Dummy
Hoy by Ralph Berger
Hoy would have been an exceptional man with or
without his handicap. After his baseball career was over, he used his celebrity
status to foster the needs and concerns of the deaf. He had a zest for life and
once walked 72 blocks at the age of 80 to see his son, Judge Carson Hoy preside
in court. At that advanced age he also danced the Charleston and pruned trees
on his farm.
William Ellsworth Hoy
was born in Houcktown, Ohio, on May 23, 1862. His parents, Rebecca Hoffman and
Jacob Hoy, were of English-German and Scottish stock and had a farm in
Houcktown. William had three brothers, Smith, Frank, and John, as well as
sister Ora. Contracting meningitis when he was three years old left William
deaf and mute. Hoy entered the Ohio School for the Deaf in 1872, graduating in
1879. Highly intelligent and hardworking, he was valedictorian of his high
school class. In those days many deaf people were either employed or
self-employed as shoemakers or shoe repair people. Hoy was no exception, and in
his early twenties opened his own shoe shop. During the summer in his hometown
many of the rural people went barefoot. Business would grind almost to a halt
then, and Dummy would play ball outside his shop with the local kids. One day a
man passed by and saw Dummy playing. He was impressed but moved on when he
found out Dummy was deaf. The man returned the next day, however, and asked Hoy
if he would be interested in playing on the Kenton, Ohio, team against its
bitter rival Urbana. Hoy accepted the invitation. Billy Hart, the Urbana
pitcher, was a professional, but Dummy had no trouble solving him for some base
hits. The following day Dummy closed his shop and set out for the Northwest
League in search of starting a professional baseball career. Some teams turned
him down because of his handicap, but he caught on with Oshkosh in Wisconsin in
1886. Hoy was a smart, fast and alert ballplayer who put together arguably
"the greatest career of any seriously handicapped player" (Shatzkin
and Charlton, 494).
Hoy began his major
league career in 1888 with Washington of the National League. A left-handed
batter and right-handed thrower, he played with Buffalo, St. Louis, Cincinnati
and Louisville. When Hoy joined the Washington ballclub, he posted a statement
on the clubhouse wall: "Being totally deaf as you know and some of my
teammates being unacquainted with my play, I think it is timely to bring about
an understanding between myself, the left fielder, the shortstop and the second
baseman and the right fielder. The main point is to avoid possible collisions
with any of these four who surround me when in the field going for a fly ball.
Whenever I take a fly ball I always yell I'll take it--the same as I have been
doing for many seasons, and of course the other fielders let me take it.
Whenever you don't hear me yell, it is understood I am not after the ball, and
they govern themselves accordingly." Hoy's yell was actually a squeak. Hoy
was with Buffalo in the Players League in 1890, with the St. Louis team of the
American Association in 1891, then back with Washington in the National League
in 1892 and 1893. He moved on to Cincinnati of the National League in 1894,
where he stayed until going to Louisville of the National League in 1898 and
1899. He then played for Chicago of the American League in 1900 and 1901. He
spent one more season with Cincinnati in 1902 and finally ended his baseball
career with Los Angeles of the Pacific Coast League in 1903. Hoy's moving
around made him one of 29 players to play in four major leagues.
All told, Hoy played in
1796 games with an average of .287 that included 2004 hits, 1426 runs, 40
homers and 726 runs batted in. Possessing great speed, he is credited with 597
steals. However, it is difficult to compare him to modern-day players because
during his time going from first to third or second to home on a single was
considered a steal. This rule was in effect from 1886 to the end of the 1897
season. Nevertheless, Hoy's ability to take the extra base shows he was an
outstanding runner. A small man standing only 5' 4" inches tall and never
weighing more than 150 pounds, he gave all he had in his small stature. Hoy is
one of three outfielders to throw out three base runners at home plate in one
game. On June 19, 1889, he threw perfect strikes to catcher Connie Mack to
throw out runners attempting to score from second base. In 1900 with the White
Sox, Hoy had 45 assists. He has a career mark of 328 assists. (See Note)
Tommy Leach, Hoy's
roommate in 1899, said, "We got to be good friends. He was a real fine
ballplayer. When you played with him in the outfield, the thing was that you
never called for a ball. You listened for him and if he made this little
squeaky sound, that meant he was going to take it." Leach went on to say,
"We hardly ever had to use our fingers to talk, though most of the fellows
did learn the sign language, so that when we got confused or something we could
straighten it out with our hands."
Some historians credit
Hoy with umpires using hand signals for balls and strikes and safe and out
calls, but their view is open to question. Bill Deane challenges that claim.
Deane said, "We can find no contemporary articles about Hoy, or even any
written while he was alive, that claim a connection between Hoy and the umpire's
hand signals--much less any claim by Hoy himself." Bill Klem, a
showboating umpire who began his umpiring career two years after Hoy retired,
is officially credited with inventing hand signals as noted on his Hall of Fame
plaque.
Hoy was directly involved
in a funny situation when he was with the Washington club. The team was
scheduled to play an exhibition game in Paterson, New Jersey, but the traveling
secretary forgot to make a special note of it to Hoy. When the team was rounded
up for the train trip to Paterson, Dummy was among the missing. A few players
went up to his room to see what was the matter. Loud knocking and raised
voices, of course, were of no avail. One little guy tried to squeeze inside the
transom but couldn't get through. The players tried to squeeze a bellboy over
the transom, but he was too big to hoist over. Then the players threw several
plugs of tobacco at Hoy, hitting him in the shoulder but also to no avail. A
pack of cards went into effect as they sailed all around Hoy. Still no
response. Finally, a set of keys was sent through the transom tied to a bed
sheet and dragged across Hoy until it caught in his night shirt whereupon he
sleepily awoke to find a bunch of playing cards lying all over him. Thinking
his mates were playing a trick on him, he quickly grabbed a pitcher of water
and flung it at the heads peeping at him from the transom. Apologies and
explanations followed, but from then on Hoy was always informed of any changes
that were to occur.
A historic moment came
about on May 26, 1902, when Luther Haden "Dummy" Taylor, pitching for
the Giants, faced Dummy Hoy of the Cincinnati Reds. When Hoy came to bat for
the first time, he greeted Taylor by hand signing, "I'm glad to see
you!"--and then cracked a single to center. Forty years later the two met
in Toledo during the Ohio State Deaf Softball Tournament held on Labor Day
Weekend in 1942. They were batterymates (Taylor pitching and Hoy catching). At
the time Taylor was 66 and Hoy 80.
On October 26, 1898, Hoy
married Anna Maria Lowry, who was also deaf. Anna Maria became a prominent
teacher of the deaf in Ohio. They raised three children, Carson, Carmen and
Clover. Two others died during childbirth. A third succumbed to the Spanish
flu. Carson became a lawyer and a jurist. Carmen and Clover became
schoolteachers.
A caring human being,
Hoy took on the responsibility of raising his nephew, whose mother had passed
away and whose father was in bad health. Ora Hoy had married Elmer Helms. The
marriage produced a son, Paul Hoy Helms, who would become the founder and
sponsor of the Helms Athletic Foundation and Helms Hall, in Los Angeles. The
family took care of young Paul, and Dummy Hoy lent him money for his education.
Paul graduated from Syracuse University in 1912 and settled in California,
where he became a millionaire through wise investments; in addition, he founded
the Helms Bakery, which financed the Olympic Committee for the United States in
1932 and 1936.
After his retirement
from baseball Hoy bought a farm in Mount Healthy, Ohio, where he succeeded as a
dairy farmer. He also worked for a time as a personnel director for the
Goodyear Tire Company. When all his children had reached adulthood, he sold the
farm and made a connection with a book firm and remained there until he was 75.
After retiring from business, he continued his involvement in baseball. He
received a silver pass from both the American and National League presidents
and used it frequently. He never liked to go to opening day games because he
felt there was too much of a crowd. He also attended five or six meetings a
year of the old timers club. In 1951 Hoy became the first deaf athlete elected
into the American Athletic Association of the Deaf Hall of Fame. A baseball
field at Gallaudet University in Washington, DC, was named for him.
Anna Maria died after
several months of illness on September 24, 1951, at age 75.
There has been a push by
many people to have Dummy Hoy elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in
Cooperstown, but all attempts have failed. The 19th century figure picked for
the Hall in 1999 was Frank Selee, the manager of the Oshkosh team where Hoy got
his start in baseball. In 2000 Bid McPhee was the 19th century player chosen
despite the push for Hoy. Hoy supporters asked, "What's McPhee have that
Hoy doesn't?" Since 1991, the USA Deaf Sports Federation has been lobbying
to get Hoy into the Hall of Fame. Joan Sampson, Hoy's granddaughter living in
Cincinnati, said, "I'm sure my grandfather would love to be in
Cooperstown. He was very proud of his career." But she felt his chances of
entering the Hall were very slim. However, in 1941 Hoy was inducted into the
Louisville Colonels Hall of Fame. Hoy has also been honored by the Ohio School
for the Deaf, Hancock County Sports, Ohio Baseball, "Stars in Their
Time," the Cincinnati Reds, and the Baseball Reliquary's Shrine of the
Eternals.
In 1961 Hoy, now 99,
threw out the ceremonial first pitch before game three of the World Series
between the Reds and the Yankees in Cincinnati. He died on December 15, 1961.
Hoy by living to the age of 99 was a bridge between the old game and the modern
one. He was living proof of how the game had changed over the years. Hoy set
the record at the time for the oldest living ex-major leaguer. Surviving him
were son Carson, daughter Clover Skaggs of Sacramento, seven grandchildren and
eight great-grandchildren. Two of the grandchildren are Judson Hoy, a
Cincinnati lawyer, and Bruce Hoy, a Hollywood and New York entertainer.
Hoy never sought the
limelight and did not look for praise. However, in December of 1987, a play
called The Signal Season of Dummy Hoy was produced telling of the 1886 season
when hand signals were supposedly developed to aid Hoy. The play received mixed
reviews.
William Ellsworth Hoy
overcame his handicap not only in a successful baseball career but also as an
ordinary citizen. He was admired both as a hero and as a solid citizen. Hoy was
truly a man for all seasons.
Note
Total Baseball,
Baseball-Reference.com, and The Ballplayers differ slightly on Hoy's career
totals. Total Baseball claims 2048 hits, Baseball-Reference says 2044, and The
Ballplayers says 2054. These sources also differ on runs, RBI, batting average,
and steals. While The Ballplayers claims Hoy stood 5'4" and weighed 148 pounds,
Total Baseball lists Hoy at 5'6" and 160 pounds.
Sources
Appendices B
"Decisions of the Special Baseball Records Committee" and C
"Major Changes in Playing Rules and Scoring Rules." The Baseball Encyclopedia. 10th ed. New York: Macmillan, 1996.
Chase, Dennis T.
"Tom." "Hoy, William Ellsworth 'Dummy.'" Biographical Dictionary of American
Sports: Baseball. David L. Porter,
ed. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 2000.
Dummy Hoy files at the
National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum at Cooperstown, New York.
The Dummy Hoy Homeplate,
Online Website.
New York Times, Obituary, December 15, 1961.
Ritter, Lawrence S. The Glory of Their Times: The Story of
the Early Days of Baseball Told by the Men Who Played It. New York: Macmillan, 1966.
Shatzkin,
Mike, and Jim Charlton. The
Ballplayers. New York: William
Morrow, 1990.
Source:
http://bioproj.sabr.org/bioproj.cfm?a=v&bid=832&pid=0
(Permission
obtained)