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Called up to the Cardinals in July, Peete made his debut July 17 in a home game against the [[Pittsburgh Pirates]]. [[Pinch hitter|Pinch hitting]] for veteran [[Hank Sauer]], he drew a [[base on balls]] and stayed in the game to play center field, and later grounded into a [[double play]] in a 4–2 Cardinal loss.<ref>[http://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/1956/B07170SLN1956.htm 1956-7-17 box score from Retrosheet.org]</ref> Although he had some successes, Peete struggled at the Major League level, collecting only ten [[hit (baseball)|hits]] in 52 [[at bats]] with two [[double (baseball)|doubles]] and two [[triple (baseball)|triples]]. He was sent back to Omaha after his last MLB appearance, August 16, when he went hitless in three at bats against [[Lew Burdette]] of the [[Atlanta Braves|Milwaukee Braves]].<ref>[http://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/1956/B08160SLN1956.htm 1956-8-16 box score from Retrosheet.org]</ref>
Called up to the Cardinals in July, Peete made his debut July 17 in a home game against the [[Pittsburgh Pirates]]. [[Pinch hitter|Pinch hitting]] for veteran [[Hank Sauer]], he drew a [[base on balls]] and stayed in the game to play center field, and later grounded into a [[double play]] in a 4–2 Cardinal loss.<ref>[http://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/1956/B07170SLN1956.htm 1956-7-17 box score from Retrosheet.org]</ref> Although he had some successes, Peete struggled at the Major League level, collecting only ten [[hit (baseball)|hits]] in 52 [[at bats]] with two [[double (baseball)|doubles]] and two [[triple (baseball)|triples]]. He was sent back to Omaha after his last MLB appearance, August 16, when he went hitless in three at bats against [[Lew Burdette]] of the [[Atlanta Braves|Milwaukee Braves]].<ref>[http://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/1956/B08160SLN1956.htm 1956-8-16 box score from Retrosheet.org]</ref>


Despite the disappointing results from his midseason callup, Peete was projected as a prime candidate for the Redbirds' 1957 centerfielder job; incumbent [[Bobby Del Greco]] had batted only .215 during 1956. Had he won the job, he would have been the Cardinals' first African-American regular starting player.<ref name="SABR-CP"/> To gain more experience, Peete decided to play winter baseball. After drawing his release from a [[Cuba|Cuban]] team because of a slow start, he caught on with the [[Valencia, Venezuela|Valencia]] club in the Venezuelan league. He was flying with his family to report to Valencia when the airliner they were riding in crashed into Avila Mountain, near Caracas, during a rainstorm — killing all aboard. Charlie Peete was 27 years of age.
Despite the disappointing results from his midseason callup, Peete was projected as a prime candidate for the Redbirds' 1957 centerfielder job; incumbent [[Bobby Del Greco]] had batted only .215 during 1956. Had he won the job, he would have been the Cardinals' first African-American regular starting player.<ref name="SABR-CP"/> To gain more experience, Peete decided to play winter baseball. After drawing his release from a [[Cuba|Cuban]] team because of a slow start, he joined the [[Valencia, Venezuela|Valencia]] club in the Venezuelan league. He was flying with his family to report to Valencia when the airliner they were riding in crashed into Avila Mountain, near Caracas, during a rainstorm — killing all aboard. Charlie Peete was 27 years of age.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 14:45, 29 June 2011

Charlie Peete
Centerfielder
Born: (1929-02-22)February 22, 1929
Franklin, Virginia
Died: November 27, 1956(1956-11-27) (aged 27)
Caracas, Venezuela
Batted: Left
Threw: Right
debut
July 17, 1956, for the St. Louis Cardinals
Last appearance
August 16, 1956, for the St. Louis Cardinals
Career statistics
Batting average.192
Home runs0
Runs batted in6
Teams

Charles Peete (February 22, 1929 — November 27, 1956) was an American professional baseball player. The reigning 1956 batting average champion of the Triple-A American Association who received a one-month, 23-game trial with the 1956 St. Louis Cardinals of Major League Baseball, Peete was projected by some as the leading candidate to be the Cardinals' 1957 starting center fielder.[1] But he was killed in a commercial airplane crash near the Caracas, Venezuela, airport while flying to his winter-league baseball team in late November of 1956; his wife, Nettie, and their three children were also among the 25 victims of the crash.[2]

Nicknamed "Mule," Peete stood 5 feet 9 inches (1.75 m) tall, weighed 190 pounds (86 kg), batted left-handed and threw right-handed. The native of Franklin, Virginia, began his professional career in the Negro leagues with the Indianapolis Clowns and played semi-professional baseball in Canada before signing with the unaffiliated Portsmouth, Virginia, Merrimacks of the mid-level, Class B Piedmont League in 1953; Peete was the first African-American to play in that league since the baseball color line was broken in 1946.[1] He batted .275 in 125 games played and impressed the Cardinals, who drafted him into their organization that offseason and assigned him to their Lynchburg Cardinals farm team, also in the Piedmont League, for 1954. Peete batted .311 with 17 home runs and was named to the PL all-star team. He was promoted three levels to Triple-A for 1955 and batted .310 in a season split between the Cardinals' two top farm teams, the Rochester Red Wings and Omaha Cardinals. Then came his stellar campaign for the 1956 Omaha Cardinals, as he batted a league-best .350 with 16 home runs and 63 runs batted in in 116 games.[3]

Called up to the Cardinals in July, Peete made his debut July 17 in a home game against the Pittsburgh Pirates. Pinch hitting for veteran Hank Sauer, he drew a base on balls and stayed in the game to play center field, and later grounded into a double play in a 4–2 Cardinal loss.[4] Although he had some successes, Peete struggled at the Major League level, collecting only ten hits in 52 at bats with two doubles and two triples. He was sent back to Omaha after his last MLB appearance, August 16, when he went hitless in three at bats against Lew Burdette of the Milwaukee Braves.[5]

Despite the disappointing results from his midseason callup, Peete was projected as a prime candidate for the Redbirds' 1957 centerfielder job; incumbent Bobby Del Greco had batted only .215 during 1956. Had he won the job, he would have been the Cardinals' first African-American regular starting player.[1] To gain more experience, Peete decided to play winter baseball. After drawing his release from a Cuban team because of a slow start, he joined the Valencia club in the Venezuelan league. He was flying with his family to report to Valencia when the airliner they were riding in crashed into Avila Mountain, near Caracas, during a rainstorm — killing all aboard. Charlie Peete was 27 years of age.

References