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A leading star in the North Dakota baseball drama at
the turn of the century when Griggs County dominated state semi-pro baseball
play was W. D. (Billy) Sinclair, retired Hannaford Postmaster and brother of
former Congressman James Sinclair. The
eyes of baseball fans of that period were directed first on Cooperstown, then on
Hannaford. Sinclair played with
both clubs during their heyday. Billy's active playing years number 26, while he
played occasionally for 15 years thereafter.
His last baseball appearance was at Red Willow Lake in 1933, when he
pitched three innings with an old timers team mustered together by Irish
Peterson, Binford's baseball veteran. The highlight of this thrill-studded baseball career
was an iron man stunt performed in 1907, in Cooperstown when Sinclair pitched
Hannaford to a 2-1 victory over Binford, another strong Griggs baseball center
of the period, in 22 innings. Gulliver
Peterson was Binford's mounds-man. Sinclair
allowed only six hits. Hannaford
got 16, but sensational fielding by Adolph Melgard, Binford shortstop, prolonged
the game time and again. On another
occasion, in 1904, he pitched a full game for Litchville against Marion, and
after 15 minutes intermission, he took the mound for the same team against
LaMoure in another nine-inning encounter. Litchville
won both contests. Dilly was the youngest of four brothers, all of whom,
including James, performed on the Cooperstown and Hannaford teams at one time or
another. The Sinclair family
settled in Bald Hill Township, near Cooperstown in 1884, and the next year a
good, sod-peeled diamond was laid out in the center of the community near the
Sinclair farm by these early baseball enthusiasts. After these farm youths had developed a strong team,
Cooperstown businessmen heard of the promising farm team and persuaded the group
to represent that city in baseball campaigns. Billy made his debut with the Cooperstown club in
1892, when a youth weighing only 114 pounds.
During the following 12 years, he didn't miss a game for Cooperstown,
playing third, shortstop and doing some pitching. The 1900 and 1901, Cooperstown aggregations are acclaimed by
old-timers the best the state had at that period. The lineup, coached by Attorney A. M. Baldwin, boasted an
excellent battery in Chester Hoar and Tamber.
Field trips to Minnesota baseball centers of the period, Litchfield and
Willmar, were taken when amateur teams in the state objected to scheduling games
with a team that they could not defeat. Fargo,
Valley City and Jamestown clubs were shut out repeatedly.
In fact, the club members would make wagers that they would shut out an
opposing team as a method of making the game interesting.
In 1904 Sinclair moved to Hannaford and began
campaigning for that city's club. Hannaford
had its best team in 1907, when their aggregation of fast fielders and heavy
stickers proved practically unbeatable. Members
of that team included, in addition to Sinclair, Dick Leiser of Colgate, Henry
Westrum of Bowbells, Eli Parker of Minneapolis and Attorney John Sad of Valley
City. Sinclair remarked about the enthusiasm displayed by
old time fans and players toward the national pasttime.
In 1905, he played third for Portal against Minot in a game which would
net the winner $1,000. Practically the entire population of Portal came to Minot by
special train to witness the game. Enthusiasm
at game time was reflected in betting and bonuses.
Gilmore, the Portal hurler, had $165 in his baseball uniform at the end
of the game, all of which had been handed him for strikeouts.
Portal won 6-3. Constant practice and rigid training are attributed
by Sinclair as the reason for his long baseball career.
During the best years of his playing days, he never had a sore arm or was
out of condition to take his pitching turn or handle an infield assignment. "I have advised many of our present promising
young throwers of the need of sufficient practice while young to avert possible
soreness and later injury, but they simply will not do the necessary work."
He says the American Legion through its junior baseball program is doing much to
provide this training. Cap Anson, Chicago first baseman, was Sinclair's
baseball idol. In addition to his baseball activities, Sinclair was
quite some bicycle racer. He
defeated Olof B. Holten, now of the naturalization department at St. Paul, for
the North Dakota championship in a five mile race at Jamestown in 1897. Source: Hannaford
Area History North Dakota Centennial 1889 - 1989 Page
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