Susan Dellinger’s book Red
Legs and Black Sox: Edd Roush and the Untold Story of the 1919 World
Series, adds unique perspective and important historical details to
the well documented history of the Black
Sox and the 1919 World Series. But the book is more than a story of
the fix—it is a delightful mini-biography of Dellinger’s grandfather, Edd
Roush. That relationship allowed the author enviable opportunities to
hear first hand stories about Roush’s life, to capture his views on the
1919 World Series, and to provide insight into details of a hero’s life
that fans seldom see.
The first chapter, for example, is based entirely on interviews with
Roush’s wife (Dellinger’s grandmother), Essie. Dellinger uses
Essie’s account to create an interesting narrative about Roush as a
young farmhand with great baseball talent who loved his future wife dearly
and never gave up his dream of playing ball. Along the way, we learn
numerous fascinating details, such as the fact that Roush was perfectly
ambidextrous, carried two gloves, and originally played right field left
handed and left field right handed.
These details give the book charm and historical value. We no longer
have to wonder why Roush held out so many times in his career—his father
taught him to never play for less than he was worth and he refused to
break that rule even though it cost him significant portions of seasons in
the prime of his career. And now we know how Roush and the Reds felt about
Hal
Chase: Roush said, “I told him [manager Mathewson]
about Chase in 1916. I played with him in ’13 in Chicago and he was
rotten then.” Not even Martin Kohout’s meticulously researched
biography of Chase (Hal
Chase: The Defiant Life and Turbulent Times of Baseball’s Biggest Crook)
gives us that kind of personal detail.
Ed
Roush
A contemporary
picture of Edd
Roush by George Grantham Bain (colorized
by Patrick Mondout).
Roush played in the Federal League before
being traded with Christy Mathewson to the
Reds in 1916. He played in all 8 games of
the 1919 World Series.
These personal details, while invigorating the book, detract somewhat
from its historical flavor when Dellinger recounts the story of the World
Series fix. For example, she says that her description of a meeting in
which Jimmy Widmeyer (the famed millionaire paperboy) learned of the fix
“is hypothetical and based on Detective Calvin Crim’s investigative
report.” While keeping with the tone of the book, the invented dialogue
in this example and the broader narrative lessens the historical
authenticity of her account. In fairness, her history is not intended to
be as detailed as Gene Carney’s revisionist Burying
the Black Sox, but it is nonetheless valuable.
After recounting the Black Sox’ story, Dellinger returns to the
book’s strength: her personal knowledge of Edd Roush’s life. We learn
at the end that Roush had serious suspicions about Dutch
Reuther and Slim
Sallee being involved in payoffs during the same 1919 World Series.
And we learn that in 1928, Roush ended up in a hospital bed with a torn
stomach muscle next to a gambler involved in the 1919 World Series fix.
The men revealed to each other secrets about the Series, with Roush
learning who was involved, where the fix got started, and that his
ex-teammate, Hal Chase, was an important player through it all. None of
the revelations surprised Roush, but at last he learned the truth.
The book is a valuable addition to our knowledge of the Black Sox
scandal, of baseball in the 1910s and 20s, and of Hall
of Famer Edd Roush’s life. And the story of his death, which I will
not reveal, is affecting enough to make some tough old baseball players
sentimental.
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