Sam Barkley
{{Short description|American baseball player (1858–1912)}}
{{for|Irish bowler|Sam Barkley (bowls)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2024}}
{{Infobox baseball biography
|name=Sam Barkley
|position=Second baseman
|image=Sam Barkley.jpg
|bats=Right
|throws=Right
|birth_date={{Birth date|1858|5|24}}
|birth_place=Wheeling, Virginia, US
|death_date={{death date and age|1912|4|20|1858|5|24}}
|death_place=Wheeling, West Virginia, US
|debutleague = MLB
|debutdate= May 1
|debutyear= {{Baseball year|1884}}
|debutteam= Toledo Blue Stockings
|finalleague = MLB
|finaldate= July 12
|finalyear= {{Baseball year|1889}}
|finalteam= Kansas City Cowboys
|statleague = MLB
|stat1label=Batting average
|stat1value=.258
|stat2label=Home runs
|stat2value=10
|stat3label=Runs batted in
|stat3value=231
|teams=
As Player
- Toledo Blue Stockings ({{Baseball year|1884}})
- St. Louis Browns ({{Baseball year|1885}})
- Pittsburgh Alleghenys ({{Baseball year|1886}}–{{Baseball year|1887}})
- Kansas City Cowboys ({{Baseball year|1888}}–{{Baseball year|1889}})
As Manager
- Kansas City Cowboys ({{Baseball year|1888}})
|highlights=
}}
Samuel E. Barkley (May 24, 1858 – April 20, 1912) was an American Major League Baseball second baseman. Born in Wheeling, Virginia he played for four teams in six seasons from {{Baseball year|1884}} to {{Baseball year|1889}}.{{cite web| title = Sam Barkley's Statistics | work = retrosheet.org | url=http://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/B/Pbarks101.htm | accessdate = 2008-03-15 }}
Career
Barkley began his career with the Toledo Blue Stockings of the Northwestern League, and was a member of their championship team in {{Baseball year|1883}}.{{cite book| title = Baseball In Toledo|page= 11 | isbn = 9780738523279 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pPa6LCWS6u8C&q=%22sam+barkley%22+baseball&pg=PA11 | accessdate = 2008-03-15 | last1 = Husman | first1 = John | year = 2003 | publisher = Arcadia }} He was still with the team when they joined the American Association for the {{Baseball year|1884}} season, and was the everyday second baseman. He batted .306 that season and led the league in doubles with 39. Following the season, Toledo and the St. Louis Browns made an arrangement in the off-season for a trade involving several players, but the trade broke down after the waiting period and only Barkley and one other player actually played with St. Louis. After a lawsuit it was estimated that Barkley had been valued for $800. Chris von der Ahe later claimed that Barkley's value was $1,000, but that may have been the asking price.
In March 1886, Browns owner Chris von der Ahe offered Barkley for $1000 to the first team to pay the money. Billy Barnie was able to have Barkley sign an undated contract with the Baltimore Orioles and wired the asking price to Von der Ahe, but he had already secured a deal with owner of the Pittsburgh Alleghenys, Denny McKnight, and Sam was convinced to play for the Allegheny club instead. The American Association suspended and fined Barkley for signing with Pittsburgh this action. Barkley sued the Association, but they settled out of court with suspension being lifted although the fine stayed in place. Baltimore was offered and accepted Milt Scott as payment.{{cite book| title = Baseball: The Early Years|pages= 217–218 | isbn = 9780198020004 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zQO-WWL1v1AC&q=%22sam+barkley%22+baseball&pg=PA217 | accessdate = 2008-03-15 | last1 = Seymour | first1 = Harold | last2 = Mills | first2 = Dorothy Seymour | date = 31 December 1960 | publisher = Oxford University Press }}
That first season with Pittsburgh, the {{Baseball year|1886}} season, he hit .266 with 31 doubles, and he also stole 22 bases, while playing in 122 games. His stats declined significantly in {{Baseball year|1887}}, only playing in 89 games, hitting only .224. After the season was over, Pittsburgh sold him to the Kansas City Cowboys of the American Association.
He was given good playing time in {{Baseball year|1888}} by the Cowboys, playing in 116 games, but his batting average slid further down, to .216, but the season was not uneventful. On June 13, he hit for the cycle,{{cite news| title = Cycle hitters | work = Baseball Digest, Nov. 2005 | url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCI/is_9_64/ai_n15657364/pg_3 | accessdate = 2008-03-15 | year=2005}} and he was given the managerial reins, which lasted 58 games and 21 wins.
Post-baseball career
After his career in baseball ended, Barkley opened a cigar shop in Pittsburgh.{{cite web| title = The Dead Ball Era: Heading Home | work = thedeadballera.com | url=http://www.thedeadballera.com/HeadingHome.html | accessdate = 2008-03-15 }} After the cigar shop closed, Barkley and his wife Dora moved to Chicago. In Chicago he opened a saloon.
Barkley died at the age of 53 in his hometown of Wheeling, and was buried in Peninsula Cemetery.
Personal life
Barkley married Flora "Dora" Feldman, who took the name Dora Feldman Barkley after marriage.{{cite book |last1=Pucci |first1=Kelly |title=Chicago's First Crime King : Michael Cassius McDonald. |date=2019 |publisher=Arcadia Publishing Inc |location=Chicago |pages=76–77 |isbn=9781467140553}} She was a young woman who he had met while playing in Kansas City. Dora, at the age of 18, grew infatuated with Barlkey and ran away from home to pursue him.{{cite book |last1=Lindberg |first1=Richard C. |title=The Gambler King of Clark Street : Michael C. McDonald and the Rise of Chicago's Democratic Machine |date=2009 |publisher=Southern Illinois University Press |location=Carbondale |pages= 200–202|isbn=9780809386543}} Feldman stalked Barkley, and, at a Kansas City hotel room where he was staying, confronted him and threatened to commit suicide if he did not marry her. While he initially believed the young woman to be insane, he ultimately wed her, and they soon after had a child named Harold Barkley together. When they lived in Chicago, Dora, working as an actress, began a public affair with political boss, and former crime boss, Michael Cassius McDonald, who she had known in her childhood. It is believed that Barkley was paid $30,000 by McDonald to divorce his wife. The two divorced, and she wed McDonald, who also adopted the son he had with Dora, who would become known as Harold McDonald.
See also
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{Baseballstats|br=b/barklsa01|brm=barkle001sam}}, or [http://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/B/Pbarks101.htm Retrosheet]
{{S-start}}
{{S-ach|ach}}
{{Succession box| before = Harry Stovey | title = Hitting for the cycle| years = June 13, 1888 | after = Jimmy Ryan}}
{{S-end}}
{{1885 St. Louis Browns|state=collapsed}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Barkley, Sam}}
Category:Baseball players from Wheeling, West Virginia
Category:19th-century baseball players
Category:19th-century American sportsmen
Category:Major League Baseball second basemen
Category:Toledo Blue Stockings players
Category:St. Louis Browns (AA) players
Category:Pittsburgh Alleghenys (AA) players
Category:Kansas City Cowboys (AA) players
Category:Kansas City Cowboys (AA) managers
Category:Toledo Blue Stockings (minor league) players
Category:Toledo Black Pirates players