Charlie Jamieson/pagetext

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{{Person-pagetext
{{Person-pagetext
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|summary=was an American League outfielder, most notably with the Cleveland Indians, from 1919 through the 1932.
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|summary=was an American League outfielder, most notably with the Cleveland Indians, from 1919 through 1932.
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|infobox-image=Charlie_Jamieson-1923_Cleveland-GonyonJ01.jpg
}}
}}
{{cleanup-peacock}}
{{cleanup-peacock}}
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Jamieson was a late bloomer. He had been in the majors for four years before Cleveland manager [[Tris Speaker]] was able to talk [[Connie Mack]] into including him to an already unbalanced trade. From 1920 to 1931 Charlie owned left field at League Park.
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Jamieson began his major league career in 1915 with Washington. In Feburary 1919 The A's traded Jamieson along with [[Larry Gardner]] and [[Elmer Myers]] to Cleveland for [[Braggo Roth]].{{footnote-newspaper | title= | newspaper=Sporting News | year=1919 | month=02 | day=13 | pages=3 | last= | url= }}
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Charlie was the primary left fielder at League Park from 1919 to the early 1930's.
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He started his professional career as a pitcher and took the mound in five of his major league seasons. By the time he reached Cleveland he was clearly a superbly athletic outfielder and a swift, hard-hitting leadoff man. He had nine full seasons batting over .300 including .359 in 1924.
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He started his professional career as a pitcher and took the mound in five of his major league seasons. By the time he reached Cleveland he was clearly a superbly athletic outfielder and a swift, hard hitting leadoff man. He had nine full seasons batting over .300 including .359 in 1924.
In 1923 he had a 23 game hitting streak and led the American League with 222 hits and 644 at bats.
In 1923 he had a 23 game hitting streak and led the American League with 222 hits and 644 at bats.
Defensively he made spectacular diving catches and powerful, accurate throws.
Defensively he made spectacular diving catches and powerful, accurate throws.
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Jamieson was a frequent MVP candidate though never a winner.
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Jamieson received votes for Most Valuable Player four times. In 1924 he was third with 25 votes. In 1923 he was sixth with 19 votes.{{footnote | source=Award Voting by Bill Deane}}
== Sources ==
== Sources ==
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* {{cite-book | title=The Ballplayers | last=| first=| Arbor House-William Morrow | New York | 1990 }}
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* {{cite-book | title=The Ballplayers | last=| first=| publisher=Arbor House-William Morrow | city=New York | year=1990 }}
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* {{cite-baseball-card | year=1993 | team= | league= | Megacards - Conlon Collection }}
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* {{cite-baseball-card | year=1993 | team= | league= | maker=Megacards - Conlon Collection }}

Latest revision as of 18:53, 21 June 2013


This article may contain unsourced peacock terms that merely promote the subject without imparting verifiable information. Please remove or replace such wording, unless you can cite independent sources that support the characterization..


Jamieson began his major league career in 1915 with Washington. In Feburary 1919 The A's traded Jamieson along with Larry Gardner and Elmer Myers to Cleveland for Braggo Roth.[1] Charlie was the primary left fielder at League Park from 1919 to the early 1930's.

He started his professional career as a pitcher and took the mound in five of his major league seasons. By the time he reached Cleveland he was clearly a superbly athletic outfielder and a swift, hard hitting leadoff man. He had nine full seasons batting over .300 including .359 in 1924. In 1923 he had a 23 game hitting streak and led the American League with 222 hits and 644 at bats. Defensively he made spectacular diving catches and powerful, accurate throws.

Jamieson received votes for Most Valuable Player four times. In 1924 he was third with 25 votes. In 1923 he was sixth with 19 votes.[2]

[edit] Sources

  • The Ballplayers. New York: Arbor House-William Morrow, 1990.
  • 1993 baseball card. (Megacards - Conlon Collection)