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| Arthur Albert Irwin (February 14 1858 – July 16 1921) was a Canadian-American shortstop and manager in Major League Baseball during the late 19th century. The fame earned by Irwin during a 13-year (1880-1891; 1894) playing career and eight years as a manager would be eclipsed by the circumstances of his death – an apparent suicide – more than two decades after his last major league game. Born in Toronto, Ontario, and raised in Boston, Massachusetts, Irwin played for the Worcester Ruby Legs (1880-82), Providence Grays (1883-85), Philadelphia Quakers/Phillies (1886-89, 1894), and Washington Nationals (1889) of the National League and for the Boston Reds in the Players League (1890) and American Association (1891). A lefthanded hitter, Irwin appeared in 1,010 games and batted .241. He managed Washington (1889, 1892, 1898-99), the Phillies (1894-95), and the New York Giants (1896) of the National League, and Boston of the American Association in 1891. He led Boston to the 1891 AA pennant – the last year the Association was classified as a major league – and compiled a winning record (149-110) with the Phillies. But in his other five seasons as a pilot, his clubs posted losing records and over his managing career he won 416 and lost 427 (.493). Aftr serving as a scout for the New York Highlanders in the early years of the American League, Irwin left baseball entirely due to ill health. In July 1921, he was a passenger on the Calvin Austin as it steamed from New York City to Boston when he mysteriously disappeared. Irwin, 63, was presumed drowned. Within days of his apparent suicide, it was discovered that Irwin had led a "double life" for 30 years, with a wife and child in Boston and a common-law wife and three offspring in New York. He was apparently successful in keeping these arrangements secret; they only came to light after his death. According to one report, Irwin had learned that he had an incurable disease just before his ill-fated steamer trip. Said his legal wife, in Boston, upon hearing of Irwin's double life: "I feel confident and happy in the belief that, although he had this other woman in New York, he was on his way to me when he died … He turned to me as the woman he loved at the last. He wanted to die in my arms." [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Arthur Irwin ] Some related entries: Glenn Beckert | Rock Cartwright | Gorman Thomas | Kimble Anders | Jim Grabb | George Blanda | Julián Javier | Kevin Greene | Dan Hawkins | Shannon MacMillan | Hugh McElhenny This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Arthur Irwin; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay |
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