Bill Stuart

William Alexander "Chauncey" Stuart was a professional baseball middle infielder and an American football player and coach. He played major league baseball with the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1895 and the New York Giants in 1899.

Bill Stuart
Stuart on the 1894 Penn State baseball team
Infielder
Born: (1873-08-28)August 28, 1873
Boalsburg, Pennsylvania
Died: October 14, 1928(1928-10-14) (aged 55)
Fort Worth, Texas
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB debut
August 15, 1895, for the Pittsburgh Pirates
Last MLB appearance
September 7, 1899, for the New York Giants
MLB statistics
Batting average.238
Home runs0
RBI10
Teams

Early life

Stuart was born on August 28, 1873, in Boalsburg, Pennsylvania.[1] He attended Penn State University, where he played on the varsity football and baseball teams.[2]

Baseball career

Listed at 5'11" and 170 pounds, Stuart threw and batted right-handed. He made his big league debut on August 15, 1895, with the Pittsburgh Pirates at the age of 21, playing 19 games that year (2 at second base and 17 as shortstop) and hitting .247 with 0 home runs and 10 RBI. He returned to the Major Leagues in 1899 to play for the New York Giants (playing only one game at second base that season) and collected zero hits in three at-bats. Stuart's overall career fielding percentage was unremarkable, at .912.[1][3]

Football career

Stuart played fullback on the Penn State football team.[4] In 1895, he played the same position for the Pittsburgh Athletic Club, one of the first football teams to pay players.[2] He was known as an outstanding kicker.[4]

From 1896 until 1899 he was the coach and star fullback of the Company C team of Bradford, Pennsylvania, which in its best year, 1897, won all of its 11 games while scoring over 300 points and allowing none.[5]

Later life

Stuart later became an oil operator in Oklahoma.[2] Alongside his oil career, he tried his hand at managing a theater in Tulsa and running a publication called Baseball World.[6][7] In 1922, he was shot in a hunting accident when his guide mistook him for a deer; he was still recovering months later.[8] He died on October 14, 1928, in Fort Worth, Texas. His body was laid to rest in Spring Creek Presbyterian Cemetery in State College, Pennsylvania.[1]

References

External links