Ed Wolfe/pagetext
From SABR Encyclopedia
< Ed Wolfe (f8ae)(Difference between revisions)
PopulateBot (Talk | contribs) m (moved Ed Wolfe/pagetext to Ed Wolfe (f8ae)/pagetext) |
|||
(One intermediate revision not shown) | |||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
|summary=was a professional player. | |summary=was a professional player. | ||
}} | }} | ||
+ | {{cleanup-wikify}} | ||
+ | {{cleanup-copyedit}} | ||
+ | {{person-narrative-stub}} | ||
Edward Anthony Wolfe is single and lives in Escondido, California per the 1949 California League Gold Book. His nationality is English-Irish. He graduated from Escondido Union High School in 1946 and participated in baseball, football and track. He attends Fullerton Junior College during the off-season. He played semi-pro ball with the Montebello Pirates. He was in the U. S. Army for 15 months. | Edward Anthony Wolfe is single and lives in Escondido, California per the 1949 California League Gold Book. His nationality is English-Irish. He graduated from Escondido Union High School in 1946 and participated in baseball, football and track. He attends Fullerton Junior College during the off-season. He played semi-pro ball with the Montebello Pirates. He was in the U. S. Army for 15 months. | ||
Information is from the 1949 California League Gold Book | Information is from the 1949 California League Gold Book |
Latest revision as of 01:23, 3 July 2010
This article needs to be wikified to meet the SABR Encyclopedia's quality standards. Please help by adding relevant internal links, or by improving the article's layout. |
This article needs copy-editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone or spelling. You can assist by editing it. |
Edward Anthony Wolfe is single and lives in Escondido, California per the 1949 California League Gold Book. His nationality is English-Irish. He graduated from Escondido Union High School in 1946 and participated in baseball, football and track. He attends Fullerton Junior College during the off-season. He played semi-pro ball with the Montebello Pirates. He was in the U. S. Army for 15 months.
Information is from the 1949 California League Gold Book