Tag Archives: citizen days

Happy Birthday–December 21

Cy Williams (1887)
Josh Gibson (1911)
Bob Rush (1925)
Howie Reed (1936)
Paul Casanova (1941)
Elliott Maddox (1947)
Dave Kingman (1948)
Joaquin Andujar (1952)
Tom Henke (1957)
Roger McDowell (1960)
Andy Van Slyke (1960)
Dustin Hermanson (1972)
LaTroy Hawkins (1972)
D’Angelo Jimenez (1977)
Freddy Sanchez (1977)
Philip Humber (1982)

We would also like to wish a very happy birthday to hungry joe’s wife, peckish jane.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–December 21

Happy Birthday–December 10

Jimmy Johnston (1889)
Rudy Hernandez (1931)
Jaime Jarrin (1935)
Doc Edwards (1936)
Bob Priddy (1939)
Dalton Jones (1943)
Steve Renko (1944)
Paul Assenmacher (1960)
Doug Henry (1963)
Luis Polonia (1963)
Mel Rojas (1966)
Joe Mays (1975)
Dan Wheeler (1977)
Pedro Florimon (1986)

Pitcher Rudy Hernandez was a member of the old Washington franchise in 1960, but was chosen by the new Washington franchise in the expansion draft in December of 1960.

We would also like to wish a happy birthday to Moss' son.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–December 10

Happy Birthday–December 5

Billy Shindle (1860)
Patsy Tebeau (1864)
Frank Bowerman (1868)
Pink Hawley (1872)
Gus Mancuso (1905)
Bobby Mattick (1915)
Chico Ruiz (1938)
Yoshiharu Wakana (1953)
Gary Roenicke (1954)
Luis Casanova (1956)
Alan Cockrell (1962)
Cliff Floyd (1972)
Felix Rodriguez (1972)
Hanley Frias (1973)

We also want to wish a Happy Birthday to CarterHayes’ mother.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–December 5

Happy Birthday–December 1

Ed Reulbach (1882)
Willie Mitchell (1889)
Walter Alston (1911)
Calvin Griffith (1911)
Cookie Lavagetto (1912)
Marty Marion (1917)
Cal McLish (1925)
George Foster (1948)
Dan Schatzeder (1954)
Greg Harris (1963)
Larry Walker (1966)
Reggie Sanders (1967)
Kirk Rueter (1970)

As everyone reading this knows, Calvin Griffith was the long-time owner of the Minnesota Twins.  He had served in a variety of positions for the Washington Senators, including batboy, minor league player-manager, and working in the front office.  His managing career lasted from 1937-1941.  He also played for Class B Charlotte from 1939-1941.  No records of his playing career are available from 1939-1940, but in 1941 he got a hit in his only at-bat.

We would also like to wish a happy birthday to SBG’s father, Butch.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–December 1

Happy Birthday–November 4

Bobby Wallace (1873)
Tommy Leach (1877)
Skeeter Webb (1909)
Carl Sawatski (1927)
Dick Groat (1930)
Tito Francona (1933)
Dick Selma (1943)
Doug Corbett (1952)
Jon Shave (1967)
Eric Karros (1967)
Carlos Baerga (1968)
Kevin Frederick (1976)
Carmen Cali (1978)

We would also like to wish a very happy birthday to davidwatts, kalarson, and yickit/eschapp.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–November 4

Happy Birthday–October 28

Tommy Tucker (1863)
Frank Smith (1879)
Doc Lavan (1890)
Johnny Neun (1900)
Joe Page (1917)
Bob Veale (1935)
Sammy Stewart (1954)
Bob Melvin (1961)
Lenny Harris (1964)
Larry Casian (1965)
Juan Guzman (1966)
Braden Looper (1974)

Twenty-three years ago today, Mrs. A and I stood at the front of First United Methodist Church in Pierre, South Dakota and said "I do".  Oddly enough, Mrs. A still seems to be happy about that.  Go figure.

Johnny Neun managed two major league teams, the Yankees in 1946 and Cincinnati from 1947-1948. Each time, he was replaced by someone who was nicknamed “Bucky”.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–October 28

Thank You

I want to thank you for your gift, the pictures, the banners, the kind words, and everything else that went everyone did this past week.  It means an awful lot to me, probably more than any of you realize.  I’m not sure I can put the reasons why into words, but I’ll try.

I grew up on a farm in rural South Dakota.  We had no neighbors we were close to.  My early elementary years were in a one-room country school in which I was the only kid in my grade.  There were no such things as “play dates” back then, and my parents didn’t go to town very often.  Our church was the smallest church in town, so there were no kids my age there, either.  As a result, I grew up as a lonely, shy kid who had no idea how to relate to people.

As I grew up and eventually went to “town school”, that’s pretty much who I stayed.  I was pretty much the definition of a geek—shy, unathletic, the class brain, a loner with no real friends and no clue how to make them.  It took me a long time to overcome that, a period extending well into my adult years.

I’ve come a long way since then, of course.  I have quite a few friends now.  I feel like I am serving God and making a positive impact on all three of my communities.  I have a very happy and fulfilling life.  Still, somewhere inside me, there will always be that awkward teenage boy who just wishes other people would like him and accept him for who he is.  So, when you guys do something like this for me, well, it’s a pretty awesome feeling.

It’s an amazing world we live in, where a group of people I’ve never met can come to mean so much to me.  There are many of you with whom I have very little in common except for a love of baseball and the Twins.  Yet, somehow, that’s enough for us to share our lives, our triumphs, our tragedies, and everything else that makes up life.  I consider each and every one of you a friend.  And right now, I feel like the richest man in town.  Because it really is a wonderful life.