Everything about Charlie Sweasy totally explained
Charles James Sweasy (
November 2,
1847 –
March 30,
1908), born
Swasey, played
second base for the original
Cincinnati Red Stockings, the first fully professional
baseball team. He returned to Cincinnati in 1876, hired by the new club that was a charter member of the
National League. In the meantime he played for six teams during the five seasons of the
National Association, so he may be considered one of the first "journeyman" ballplayers. A right-handed thrower and batter, he played
second base almost exclusively.
Born 1847 in
Newark, New Jersey, Sweasy's debut with a "major" team was in 1866 with
Irvington, New Jersey about 20 miles inland. Irvington was a new member of the
National Association of Base Ball Players, with many other clubs as the association tripled in size to more than 90 in its first post-war season. The Irvingtons frightened the champion Atlantics by winning their first meeting on
June 14 and losing their third one only in extra innings on
October 29. Several team members would later play professionally including Sweasy and
Andy Leonard, also of Newark.
Cincinnati
For 1868 Sweasy and Leonard moved to Cincinnati and joined the Buckeyes, the chief local rival of the
Red Stockings; the move suggests that they were somehow compensated by club members if not by the club.
When the NABBP permitted professionalism for 1869, Sweasy and Leonard were two of five new men hired to complete the First Nine of the
Cincinnati Red Stockings, the first team on salary for a season. All had previously played in the infield, with Harry Wright and Asa Brainard sharing
pitcher and second base for Cincinnati. Wright put Sweasy at second and made
center field the position shared by the two pitchers.
Sweasy earned $800 for the eight-month season, March 15 to November 15. That was the standard rate with four men earning more. Years later, the son of club officer George Ellard recalled the skills of each player in words of praise. Ellard (1908: 100) covered Sweasy in the field and only in the field, with most attention to his grasp of flies to short center and right, where he was "one of the surest catchers of high fly balls to be found." The limited statistical record suggests that he fit comfortably in the supporting cast during the Red Stockings innings, hitting a little less frequently than team average, with a few more
extra bases on hits. In two years he played all but one of 130 games in the record books, one of six who played essentially without interruption.
Cincinnati toured the continent undefeated in 1869 and may have been the strongest team in 1870, but the club dropped professional base ball after the second season.
1871
Wright was hired to organize a new team in Boston, where he signed three teammates for 1871. The other five regulars including Charlie Sweasy signed with
Nick Young's
Washington Olympics, an established club that also joined the new, entirely professional
National Association (NA).
The Olympics appointed Sweasy
captain, meaning that he'd have many duties of a modern
field manager, speaking for the team during the game and making many internal decisions. Unfortunately, he missed two long stretches of the season with illness, barely playing and so barely "managing". Two other transplants,
Asa Brainard and
Fred Waterman, acted as captains in his absence.
Charlie Sweasy played almost every game during his five NABBP seasons, through 1870 and age 22. Then he played only occasionally for five teams in four NA seasons. His batting record during those years and thereafter is unusually weak, suggesting that his skills were left behind by competitive improvement in the game or weakened by illness and forced idleness.
Sweasy returned to a regular playing role and earned his manager's credit in 1875, when he captained the lesser of two St. Louis clubs that joined the NA; the "Reds" dropped out after 19 games, overmatched. Next year he returned to Cincinnati as the second baseman of a new club that was a charter member of the
National League. Probably he was hired by old teammate
Charlie Gould, the first baseman and manager. His major league career ended two years later as regular second baseman for the new
Providence Grays. Apparently he was a marginal "major leaguer", able to hold a regular job at that level only for teams on the way in and teams on the way out.
Sweasy died 1908 in his native Newark, 60 years old.
He is buried in
Evergreen Cemetery,
Hillside, New Jersey.
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