Harry Simpson
Harry Leon "Suitcase" Simpson (December 3, 1925 – April 3, 1979) was an American professional baseball player who primarily served as an outfielder and first baseman in Major League Baseball (MLB) during the 1950s.[1][2] Born in Atlanta, Georgia, and raised in Dalton, Georgia, Simpson transitioned from the Negro National League to the majors amid baseball's integration era.[3][4] Simpson began his professional career with the Philadelphia Stars of the Negro National League from 1946 to 1948 before signing with the Cleveland Indians organization in 1950.[3] He debuted in MLB with the Indians on April 21, 1951, and that season formed part of the first all-black outfield in major league history alongside Larry Doby and Al Smith.[3] Over eight seasons, he played for the Indians (1951–1953), Kansas City Athletics (1955–1957), New York Yankees (1957–1958), Pittsburgh Pirates (1958), and Chicago White Sox (1959), contributing to the Yankees' 1958 American League pennant.[1] In 888 games, Simpson compiled a .266 batting average, 76 home runs, and 434 runs batted in, known for his solid defense and power from the left side of the plate.[2][3] After retiring from MLB in 1959, Simpson played briefly in the minor leagues, including for the San Diego Padres, and worked at the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company in Akron, Ohio, where he resided until his death from a heart attack.[4] His nickname "Suitcase" originated from frequent trades and team changes, reflecting a journeyman career marked by steady performance rather than stardom.[3]Early Life and Background
Childhood in the Segregated South
Harry Leon Simpson was born on December 3, 1925, in Atlanta, Georgia, to Frank Simpson Sr. and Maggie Mae Sprowl Simpson.[3] [5] As the fourth of six children—three brothers and two sisters—he grew up primarily in Dalton, a northern Georgia city centered on carpet manufacturing, amid the strict racial segregation enforced by Jim Crow laws.[3] The 1930 U.S. Census recorded the family in this environment, where Black residents like the Simpsons faced systemic separation in education, transportation, and public accommodations, limiting opportunities and enforcing social inferiority.[3] In Dalton, Simpson earned the childhood nickname "Goody" for his gentle nature and eagerness to assist others, traits that contrasted with the era's harsh racial realities.[3] He developed an early interest in baseball, playing locally in segregated sandlots and initially as a right-handed pitcher before shifting to the outfield, honing skills within the confines of all-Black teams and facilities.[3] These formative years, marked by economic hardship in a sharecropper-adjacent working-class family and the omnipresent barriers of segregation, shaped his resilience before military service interrupted at age 15 in September 1941.[3] [4]Entry into Baseball
Simpson enlisted in the U.S. Army in September 1941 and served at Fort Benning, Georgia, until his discharge in early 1946 following the end of World War II.[3][6] Upon returning to civilian life, he signed with the Philadelphia Stars of the Negro National League in 1946 under manager and scout Goose Curry, marking his entry into professional baseball.[3][7] Originally a right-handed pitcher, Simpson converted to outfield play and adopted a left-handed batting stance, debuting with the Stars on May 3, 1946.[3][2] In limited action that season, he batted .333 with three home runs in 51 at-bats across 52 games, demonstrating early power potential as a left-handed hitter.[7][6]Negro Leagues Career
Philadelphia Stars Tenure
Harry Simpson signed with the Philadelphia Stars of the Negro National League in 1946 as an amateur free agent, scouted by Goose Curry under the auspices of Eddie Gottlieb and Abe Saperstein.[7] Initially converting from pitching to outfield, he appeared in 44 games that season, primarily in right field, batting .260 with one home run and 16 RBIs in 127 at-bats.[8] In 1947, Simpson shifted to left field for 35 games, improving his batting average to .298 over 114 at-bats, though he hit no home runs and drove in 13 runs amid the league's demanding schedule of frequent games and extensive travel.[8] The grueling conditions, including multiple daily contests, poor facilities, and absence of support staff like trainers, contributed to widespread player discouragement in the Negro Leagues.[3] Simpson's final season with the Stars came in 1948, where he played center field in 45 games, maintaining a .298 average with two home runs and 24 RBIs in 171 at-bats.[8] Overall, his three-year tenure showcased emerging outfield versatility and contact hitting, though inconsistent power output reflected the era's challenges; he briefly left baseball for a sales job due to frustration but returned at his wife Johnnie's encouragement before signing with the Cleveland Indians organization in 1948.[3][7]| Year | Games | AB | AVG | HR | RBI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1946 | 44 | 127 | .260 | 1 | 16 |
| 1947 | 35 | 114 | .298 | 0 | 13 |
| 1948 | 45 | 171 | .298 | 2 | 24 |
Transition to Integrated Baseball
Harry Simpson's tenure with the Philadelphia Stars in the Negro National League spanned 1946 to 1948, marked by initial promise and subsequent hardships that nearly derailed his career. Signed by Stars manager Goose Curry in 1946 at age 20, Simpson batted .333 over 52 games as an outfielder, showcasing early potential despite limited at-bats.[3] His 1947 performance dipped to .244 amid grueling travel schedules, lack of support staff, and financial instability, leading him to quit baseball temporarily for a sales job.[3] Encouraged by his wife, Simpson returned in 1948, where standout performances, including a 4-for-4 game with two home runs scouted by Hank Greenberg, drew major league attention; Eddie Gottlieb likened his swing to Ted Williams'.[3] These efforts culminated in his signing with the Cleveland Indians in late 1948 as an amateur free agent, positioning him as the 16th Negro Leagues player to transition to integrated professional baseball following Jackie Robinson's breakthrough.[6][7] Upon signing, Simpson entered Cleveland's minor league system in 1949 with the Class A Wilkes-Barre Indians of the Eastern League, where he excelled with a .305 batting average, 31 home runs, 120 RBIs, and 125 runs scored, leading the league in multiple categories.[3] Promoted to the Triple-A San Diego Padres of the Pacific Coast League in 1950, he continued his ascent, hitting .323 with 33 home runs and 156 RBIs while leading in triples and RBIs, demonstrating power, speed, and defensive prowess in right field.[6][7] Having switched from right-handed to left-handed batting during his Negro Leagues days to leverage his natural power, Simpson's minor league dominance paved the way for his major league call-up.[3] Simpson made his MLB debut on April 21, 1951, with the Cleveland Indians at age 25, integrating into a league still adjusting to racial inclusion four years after Robinson's arrival.[2] His rapid progression from the Negro Leagues' demanding conditions to minor league stardom and eventual big-league roster spot underscored the talent unearthed amid segregation's end, though he faced the pressures of proving himself in a scrutinized environment.[3]Major League Career
Debut with Cleveland Indians (1951–1955)
Harry Simpson made his Major League Baseball debut with the Cleveland Indians on April 21, 1951, at the age of 25, following a strong spring training performance where he batted over .400.[3][1] As one of the early African American players in the American League after Larry Doby, Simpson initially served as a bench player and occasional first baseman. In his rookie season, he appeared in 122 games, recording a .229 batting average with 7 home runs and 24 runs batted in over 332 at-bats. His first major league start came on May 1, during which he combined for 6 hits in 7 at-bats over the next two games while filling in for the injured Luke Easter.[4][1] In 1952, Simpson transitioned to the primary right fielder role, playing 146 games and improving to a .266 batting average, with 10 home runs, 65 RBIs, and 66 runs scored in 545 at-bats.[4][1] He notably broke up Early Wynne's no-hitter against the Indians on April 26 with a single in the ninth inning.[3] The following year, 1953, saw a decline as he batted .227 with 7 home runs and 22 RBIs in 82 games, impacted by an adjusted batting stance and a back injury from a collision with teammate Bobby Ávila that sidelined him for 28 games.[4][3][1] Simpson missed the entire 1954 season after fracturing his wrist in an exhibition game on March 24, spending the year in the minors with the Indianapolis Indians, where he hit .282 in 100 games.[3] He briefly returned to Cleveland in 1955, appearing in only 3 games with 1 at-bat before being sold to the Kansas City Athletics on May 11 due to roster constraints following Ralph Kiner's arrival.[3][1]| Year | Games | AB | H | HR | RBI | AVG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1951 | 122 | 332 | 76 | 7 | 24 | .229 |
| 1952 | 146 | 545 | 145 | 10 | 65 | .266 |
| 1953 | 82 | 242 | 55 | 7 | 22 | .227 |
| 1955 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 |
Kansas City Athletics Years (1956–1957)
Simpson enjoyed his most successful major league season in 1956 with the Athletics, appearing in 141 games primarily as a right fielder and posting a .293 batting average with 21 home runs and 105 runs batted in.[1] This RBI total marked the first time a Kansas City player had reached 100 in a season, contributing to his selection as an American League All-Star and finishing 11th in Most Valuable Player voting.[6][4] His performance highlighted strong power hitting and run production, though the Athletics finished last in the American League with a 52-102 record under manager Lou Boudreau.[9] Early in the 1957 season, Simpson maintained solid production, batting .296 with 6 home runs and 24 RBIs over 50 games before being traded to the New York Yankees on June 14 in exchange for pitchers Art Ditmar, Jack McMahon, and William Hunter.[1] The deal reflected the Athletics' ongoing roster adjustments amid poor team performance, as Simpson's departure ended his initial tenure with Kansas City after parts of three seasons.[10] During this period, he continued to demonstrate reliable outfield defense and left-handed power, though no major injuries were reported affecting his play.[1]New York Yankees Stint (1957–1959)
Simpson was acquired by the New York Yankees from the Kansas City Athletics on June 15, 1957, along with pitcher Ryne Duren and outfielder Jim Pisoni, in exchange for second baseman Billy Martin, pitchers Ralph Terry and Bob Smith, and infielder Woodie Held.[10][1] The trade followed a May 1957 brawl at the Copacabana nightclub involving Martin and other Yankees players, prompting manager Casey Stengel to seek roster changes.[10] Simpson, a left-handed power hitter who had batted .293 with 21 home runs and 105 RBIs for the Athletics in 1956, was platooned primarily in the outfield and at first base.[10][1] In 75 games with the Yankees during the 1957 regular season, Simpson recorded 56 hits in 224 at-bats for a .250 batting average, seven home runs, and 39 RBIs.[1] The Yankees won the American League pennant but lost the World Series to the Milwaukee Braves in seven games; Simpson appeared in five contests as a first baseman, going 1-for-12 with a .083 average and no extra-base hits.[1][10] Simpson's performance declined sharply in 1958, batting .216 with 11 hits in 51 at-bats over 24 games and no home runs before being traded back to the Athletics on June 15, along with pitcher Bob Grim, for pitchers Duke Maas and Virgil Trucks.[1][10] He did not play for the Yankees in 1959.[1] Simpson later reflected that the intense pressure of Yankee Stadium and Stengel's platoon system contributed to his struggles in New York.[10]Pittsburgh Pirates and Final Seasons (1959–1960)
On August 25, 1959, the Pittsburgh Pirates acquired Simpson from the Chicago White Sox in exchange for first baseman Ted Kluszewski.[3][1] In his brief tenure with Pittsburgh, Simpson appeared in nine games, primarily in the outfield, compiling a .267 batting average with four hits—including two doubles—two runs batted in, and three runs scored over 15 at-bats.[1] His final major league game occurred on September 27, 1959, at Crosley Field against the Cincinnati Reds, marking the end of his nine-year MLB career that spanned 888 games and a .268 overall batting average.[7] Following the 1959 season, the Pirates sold Simpson's contract back to the White Sox on October 13, 1959, though he received no further major league opportunities.[3] Simpson's professional playing career concluded in 1960 with the San Diego Padres of the Pacific Coast League, where he appeared in 95 games, batting .222 without notable power production.[3] This minor league stint represented his last organized baseball activity before retirement.[7]Playing Style, Achievements, and Statistics
Offensive and Defensive Contributions
Simpson demonstrated solid offensive capabilities early in his career with the Philadelphia Stars in the Negro Leagues, batting .298 with a .355 on-base percentage and two home runs in 45 games during the 1948 season, showcasing emerging power and plate discipline.[8] In Major League Baseball, over 888 games from 1951 to 1960, he compiled a .269 batting average, 76 home runs, and 489 RBIs, with an on-base plus slugging percentage of .759.[1] His peak offensive year came in 1956 with the Kansas City Athletics, where he hit .293 with 21 home runs and 105 RBIs, earning an All-Star selection and finishing 11th in American League Most Valuable Player voting.[1] Simpson's left-handed swing produced consistent extra-base hits, including 11 triples that season, though his power output declined after age 30 due to injuries and inconsistent playing time.[3] Defensively, Simpson excelled as a versatile outfielder capable of playing all three positions and first base, posting a .971 career fielding percentage in the outfield across 1,614 putouts and 38 assists.[1] At first base, he recorded a .990 fielding percentage with 2,499 putouts and 93 assists, reflecting reliability in handling grounders and picks.[1] Praised for his strong throwing arm and smooth stride, he was named the American League's best right fielder by New York Yankees manager Casey Stengel in 1956, contributing to his value in right field patrols.[3] Overall, his defensive metrics underscored a rangy, error-minimizing presence that complemented his bat, though he lacked Gold Glove recognition in an era without formal outfield awards.[1]Key Highlights and All-Star Selection
Simpson's standout MLB season occurred in 1956 with the Kansas City Athletics, during which he achieved a .293 batting average, 21 home runs, 105 RBI, and a league-leading 11 triples across 152 games.[1] [3] This performance marked his career peak offensively and contributed to his selection as the American League's lone All-Star representative that year, chosen by manager Casey Stengel for the July 10 game at Griffith Stadium, though he did not appear in the contest.[1] [3] His 1956 output also placed him 11th in American League Most Valuable Player voting, highlighting his value as a power-hitting outfielder with speed.[1] Earlier, in 1955 with the Cleveland Indians, Simpson posted a .301 average over 123 games, demonstrating consistent contact skills prior to his Athletics tenure.[3] These highlights underscored his transition from Negro Leagues success—where he earned an all-star nod with the Philadelphia Stars—to integrated professional baseball, though injuries and frequent trades later curtailed sustained excellence.[3]Injuries and Performance Decline
Simpson suffered a back injury on May 10, 1953, after colliding with teammate Bobby Ávila while pursuing a pop fly, which sidelined him for 28 games and contributed to a subpar season batting average of .227 with 7 home runs and 22 RBI in 82 games played.[4] Following the 1953 season, he broke his wrist during barnstorming activities, further delaying his preparation.[4] In spring training on March 24, 1954, Simpson fractured his left arm (described variably as a wrist break in some accounts) during an exhibition game close play at the plate, causing him to miss the entire major league season with the Cleveland Indians amid their pennant-winning campaign; he instead played 100 games for the Triple-A Indianapolis Indians, hitting .282 with 12 home runs.[10][4] These consecutive setbacks disrupted his momentum after a solid 1952 season (.266 average, 10 home runs, 65 RBI in 146 games), limiting his development and contributing to diminished output upon his 1955 return.[1] Later in his career, Simpson fractured his right wrist on April 8, 1958, after being struck by a pitch, restricting him to just 24 of the New York Yankees' first 52 games and correlating with a .255 average, 7 home runs, and 33 RBI across 102 total games that year.[4] By 1959, his performance had eroded further to a .212 average with 3 home runs and 17 RBI in only 55 games split among three teams, reflecting the cumulative toll of injuries, frequent trades, and reduced playing time amid platoon roles and roster competition.[1][10] Overall, these injuries hampered his consistency, preventing sustained peak production after his 1956 All-Star season (.293 average, 21 home runs, 105 RBI) and hastening his exit from the majors following limited 1960 minor league play.[1]Personal Life
Marriage and Family
Simpson married Johnnie Cooper on August 15, 1946, immediately following his discharge from the U.S. Army after serving in World War II.[3][7] The couple's union produced five children, though specific names and birth dates remain undocumented in primary records.[11] Johnnie Simpson played a supportive role in her husband's career, encouraging him to persist in professional baseball during a challenging 1947 season in the Negro Leagues when he contemplated quitting.[6] Simpson's frequent team trades and relocations—earning him the nickname "Suitcase"—necessitated repeated moves for the family, a direct consequence of his itinerant MLB career across five franchises from 1951 to 1960.[11] Johnnie outlived her husband, passing away in 2020.[11]Origin of "Suitcase" Nickname
Harry Simpson acquired the nickname "Suitcase" during his time in the Negro Leagues and minor leagues, stemming from his exceptionally large feet—requiring size 13 shoes—which a sportswriter compared to the oversized footwear of the character Suitcase Simpson from the Toonerville Trolley comic strip, whose feet were depicted as being as large as suitcases.[3][12] This association occurred around 1949 while Simpson played for the Wilkes-Barre Indians in the Middle Atlantic League, where a local sportswriter first applied the moniker based on the visual resemblance.[13] A persistent misconception attributes the nickname to Simpson's frequent team changes and trades throughout his career, which saw him play for 17 professional teams across Negro, minor, and major leagues; however, historical accounts confirm it predated his major league debut in 1951 and was unrelated to his mobility, instead originating solely from the comic-inspired foot size comparison.[3][13] The nickname endured into his MLB tenure with the Cleveland Indians, where sportswriters adopted it without reference to his later transactions.[12]Death and Post-Playing Life
Cause of Death
Harry Simpson died of a heart attack on April 3, 1979, at his home in Akron, Ohio, at the age of 53.[3][7] No prior medical conditions or precipitating factors were publicly detailed in contemporary reports, though Simpson had retired from professional baseball nearly two decades earlier and worked in various capacities afterward.[3] The sudden nature of the event aligned with accounts from multiple baseball historical sources confirming the cause as cardiac arrest without elaboration on underlying health issues.[14][6]Burial and Immediate Aftermath
Simpson died of a heart attack at his home in Akron, Ohio, on April 3, 1979.[3][7] Funeral services were conducted at New Trinity Baptist Church in Akron, where he had served as a deacon.[3] His body was transported to Dalton, Georgia, for burial at West Hill Cemetery, his hometown resting place.[3][7] Local obituaries noted his baseball career and family ties to the area, but no widespread public commemorations occurred immediately following his death.[15]Legacy and Impact
Role in MLB Integration
Harry Simpson, born in the segregated South on December 3, 1925, began his professional baseball career in the Negro Leagues with the Philadelphia Stars in 1946, where he hit .333 before transitioning from pitching to outfield and batting .244 in 1947.[10] He signed with the Cleveland Indians in 1948 following a tryout arranged by promoter Eddie Gottlieb, marking his entry into organized baseball amid the ongoing integration efforts pioneered by Jackie Robinson in 1947 and Larry Doby with the Indians that same year.[10] Simpson debuted in Major League Baseball on April 21, 1951, against the St. Louis Browns, becoming the 16th player to transition from the Negro Leagues to MLB and contributing to the American League's gradual diversification beyond initial barrier-breakers like Doby.[1] [6] As one of the earliest Black outfielders in the American League post-Doby, Simpson helped expand integration on the Cleveland Indians, playing 1951-1954 and posting a .273 batting average with solid defense, though early promotion pressure as a Black rookie limited his initial output to .229 in 1951.[10] [16] His presence exemplified the influx of Negro League talent into MLB during the 1950s, a period of "deliberate speed" in team reintegration, where clubs like the Indians actively scouted and fielded multiple Black players to compete amid rising competition from integrated rosters.[17] Traded to the Kansas City Athletics in 1955 shortly after their relocation from Philadelphia—a franchise historically slow to integrate—Simpson bolstered the team's early Black representation, playing there through 1959 and enabling further diversification in a city with strong Negro League roots via the historic Monarchs.[10] [6] Simpson's career across five American League teams, including stints with the New York Yankees and Chicago White Sox, underscored his role in normalizing Black players in everyday lineups, facing implicit biases and roster instability reflective of the era's transitional challenges without publicized overt incidents.[10] Over 888 MLB games from 1951 to 1959, he maintained a .266 average with strong arm and range in the outfield, attributes praised by contemporaries like Casey Stengel, aiding the league's shift toward merit-based inclusion over segregationist holdouts.[10] His trajectory from segregated Southern origins to MLB pioneer, though often overlooked amid flashier figures, advanced causal integration by demonstrating viable performance from Negro League alumni, pressuring holdout franchises through competitive necessity.[18]Statistical Evaluation and Hall of Fame Consideration
Harry Simpson's major league career spanned eight seasons from 1951 to 1959, during which he appeared in 1,061 games, compiling a .269 batting average, 870 hits, 76 home runs, and 465 RBIs in 3,959 at-bats.[1] His on-base plus slugging (OPS) stood at .747, reflecting solid but not exceptional power and patience at the plate, with a career on-base percentage of .331.[1] Defensively, Simpson primarily patrolled the outfield—logging the most innings in right field—where he demonstrated a strong throwing arm and above-average range in select seasons, though his fielding metrics were inconsistent overall, including negative runs fielded in peak years like 1955 and 1956.[3][1] His most productive stretch came with the Kansas City Athletics from 1955 to 1957, highlighted by a 1956 All-Star selection and a career-best .293 average with 21 home runs and 105 RBIs, placing him 11th in American League MVP voting that year.[1] Earlier, in 1952 with Cleveland, he hit .266 with 10 home runs in 146 games as a regular right fielder.[1] Advanced metrics underscore his limitations: a 5.7 Wins Above Replacement (WAR) total, driven more by occasional offensive peaks than sustained excellence or defensive dominance, pales against Hall of Fame outfielders' typical 50+ WAR benchmarks.[1] Simpson's versatility across outfield spots and first base added value, but frequent trades and platooning disrupted consistency, yielding below-league-average production in half his seasons.[3]| Year | Team | G | BA | HR | RBI | OPS | WAR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1952 | CLE | 146 | .266 | 10 | 65 | .737 | 1.2 |
| 1956 | KCA | 141 | .293 | 21 | 105 | .859 | 2.8 |
| Career | - | 1,061 | .269 | 76 | 465 | .747 | 5.7 |