Horace Stoneham
Horace Stoneham | |
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![]() Stoneham at the first game of the World Series, 6 October 1937. | |
Born | Newark, New Jersey, U.S. | April 27, 1903
Died | January 7, 1990 Scottsdale, Arizona, U.S. | (aged 86)
Occupation | Baseball executive |
Known for | Relocating the Giants from Manhattan to San Francisco |
Spouse |
Valleda Pyke (m. 1931) |
Children | 2 |
Parent(s) | Charles Stoneham (father) Johanna McGoldrick (mother) |
Relatives | Chub Feeney (nephew) |
Baseball career |
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Career highlights and awards | |
As president
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Horace Charles Stoneham (/ˈstoʊnəm/ STOW-nəm; April 27, 1903 – January 7, 1990) was the owner of the New York / San Francisco Giants from 1936 to 1976. During his ownership, the Giants won the 1954 World Series and four National League pennants in 1936, 1937, 1951, and 1962, and moved from Manhattan to San Francisco.
Early life
Horace Stoneham was born in
He managed the leasing of the team's Polo Grounds stadium for other sporting events, including football and boxing and managed the team's travel and accommodation with club secretary Eddie Branick. Horace would be admitted into team manager John McGraw's inner circle in the early 1930s, and would work closely with McGraw, Bill Terry and his father.[1]
In 1936, at age 32, he inherited ownership of the Giants on his father's death due to a heart attack on January 6. He became the youngest club owner in National League history.[3]
New York Giants
The Giants were one of the most prominent franchises of the National League. Horace oversaw four pennant wins and one World Series championship in his first two decades as owner. He moved the Giants from New York City to San Francisco, one of two National League owners to bring Major League Baseball to the west coast territory. Although the Giants won only one pennant (1962) and one division title (1971) in their first 15 years after moving to the Bay Area, they were a consistent contender that featured some of the era's biggest stars. But during the mid-1970s, lacklustre on-field performance and dwindling attendance forced Stoneham to sell the team in 1976.
Stoneham's ownership witnessed three separate pennant-contending and -winning eras: the team that he inherited, the 1936–1938 Giants with Bill Terry, Carl Hubbell and Mel Ott; the 1949–1955 teams of manager Leo Durocher, with Monte Irvin, Sal Maglie, Bobby Thomson and Willie Mays; and the star-studded Giants of 1959–1971. During Stoneham's 41 years as owner, the Giants won National League pennants in 1936, 1937, 1951, 1954 and 1962, a National League West division title in 1971, and the World Series title in 1954.
Early success

Stoneham was known as a hands-on owner that was concerned with the day-to-day business of the Giants and personally involved in player trades and transactions.[3][5] In 1936, player-manager Bill Terry's last season as a player, the Giants defeated the St. Louis Cardinals by five games to win the National League pennant. However, in the World Series, the Giants were defeated by the New York Yankees four games to two. Terry would retire as a player at the end of the season and be appointed as the full-time manager until 1941. Terry also served as the general manager through 1942. The Giants would again win the National League pennant in 1937 but fall four games to one to the Yankees featuring Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, Bill Dickey and Lefty Gomez in the World Series. The Giants finished third in 1938 but not finish in the first division again, finishing fifth in 1939, sixth in 1940 and fifth in 1941. Terry resigned as the manager after the 1941 season and was succeeded by former teammate Mel Ott as player-manager.
Struggles during and after World War II
In the 1942 season, Ott led the league in home runs, runs scored and walks but the Giants finished third in the National League. The team struggled in the National League, falling into the league's second division after the end of World War II. Stoneham fired the popular but easy-going Ott mid-way through the 1948 season and hired Brooklyn Dodgers manager Leo Durocher as a replacement.
World Series success and Shot Heard 'Round the World
Stoneham negotiated a deal with Dodgers' general manager Branch Rickey to release Durocher from his contract and join their cross-town rivals. Giant fans initially reviled Durocher as the pilot of the arch-rival Brooklyn Dodgers,[5] but he quickly produced an exciting team that just two years later was in the World Series. The Giants won the 1951 National League in a thrilling play-off against the Dodgers, on the back off Bobby Thomson's home run in the deciding game in what was to be known as the 'Shot Heard 'Round the World'. However, the Giants would fall four games to two to the Yankees in the 1951 World Series.
In 1954, Durocher and Willie Mays would lead the Giants to the National League pennant and their only World Series title. The Giants swept the heavily favoured Cleveland Indians. In Game One, center fielder Mays caught a long drive by Vic Wertz near the outfield wall with his back to the infield in a play remembered as "the catch". Stoneham was hailed as The Sporting News' Executive of the Year in baseball.[6]
In 1949, the Giants recruited former Negro League players Monte Irvin and Hank Thompson to become the second National League team to be fully integrated.[1]
Controversial move to San Francisco
The 1954 World Series title was the last hurrah for Stoneham and the Giants in New York. Stoneham was alarmed by a dramatic drop-off in attendance during the 1950s. The 1947 Giants had drawn 1.6 million paying fans despite finishing fourth. But the 1951 pennant winners and 1954 world champions struggled to hit seven figures in home attendance, and mediocre 1956–57 Giants' teams had drawn fewer than 700,000 customers each season. It did not help matters that the Giants' park, the Polo Grounds, was not aging gracefully. The park had been built in its present form in 1911 and had not been well maintained from the 1940s onward. Meanwhile, the park's surrounding neighbourhoods (in Washington Heights in Upper Manhattan) had entered a steep economic and social decline, with rising rates of crime.[7] All of these factors contributed to a sharp drop in attendance.
The Giants' dwindling gates hit Stoneham particularly hard. Unlike most of his fellow owners, the Giants and the Polo Grounds were his sole source of income. Stoneham's balance sheet took a further hit after the 1955 season when the football Giants, who had spent their entire history as tenants of the baseball Giants, moved across the Harlem River to Yankee Stadium. With the loss of their football tenant, the baseball Giants' shrinking bottom line made it difficult for Stoneham to find the money needed for renovations even after laying off his maintenance staff. Even without that to consider, while the Giants owned the Polo Grounds, the land on which it stood was still owned by the heirs of James J. Coogan.[8]
In hopes of finding a way out, Stoneham briefly considered moving to the
Stoneham confided his plan to Dodgers owner Walter O'Malley, who then revealed that he was negotiating to transfer the Dodgers from Brooklyn to Los Angeles. He suggested that Stoneham contact San Francisco Mayor George Christopher and explore moving his team there to preserve the teams' bitter rivalry. Stoneham soon abandoned his Minnesota plan and shifted his attention, permanently, to San Francisco. In 1961, the Twin Cities succeeded in getting their own big-league team when the 1901–60 incarnation of the Washington Senators moved there and became the Minnesota Twins.
Stoneham and O'Malley were vilified by New York baseball fans when their teams' boards approved the moves to the West Coast. Stoneham was confronted by fans both angry—they chanted, after their last home game on September 29: "We want Stoneham! With a rope around his neck!"[10]—and grief-stricken. During the August 19, 1957 press conference officially announcing the franchise's move to San Francisco, he explained, "Kids are still interested, but you don't see many of their parents at games."[11] (In his book Five Seasons, Roger Angell quotes Stoneham as saying, "The last day we played [at the Polo Grounds], I couldn't go to the game. I just didn't want to see it all end.")
Writer
The Giants' transfer to San Francisco was initially a rousing success. The team began to play winning baseball and drew 1.27 and 1.42 million fans playing in a tiny (22,900 capacity) minor league ballpark, Seals Stadium, in 1958–59. Then the Giants moved to brand-new Candlestick Park in 1960 and attendance rose above 1.75 million fans. (Meanwhile, the National League returned to New York in 1962, with an expansion team, the Mets.)
1962 National League pennant
While Stoneham's San Francisco club produced only one pennant (in
But the National League was so powerful and competitive—it had far outpaced the
Stoneham was partially to blame for the Giants' lack of sustained dominance, as he squandered the resources of his productive
In 1971, Mays' final full season with San Francisco, the Giants roared to an early lead in the NL West, winning 37 of their first 51 games to build a 10+1⁄2-game margin over the Dodgers through May 31. Then they fell to earth, going only 53–58 for the rest of the season. Still, they prevailed by a single game over Los Angeles to become division champions. In the 1971 National League Championship Series, however, the eventual world champion Pittsburgh Pirates handled Stoneham's club in four games.
In 1959, Stoneham began developing a spring training facility for the San Francisco Giants at Francisco Grande, in Casa Grande, Arizona. Francisco Grande hosted its first exhibition game in 1961, where Willie Mays hit a 375-foot home run in the fourth inning. Francisco Grande, now a hotel and golf resort, still houses various memorabilia of the San Francisco Giants of the 1960s.
Struggles during the 1970s
After their initial success, Stoneham's Giants fell on hard times after 1971. The arrival of the cross-bay Oakland Athletics in 1968 split the market. The Athletics themselves struggled at the turnstiles, leading to doubts about whether the Bay Area was big enough for two MLB teams. Attendance at cold and windy Candlestick Park plummeted after 1971 to levels even below those at the Polo Grounds in the mid-1950s; during Stoneham's final five years as owner, only in 1973 did the Giants draw more than 648,000 fans, causing Stoneham financial hardship. This was the same situation that forced him to move to San Francisco almost 20 years earlier.
Finally, in 1976, he put the team up for sale. The Giants very nearly moved back east, to Toronto, when a deal with Canadian investors seemed imminent. In addition, it was briefly rumoured that they might return to the metropolitan New York area, perhaps to a new baseball stadium in the New Jersey Meadowlands. Instead, Stoneham sold it to San Francisco real estate magnate Bob Lurie and Phoenix, Arizona-based meat-packer Bud Herseth for $8 million, with the transaction unanimously approved by the other National League club owners on March 2, 1976.[13] The deal represented a handsome return on his father's purchase of the team for $1 million 57 years earlier.[1]
Personal life
Stoneham married his wife Valleda (née Pyke) on 14 April 1924. They had two children, son Charles Stoneman and a daughter also named Valleda. Stoneham died at age 86 in a nursing home in Scottsdale, Arizona. He was survived by his wife, son, daughter, five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.[14]
References
- ^ a b c d e f Garratt, Rob; Treder, Steve. "Horace Stoneham". Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
- ^ Graham, Frank (May 1956). "The Shy Boss of the Giants". Sport: 49.
- ^ a b c Obituary, The New York Times, 1990-01-09
- ISBN 9780803259508.
- ^ a b Durocher, Leo, with Linn, Ed, Nice Guys Finish Last. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1975, pp. 235–239
- ^ "The Sporting News MLB Executive of the Year". Baseball Almanac.
- ^ a b Thornley, Stew, "The Polo Grounds (New York)", Society for American Baseball Research
- ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-01-18.
- ^ Landers, Chris (2019-01-25). "Just why did the Dodgers and Giants move from New York to California?". MLB.com. Retrieved 2024-01-18.
- ^ Richman, Milt, Associated Press, in The Second Fireside Book of Baseball. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1958, page 292
- ^ Mozley, Dana. "Giants Gone; It's Frisco in '58," Daily News (New York City), Tuesday, August 20, 1957. Retrieved February February 4, 2020
- ^ Seamheads.com
- ^ "Herseth Replaces Short As Co-Owner; Rigney Named Giants Manager," United Press International, Wednesday, March 3, 1976. Retrieved February 29, 2020
- ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-01-18.