(Continued
from yesterday)
Judgement is rendered
In the closing days of September, a
special meeting of the Pacific Coast League owners was convened to pass
judgment on league president William McCarthy’s suspension of Bill Rumler.
Unfortunately for Rumler, just prior to that meeting, news of the Black Sox
scandal in Chicago became public. Rumler, who had appeared at the meeting in
his own defense, along with Bees’ team president Bill Lane and the entire board
of directors of the Salt Lake club, said, “That Chicago scandal makes it all
the tougher for me.”
By a seven-to-one vote – Lane
naturally the lone dissenting ballot – the league owners voted to sustain
McCarthy’s suspension of Rumler.
Almost forgotten in the wake of the
scandal was the close of the 1920 Coast League season. With two-thirds of its
outfield and much of its hitting suspended, Salt Lake fell from first place in
late August into the second division when the season ended, in fifth place,
9-/2 games behind the pennant winner – Vernon.
In late October, Los Angeles County
convened a grand jury to investigate the allegations of gambling and
game-throwing. A parade of ballplayers and sporting men made their way through
the star chamber proceedings. When it came Rumler’s turn in the barrel, he was
quizzed sharply on the matter of his safety bet with Borton. The grand jury was
unable to find any evidence that the money Rumler received from Borton was
anything else.
Testimony raised in the grand jury’s
investigation also appeared to satisfactorily explain the absence of Rumler
from the Salt Lake line-up in the final days of that crucial series in Vernon
in 1919. According to “Dr. Spencer, a local bone-setter who had treated many
ballplayers,” Rumler injured his right hand sliding into third base. “He said
he did not want to stay out of the game because he was battling (Sam) Crawford
for the hitting leadership of the Coast League,” the doctor testified. “I found
the ligaments so badly injured that he could not throw a ball or grip a bat.
Not only would he have been a detriment to his own club if he had played ball,”
the doctor opined, “but he also would have taken chances on cutting short his
baseball career.” The physician produced records to affirm he had been treating
Rumler for his injury on the days he had sat out against Vernon.
Despite the inability to prove any
culpability on Rumler’s part, he was indicted by the grand jury in December,
along with Borton, teammates Harl Maggert and Gene Dale, and Seattle gambler
Nate Raymond.
In mid-month, the P.C.L. owners meeting
in Sacramento turned into a riot when Bill Lane physically attacked Pres.
McCarthy, claiming that McCarthy was trying to ruin the Salt Lake club and
award the franchise to a location more beneficial to the rest of the league’s
travel budget. McCarthy turned in a resignation, but was later coaxed back when
his salary was doubled to $10,000 – something of an early Christmas present.
Rumler and his indicted
co-conspirators also received an early gift when, on Christmas Eve, California
Judge Frank Willis dismissed the indictments on the grounds that there was no
law in the Golden State prohibiting ballplayers from throwing ballgames, or
gamblers from inducing them to do so.
According to The Sporting News, that gift may have been a white elephant in Rumler’s
case. The paper said, “The lawyers certainly messed it up for Bill Rumler in
the Los Angeles court proceedings by having the indictment against Rumler
dismissed. Bill was insisting loudly upon a trial, so that he might clear
himself before a jury. Now that chance is denied him and there’s small chance
of him convincing any baseball jury that he’s an ‘innocent boy,’ particularly
after a grand jury found evidence enough to indict, even if there was no law to
cover such an offense as charged.”
The paper added, “The Salt Lake club
had set great store by a trial in which Bill Rumler might be cleared. Confident
it could not be proven the payment by Borton to Rumler was a bribe, the Salt
Lake club then planned to demand reinstatement of Rumler. Now that the case
must be settled entirely as a baseball affair outside the courts, the Salt Lake
contention may not have so much technical merit to stand on.”
McCarthy, in extracting a doubled
salary from the owners, also demanded a vote of confidence for his continued
stance that Rumler would not be allowed to return to the Coast League.
Given the tenor of the times,
Rumler’s suspension from the P.C.L. meant no other circuit in Organized
Baseball would accept him. Then, as now, however, O.B. was not the only game in
town. There were plenty of places a professional ballplayer could ply his
trade, often at wages competitive with all but the highest minor leagues.
Thus Bill Rumler found himself in
Minot, North Dakota, for the 1921 season. A team photo of the Minot squad,
labeled “North Dakota Champions 1921” has the name “Moore” under Rumler’s
picture. Family members assume he was playing under a pseudonym. In the
off-season, Rumler accepted a job from an old Army buddy, beginning his law
enforcement career as a desk sergeant in Minot.
In November of 1921, the Salt Lake
club hired attorneys in an attempt to get newly named Commissioner of Baseball
Kenesaw M. Landis to review Rumler’s situation as a preliminary to another
threatened lawsuit. Nothing came of the attempt. It is probably fortunate for
Rumler that Landis did not too closely scrutinize Rumler’s case or he would
have almost surely made the five-year suspension permanent, given his handling
of similar cases during his tenure.
For 1922, Ruler moved on to Hibbing,
Minn., in the Mesaba Range League, another independent pro circuit. Besides his
play for the city’s team, Rumler’s contract paid him $150 a month to work for
the township.
The following year Rumler joined the
Canton, Ohio, team in the outlaw Mid-West League. At that time the league was
the fastest semi-pro circuit in the central U.S., stretching across the
industrialized Great Lakes area from southeastern Wisconsin to Ohio. In the
early 1920s the leagued proved a haven for players who had been black-balled by
the major leagues, including on its rosters several of the Black Sox. Rumler’s
1924 contract with Canton survives in a family scrapbook, providing for payment
at the rate of $650 a month.
There is nothing found in the family
archives or in the records of Organized Baseball detailing Rumler’s whereabouts
between 1924 and the end of 1928. The five-year suspension handed down by
McCarthy should have expired at the close of the 1925 season. McCarthy himself
had been replaced as P.C.L. president in a bitter 1923 dispute among the
owners. Whether Rumler applied for reinstatement in 1925 is unknown. It’s
possible Rumler pursued his police career during this period. A newspaper
account in the 1960s said Rumler had been a member of the “suicide squad” of
the Portland, Ore., P.D., but provides no dates.
Inquiries concerning reinstatement
must have been made at some point thereafter, however, for the first report of
Rumler’s return to O.B. indicated he had severed his ties with the outlaw
leagues at least prior to the 1927 season. In an effort to further punish those
whom it had banned, it was the policy of the major leagues and the National
Association (the minor leagues’ governing body) in that era to refuse admission
to an O.B. roster to any player who had played with or against banned
ballplayers, even in exhibition contests.
In December of 1928 it was reported
that Bill Rumler had been reinstated to good standing with O.B. during the
minor leagues’ winter meetings at Toronto, by action of the Board of Arbitration.
Rumler’s contract reverted to Hollywood, where Bill Lane had moved the Salt
Lake team in 1926.
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In 1929 Ruler returned to the Pacific Coast League and to Zee-Nuts' baseball cards with the Hollywood Stars. |
Rumler’s return to the Coast League
in 1929 could have inspired “The Natural.” At the age of 38 he helped lead the
Stars to the pennant. He batted .386, the third-highest mark in the league and
the highest batting average that would ever be attained by a Hollywood player.
He had a career-high 26 home runs and his .990 fielding average was the best in
the P.C.L. for an outfielder in more than 55 games.
Hollywood won the PC.L. pennant in
1929, though the team was third overall in the won-loss columns. The Mission
Reds had a 4-1/2- game lead as the season neared the halfway point, and were
pulling away from the pack. To maintain interest in the remainder of the
season, the league’s owners voted to split the season. Hollywood won the second
half by one game over Mission and the two teams met in a best-of-seven playoff
series that the Stars won 4-2. In the fourth game of that series, Rumler was
hit in the head with a pitched ball and had to be carried from the field to a
hospital. He was able to return for the final game, going 1-for-1 with an RBI
to help Hollywood claim the pennant.
Besides the injury, Rumler suffered
a major financial setback in 1929. While on the field one day, thieves removed
$485 from his clothes in the locker room. As a token of their appreciation,
owner Bill Lane and Rumler’s teammates took up a collection and made up for the
loss. Rumler put that money, and his season’s savings into the local bank
following the season’s close – and the bank failed in the Depression.
The 1930 pre-season looked like it
would be another banner year for Rumler. In a two-game series with the Chicago
Cubs, the final tune-up prior to the opening bell, Rumler went 9-for-10 at the
plate.
As the team traveled to Oakland for
the season opener Rumler suffered a freak accident that delayed his own season
debut by more than a week. Asleep in a Pullman on that trip, Rumler apparently
had a nightmare – at least that’s the way the press reported the accident – and
crashed his leg through the train window, badly lacerating his foot.
Rumler recovered and was having
another big year, batting .353 with 14 home runs as the end of August
approached. Again, injury intervened.
The 1930 season was the first in
which large numbers of minor league teams experimented with night baseball.
Naturally, the lighting left a lot to be desired. In his first game at Los
Angeles under the lights, on Aug. 27, Rumler broke his ankle when he misjudged
a slide and jammed it into the base. He missed the remainder of the season,
another pennant-winner for Hollywood.
Whether it was the injuries or his
age that slowed him, Rumler passed out of fast company with the end of the 1930
season.
At age 40 in 1931, he opened the
season as left fielder and clean-up hitter for Denver, in the Western League.
Official statistics credit him with 16 games, though his name appears in only
14 box scores. (My go-to source for baseball stats, baseball-reference.com, does
not show Rumler playing with Denver in 1931. The site does, however, has a
separate entry for a Rumler, first name unknown, playing there. Those stats
should, in fact, be included with Bill Rumler’s.)
Rumler was the Bears’ regular left
fielder from the May 1 opener through May 18, but the team got off to a
dreadful start. They lost eight of their first nine games by a
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Rumler was included in the 1931Denver Bears team photo. |
combined score
of 73-46. Although they won the next three games, Rumler was benched while the
team piled up a couple more wins. With Rumler back in the outfield, Denver
immediately dropped its next pair of games by scores of 13-3 and 11-5, and
Rumler was released, having hit just .236.
Following his release from Denver,
Rumler once again went on the road, as manager of a traveling team known as the
Canadian Clowns. The team, carrying its own portable lighting system,
introduced many a small town to night baseball, playing local nines, Negro
aggregations and whomever else could draw a crowd.
For
1932, Rumler came home to Nebraska, as manager of the Lincoln Links of the
Nebraska State League, a Class D circuit.
Lincoln’s opening day festivities on
May 20 found the stands packed with Milford residents while the ton band played
on the sidelines. Nebraska’s governor threw out the first ball, which was
caught by Lincoln’s mayor. The fans were treated to a great inaugural contest.
The McCook Generals scored three runs in the top of the ninth to tie the game
at 10-all.
Lincoln opened the home half of the
10th inning with a triple, then the McCook manager ordered the next
two batters intentionally walked. After a strikeout, McCook’s pitcher walked in
the winning run. Rumler’s on-field contribution to the win was a trio of
doubles in five at-bats.
That debut victory was the highlight
of Rumler’ season, however, as his team stumbled out of the starting gate. In
one early-June game Rumler’s team committed 10 errors, allowing nine runs—all
unearned—in a 9-1 loss.
On June 22, the Links visited McCook
for a double-header. The Generals were ahead 4-2 in the opening game when
Rumler slugged the umpire, precipitating a riot that was quelled only when
local police led Rumler off the field. That game was declared a forfeit to
McCook. In the second half of the bargain bill, McCook also won, 8-2. That
game, too, was marred when a pair of Lincoln players attacked the same umpire
whom Rumler had bloodied.
“I really got into it with him,“
Rumler said later. “He poked his nose in my face, so I lowered the boom on
him—right on the nose.”
With a 12-26 record at the time,
Lincoln was in fifth place in the six-team league, 15 games out of first. League
president Bob Russell fined Rumler $25 ad suspended him indefinitely for his
assault on the umpire. Lincoln’s ownership used the occasion to replace Rumler
as manager. Despite his .340 batting average over 17 games, Rumler was also
released as the team’s right fielder. It was the end of his career in Organized
Baseball.
For the remainder of the 1932
season, Ruler managed the Maryville, Kan., amateur baseball team.
Details of Rumler life between 1932
and World War II are unchronicled. He likely was involved in some combination
of working the family farm and law enforcement around Milford.
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During the war Rumler worked as chief of guards (and manager of the baseball team) at a Nebraska ordnane factory. He's shown here kneeling at left in the middle row. |
During the war, Rumler served as
chief of guards at the Cornhusker Ordnance Depot in Grand Island, Neb., where
he played on the plant’s baseball and basketball teams. In 1943 he was made
lieutenant of the guards working on the Al-Can Highway at Skagway, Alaska.
Rumler returned to Milford after the
war and became the town’s chief of police. He also served some time as chief of
the village’s fire department, was a 10-year member of the county draft board,
and, upon his retirement from law enforcement in 1964 sometime after suffering
a heart attack, became justice of the peace for the Milford police court.
Local lore credits Rumler with being
a cop who was firmly rooted in the tradition of the tough-but-fair city marshal
of the century past. He is said to have had no tolerance for juvenile
delinquents or challenges to his authority.
But Rumler also cared enough for the
local youth to coach the town’s American Legion basketball team all the way to
the state finals one year. Rumler retired from public service in 1964, hoping
to spend his remaining years hunting and fishing. On May 26, 1966, he died in
Milford at the age of 75. He is buried in the town’s Blue Mound Cemetery.
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This undated portrait shows Bill Rumler as remembered by family and friends in Milford, Neb. |
(Editor’s note: This article was
originally published in Sport Collectors Digest, Sept. 17, 1993 . . . more than 20 years ago. It was written
following a visit I made to Milford, where a
grand-niece of Bill Rumler’s, Terry Torrez, maintained Rumler’s last
home as well as the family’s scrapbook and other remnants of Rumler’s life and
baseball career. In an upstairs bedroom, the walls are hung with framed photos
of some of the teams on which Rumler played or managed. A chair in the corner
has on its rails the hats he wore as a World War II security guard and as the
town’s chief of police.
One of the few remaining family
members who knew Rumler prior to his death, Ms. Torrez said that prior to being
contacted about this article, the family had few details about the scandal in
which Bill Rumler had been involved. It had not been a topic of conversation
among the relatives. A special thanks to Ms. Torrez for her sharing of the
archival material for this presentation.
The concluding parts of the story of the Bad News Bees will be presented on this blog about this time in September, detailing the role of Babe Borton, the "fixer.")