William Veeck Sr.

American baseball executive

William Louis Veeck Sr. (January 20, 1876 – October 5, 1933) was an American sportswriter and baseball executive. He was president of the Chicago Cubs from 1919 to his death in October, 1933. Under Veeck's leadership, the Cubs won two pennants, in 1929 and 1932.

Veeck was a Chicago American sportswriter working under the pseudonym Bill Bailey before Cubs owner William Wrigley Jr. hired him to be vice-president of the baseball club in 1917.[1] Having won the National League pennant in 1918, Wrigley promoted him to president of the club in July 1919. Under Veeck's watch, Wrigley Field began taking on its present look, with ivy-covered outfield walls and concrete bleachers in the outfield.

Veeck resided in the Chicago suburb of Hinsdale, Illinois. He married Grace Greenwood DeForest in 1900, who died in 1964. They had three children: Maurice, who died at age 8; Margaret Ann Veeck Krehbiel, and William Louis Veeck Jr., also known as Bill Veeck. Bill owned the Chicago White Sox and Cleveland Indians.

Veeck Sr. is buried at the Bronswood Cemetery in Oak Brook, Illinois.

References

  1. ^ Boxerman, Burton A. & Boxerman, Benita W. Ebbets to Veeck to Busch: Eight Owners Who Shaped Baseball. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, Inc., 2003. Retrieved October 8, 2021

Other sources

  • Bill Veeck: Baseball genius
  • Jack Bales, "Wrigley Jr. & Veeck Sr." WrigleyIvy.com.
  • Jack Bales, "Baseball's First Bill Veeck," The Baseball Research Journal 42, no. 2 (Fall 2013): 7–16.
  • Jack Bales, "'It Was His Fairness That Caught Wrigley’s Eye': William L. Veeck’s Journalism Career and His Hiring by the Chicago Cubs,” Nine: A Journal of Baseball History and Culture 20, no. 2 (Spring 2012): 1–14.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Chicago Cubs presidents
  • Hulbert
  • Spalding
  • Addison
  • Hart
  • Murphy
  • Thomas
  • Weeghman
  • Mitchell
  • Veeck
  • P. Wrigley
  • B. Wrigley
  • Kennedy
  • Hagenah
  • McKenna
  • Finks
  • Green
  • Grenesko
  • MacPhail
  • McDonough
  • Kenney
  • Epstein
  • Hoyer


Stub icon

This biographical article relating to a baseball executive is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e