- John Anderson (baseball)
Infobox MLB retired
name=John Anderson
position=Outfielder /First baseman
birthdate=December 14 ,1873
city-state|Sarpsborg|Norway
deathdate=death date and age|1949|7|23|1873|12|14
city-state|Worcester|Massachusetts
bats=Switch
throws=Right
debutdate=September 8
debutyear=1894
debutteam=Brooklyn Grooms
finaldate=October 2
finalyear=1908
finalteam=Chicago White Sox
stat1label=Avg.
stat1value=.290
stat2label=Hits
stat2value=1841
stat3label=RBIs
stat3value=976
teams=
*Brooklyn Grooms/Bridegrooms/Superbas (by|1894-by|1898, by|1899)
*Washington Senators (by|1898)
*Milwaukee Brewers/St. Louis Browns (by|1901-by|1903)
*New York Highlanders (by|1904-by|1905)
*Washington Senators (by|1905-by|1907)
*Chicago White Sox (by|1908)
highlights=
*Led NL inSlugging Percentage (.494), Triples (22) and Extra-Base Hits (64) in 1898
*American League stolen base champion: 1906John Joseph Anderson (born
December 14 ,1873 inSarpsborg ,Norway , diedJuly 23 ,1949 ) was a former Major Leagueoutfielder andfirst baseman . Nicknamed "Honest John", Anderson played for six seasons in theNational League from 1894 to 1899 and then in theAmerican League from 1900 to 1908.Anderson was born in
Sarpsborg ,Norway ; he was the first of only three Major League baseball players to have ever been born in the country. He first appeared in the National League in by|1894, when he signed with the Brooklyn Grooms. He spent the next three full seasons with Brooklyn and was primarily used as an outfielder, and batted over .300 in both by|1896 and by|1897.During the by|1898 season, he was sold to the Washington Senators, only to be sold back to Brooklyn four months later. Nevertheless, he managed to have one of his best seasons, leading the National League with 22 triples and also leading the league in
slugging percentage andextra-base hit s. Anderson stayed in Brooklyn for the by|1899 before being purchased by the Milwaukee Brewers of the newly-formed American League.Anderson was one of the league's best hitters in the AL's first year as a Major League in by|1901. (In by|1900, the American League was still considered a
minor league .) As the Brewers' first baseman, he finished second in the league inbase hit s and doubles, trailing onlyNap Lajoie in both categories, ranked third inruns batted in behind Lajoie andBuck Freeman , and was sixth in the league with a .330 average.He stayed with the franchise when it relocated to St. Louis in by|1902 to become the Browns. He played two seasons in St. Louis and recorded virtually identical .284 batting averages in those years.
On September 24, 1903, Anderson tried to steal second base when the base was already occupied. This particular mistake was often referred to as a "John Anderson play" in the early part of the century [http://www.baseballlibrary.com/ballplayers/player.php?name=Bobby_Wallace_1873]
Anderson was dealt to the
New York Highlanders before the by|1904 season in exchange for Jack O'Connor. He played one full season in New York and batted .278 with the club. He started the by|1905 season in New York but was waived after a slow start. The Washington Senators (officially a different franchise from the team he played for in 1898) claimed him off of waivers, and he recovered to bat .279 on the season, good enough for ninth in the AL in the midst of thedead ball era .He remained in Washington for the next two seasons. In by|1906, Anderson tied for the American League lead in
stolen base s withElmer Flick . He left Washington after his contract was purchased by theChicago White Sox for the by|1908 season. He played for one season with the Pale Hose to end his career in the Major Leagues.Anderson retired with a .290 career average, 49 home runs, and 976 runs batted in. He also finished his career with 124 triples, currently tying him for 90th place all-time in that category.
He died at the age of 74 in Worcester,
Massachusetts .ee also
*
List of Major League Baseball players with 100 triples
*List of Major League Baseball stolen base champions
*List of Major League Baseball triples champions External links
* [http://www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/A/Anderson_John.stm John Anderson] at BaseballLibrary.com.
* [http://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/Pandej101.htm John Anderson] atRetrosheet .
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.