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Enos Slaughter


Enos Slaughter (April 27, 1916 – August 12, 2002) was an American professional baseball right fielder who played 19 seasons in Major League Baseball, primarily for the St. Louis Cardinals from 1938 to 1950 and again from 1953 to 1955.
Slaughter compiled a .300 career batting average with 2,383 hits, 169 home runs, and 1,304 runs batted in, earning selection to 10 All-Star Games and leading the National League in RBIs with 130 in 1946.
Renowned for his aggressive base-running and determination, he delivered a pivotal moment in the 1946 World Series by scoring from first base on a single in Game 7, securing a Cardinals victory over the Boston Red Sox, and contributed to four championships overall—two with St. Louis (1942, 1946) and two with the New York Yankees (1956, 1958).
Inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1985, Slaughter exemplified hard-nosed play during an era of intense competition, including service interruptions for World War II.

Early Life

Upbringing and Family Background

Enos Bradsher Slaughter was born on April 27, 1916, near Roxboro in , to Slaughter, a tobacco farmer, and Lonie Frances Gentry Slaughter. He was the third of six children in the family, raised on a 90-acre in the rural community surrounding Roxboro, where the family's livelihood depended on tobacco cultivation and general farming. Slaughter's early years involved manual labor on the , which contributed to his physical development and , and he earned the nickname "Country" reflecting his rural origins. He first learned to play informally on a neighboring , using makeshift fields amid the agricultural .

Professional Career

Minor League Development

Slaughter signed with the St. Louis Cardinals as an amateur free agent in 1935 following a recommendation from scout Fred Haney to farm director Oliver French, who granted him a 10-day tryout. He began his professional career that year with the Class D Martinsville Manufacturers in the Bi-State League, appearing in 109 games with a .273 batting average, 115 hits, 18 home runs, and a .512 slugging percentage. In 1936, Slaughter advanced to the Class B Columbus Red Birds of the , where he played 151 games, batting .325 with 185 hits, 31 doubles, 20 triples, 9 home runs, and 118 RBIs, while posting a .497 and .394 . Under coaching from Eddie Dyer and advice from Billy Southworth to run on his toes, he improved his speed and baserunning. Slaughter's breakthrough came in 1937 with the Class AA Columbus Red Birds in the American Association, managed by , who nicknamed him "" for his rural roots and folksy demeanor. In 154 games, he batted .382 with 245 hits, 42 doubles, 13 triples, 26 home runs, and 122 RBIs, achieving a .609 and .444 , which positioned him as a top prospect. Branch Rickey, the Cardinals' general manager, selected Slaughter for promotion to the major leagues in over other candidates like Johnny Rizzo, citing his all-around skills despite Rizzo's slightly higher of .358. This rapid ascent from Class D to the majors in three seasons highlighted Slaughter's hitting prowess, power, and fielding ability in right field, establishing him as a key part of the Cardinals' farm system development under Rickey's renowned structure.

Major League Achievements and World Series Successes


Enos Slaughter made his Major League Baseball debut with the St. Louis Cardinals on April 19, 1938, establishing himself as a reliable right fielder known for his consistent hitting and aggressive baserunning. Over 19 seasons, primarily with the Cardinals and later the New York Yankees, he compiled a .300 batting average, 2,383 hits, 169 home runs, 1,304 RBIs, and 1,247 runs scored across 2,380 games. His career highlights included 10 All-Star selections from 1941–1942 and 1946–1953, along with leading the National League in hits (188), triples (17), and total bases (292) in 1942, and RBIs (130) in 1946.
Slaughter's postseason prowess contributed to four World Series titles: two with the Cardinals in 1942 and 1946, and two with the Yankees in 1956 and 1958. In the against the Yankees, he batted .263 with 5 hits in 19 at-bats, including one , helping win in five games. His most iconic moment came in the versus the Red Sox, where he hit .320 (8-for-25) with one double, one triple, and one ; in Game 7 on October 15, 1946, Slaughter's "Mad Dash" from first base on Harry Walker's single in the eighth inning evaded the relay throw to score the decisive run in a 4-3 victory, clinching the championship. With the Yankees, Slaughter batted .350 (7-for-20) in the against the , including a , en route to a seven-game triumph that featured in Game 5. Although the Yankees lost the 1957 series to the Milwaukee Braves (.250 average in 12 at-bats), Slaughter appeared in the 1958 , which New York won in seven games despite his limited .000 performance in 3 at-bats. Across five appearances, he maintained a .291 with 23 hits in 79 at-bats, three s, and strong defense (.979 fielding percentage).
YearTeamSeries OpponentOutcomeABHBANotable
1942CardinalsYankeesWon (4-1)195.2631 HR
1946CardinalsRed SoxWon (4-3)258.320Mad Dash Game 7
1956YankeesDodgersWon (4-3)207.3501 HR
1957YankeesBravesLost (3-4)123.250-
1958YankeesBravesWon (4-3)30.000Limited role

Military Service Interruption

Slaughter enlisted in the United States Army Air Forces in August 1942, following the St. Louis Cardinals' victory, but deferred reporting for training until after the postseason. His service officially interrupted his career from the 1943 through 1945 seasons, during which he was initially stationed at Jefferson Barracks in before transferring to March Field in . There, as a , he primarily taught to recruits and played on the base's baseball team, participating in exhibitions against other military and professional squads, though he saw no overseas combat duty. The three-year hiatus deprived Slaughter of approximately 400-500 at-bats in his mid-20s prime, a period when he had established himself as a .300-hitting with speed and power for the Cardinals. He received an honorable on March 1, 1946, allowing his return to the Cardinals that spring. In his first full season back, Slaughter posted a .323 with 130 —leading the —and contributed to the Cardinals' pennant-winning campaign, demonstrating minimal long-term disruption from the interruption.

Controversies

Alleged Racial Incidents and Interactions with Jackie Robinson

On August 20, 1947, during an 11th-inning play in a St. Louis Cardinals-Brooklyn Dodgers game at , Enos Slaughter hit a ground ball to , who fielded it and stepped on the bag for the out; Slaughter's cleats caught Robinson's right foot, which was positioned against the base rather than on it. Robinson hopped briefly in pain but remained in the game, which the Cardinals won 3-2 in 12 innings, and he reported no lasting injury. Contemporary press accounts, including from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, noted crowd boos directed at Slaughter and debate among sportswriters over whether the contact was intentional, with Dodgers second baseman claiming it resembled prior spiking incidents against Robinson. Slaughter immediately denied deliberate intent, stating he had "never deliberately spiked anyone in my life," attributing it to his aggressive base-running style. Robinson initially remarked that he had given Slaughter "plenty of room," but in his 1972 autobiography I Never Had It Made, he described the spiking as purposeful. The incident has been cited in historical accounts as emblematic of racial hostility toward Robinson's integration of , given Slaughter's Southern background and the Cardinals' team context, though no called it malicious, and Robinson continued playing without missing s that season. Slaughter reiterated his denial of racial motivation in , including a 1985 interview where he affirmed, "I never intentionally spiked and I never intentionally spiked anybody," while describing Robinson as a friend and competitor. historians, such as those from the , note the play's ambiguity, contrasting it with Slaughter's reputation for hard-nosed play rather than conclusive evidence of targeted racism. Earlier in 1947, Slaughter was accused of leading a faction of Cardinals players, including outfielder Terry Moore, in threatening a team or walkout against playing the Dodgers due to Robinson's presence, reportedly in May during a series at . These claims stem from contemporaneous rumors and later recollections, including assertions that up to 14 Cardinals expressed unwillingness to compete, prompting intervention by Commissioner and Cardinals owner Sam Breadon to avert action. Slaughter, as a vocal team leader from , was specifically named in some accounts as opposing , aligning with broader Southern resistance in . However, for such a coordinated Cardinals effort remains anecdotal and contested; research by the describes league-wide rumors as largely mythical with flimsy primary sourcing, though isolated player sentiments like those attributed to Slaughter may reflect genuine without escalating to organized refusal. No public denial from Slaughter on the boycott allegations appears in verified records, and the Cardinals ultimately played the Dodgers without incident that season.

Post-Playing Career

Coaching, Managing, and Scouting Roles

Following his retirement in 1959, Slaughter served as player-manager of the Triple-A Buffs, a Cubs affiliate in the American Association, during the 1960 season. He appeared in 40 games, batting .289, while guiding the team to an 83-71 record and a third-place finish. In 1961, Slaughter managed the Class D Raleigh Capitals of the , a farm club, though specific win-loss records for that season remain sparsely documented in available records. Slaughter then transitioned to collegiate coaching, taking over as head baseball coach at Duke University in 1971 after succeeding Tom Butters. He held the position through 1977, compiling an overall record of 68 wins and 120 losses over seven seasons in the Atlantic Coast Conference. During this period, Slaughter emphasized fundamentals and hustle, drawing from his professional experience, though the Blue Devils struggled competitively, finishing with losing records annually. No notable scouting roles are recorded in his post-playing career.

Personal Life

Family and Relationships

Enos Bradsher Slaughter was born on April 27, 1916, in , to Zadok Slaughter and Lonie Gentry Slaughter, as the third of six children in a farming family. His siblings included four brothers—Daniel Francis (1910–2002), Howard G. (1911–1990), William Carlton (1913–1951), and —and one sister, (1918–2019). The Slaughter family's rural upbringing emphasized physical labor, which Slaughter later credited for building his athletic durability. Slaughter married five times, with each marriage ending in divorce. His first marriage was to Hughle Isabelle Powell on January 5, 1935, in Halifax, Virginia. Subsequent wives included Josephine Antoinette Begonia, Mary Peterson Walker, Ruth Darlington Rohleder, and Helen Spiker, the last of whom he wed in 1955. He fathered four daughters: Gaye Currier, Sharon Slaughter, Rhonda Slaughter Underwood, and Patricia Slaughter. At the time of his death in 2002, Slaughter was survived by his daughters and several grandchildren, though no sons were reported.

Character Traits and Public Views

Enos Slaughter was widely regarded for his relentless hustle and aggressive playing style, traits that defined his 19-season career and earned him admiration from teammates and opponents alike. Described as a player who approached every game with the intensity of it being his last, Slaughter's farm-boy roots in , instilled a that translated to exceptional base-running and fielding vigor, exemplified by his famous "Mad Dash" home run in Game 7 of the on October 15, 1946. His nickname "" reflected this rural tenacity, and he often credited his physical conditioning to childhood farm labor, which built the stamina for his non-stop effort. Contemporaries and biographers portrayed Slaughter as fiercely competitive and tenacious, with a reputation for "eye-for-an-eye" retaliation on the field, including sharp spikes and verbal confrontations that underscored his combative nature. This intensity sometimes manifested as brashness or surliness, polarizing public and media perceptions; while fans of the St. Louis Cardinals celebrated his loyalty and championship grit—contributing to four titles—critics viewed his demeanor as overly ruthless or intimidating. Slaughter himself emphasized a deep love for as essential to success, stating, "To be a big league ball player, you have to love the game," a sentiment that aligned with his enduring commitment despite advancing age and career trades. In later reflections, Slaughter's public image blended reverence for his hustling archetype with scrutiny over his interpersonal style, yet his Hall of Fame induction on March 6, 1985, by the Veterans Committee affirmed a legacy rooted in dedication over personal likability. Teammates like highlighted his team-first ethos, while broader views acknowledged how his unyielding competitiveness—averaging 150 games per season in his prime—set him apart as an archetype of old-school professionalism, uncompromised by modern sentiments.

Final Years and Death

Health Issues and Passing

In June 2002, Slaughter was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, a cancer of the , and began combined and treatments. He was hospitalized at Duke University Medical Center in , on July 25, 2002, where he underwent emergency colon surgery. Four days later, on July 29, he had a second procedure to repair perforated stomach ulcers. Slaughter remained in intensive care following the surgeries, succumbing to complications from them on August 12, 2002, at 12:44 a.m., at the age of 86. His death was attributed primarily to the surgical aftermath rather than the itself, though the cancer had necessitated aggressive interventions in his final weeks. No prior major chronic health issues were publicly detailed in his post-retirement decades, during which he maintained an active including and until his late 70s.

Legacy and Honors

Statistical Record and Playing Style


Enos Slaughter recorded a across 19 seasons from 1938 to 1959, amassing 2,383 hits, 413 doubles, 148 triples, 169 home runs, and 1,304 runs batted in over 2,380 games played primarily with the St. Louis Cardinals. His stood at .382, with 1,018 walks drawn and 538 strikeouts, reflecting disciplined plate appearances and contact-oriented hitting. Slaughter stole 71 bases while being caught 15 times, underscoring early-career speed that complemented his extra-base production.
In standout seasons, he led the with 188 hits and a .318 average in 1942, alongside 19 , and topped with 130 in 1946. His peak batting year came in 1949 at .336, placing third league-wide, while tying for the lead with 13. Defensively as a , Slaughter paced NL outfielders with 23 assists in 1946, leveraging a strong arm to turn potential hits into outs. Slaughter's playing style emphasized aggressive hustle and tenacity, earning him selection to 10 All-Star Games, including eight consecutive from 1946 to 1953. Known for line-drive hitting with gap power rather than uppercut swings for distance, he generated consistent extra-base hits through precise contact and speed on the bases. His relentless pursuit, exemplified by the "mad dash" scoring from first on a double to clinch Game 7 of the , defined his reputation as a competitor managers like lauded for doing "anything to beat you." This all-out effort extended to fielding, where his solid positioning and throwing accuracy supported team defenses during four appearances.

Awards, Hall of Fame Induction, and Long-Term Impact

Slaughter was selected to the ten times, including eight consecutive appearances from 1946 through 1953. He contributed to four championships, winning with the Cardinals in 1942 and 1946, and with the New York Yankees in 1956 after a mid-season trade. The Cardinals retired his uniform number 9 on September 6, 1996, honoring his franchise records in games played (1,999) and at-bats (7,351) at the time of his departure in 1950. Slaughter's signature moment, the "Mad Dash" in Game 7 of the on October 15, exemplified his aggressive base-running; he scored from first base on a single by , securing a 4-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox and clinching the Cardinals' third title in five years. This play, executed with a head-first slide past catcher amid a disputed call on Enos Pesky's throw, became an enduring symbol of hustle and clutch performance in lore. In 1985, Slaughter was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee on the first ballot, receiving the necessary 75% support alongside inductees , , and ; his plaque cites a .300 career , 2,383 , and 1,696 runs batted in over 19 seasons. The induction, held July 28 in , recognized his consistent line-drive hitting, defensive prowess in right field (1,063 putouts with only 33 errors), and reputation for relentless effort, as noted by contemporaries like who praised his willingness to "do anything to beat you." Slaughter's long-term impact endures through his embodiment of fundamental intensity, influencing generations of players to prioritize speed and smart aggression over in an transitioning from dead-ball tactics. His career stats—ranking him among the top-10 Cardinals in hits (1,817), doubles (281), and RBIs (1,078) during his primary tenure—cemented the "Country Slaughter" archetype of the durable, rural-bred competitor who thrived in high-stakes games. Post-induction, his legacy was further honored with selection to the Cardinals Hall of Fame Class of 2014, affirming his foundational role in the franchise's mid-20th-century dynasty despite later controversies.

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