Jack Glasscock

Jack Glasscock
Birthdate 7/22/1857
Death Date 2/24/1947
Debut Year 1879
Year of Induction
Teams Blues, Browns, Colonels, Giants, Indianapolis Hoosiers, Outlaw Reds, Pirates, Senators
Positions Second Base, Shortstop

The National League’s batting champion of 1890 with a .336 average, Jack Glasscock was the top shortstop during baseball’s bare-handed era. 

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Jack Glasscock was SARB's

Jack Glasscock was SARB's "Overlooked 19th Century Legend for 2016"

Selected by the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) as their most “Overlooked 19th Century Baseball Legend for 2016“, Jack Glasscock is thought by many to be worthy of induction at Cooperstown. Glasscock led the National League in fielding percentage seven times and assists six times, marks that would stand until Ozzie Smith sur...

2 responses to “Jack Glasscock”

  1. J McAfee says:

    John Wesley “Jack” Glasscock of Wheeling, West Virginia

    I believe he was the first national league manager in St. Louis, Missouri (on a team that was a predecessor to the St. Louis Cardinals).

  2. Joyce Glasscock-Kachenmeister says:

    Sure wish my Great Grandfather, “Pebbly Jack” Glasscock would be inducted to the Cooperstown Hall of Fame. If he was inducted to the West Virginia HOF and Ohio HOF, he certainly deserves Cooperstown from everything I know and have read. Though I never met him my Dad shared lots of stories. I hope some day he does make it and we get to be here when it happens.

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"Whoever wants to know the heart and mind of America had better learn baseball…"

~Jacques Barzun, 1954