The
Great Gallia: Texas’s Melvin “Bert” Gallia and
Ethnicity in Major League Baseball
Published in Southwestern Historical Quarterly vol. CV, no. 4, April
2002
Very few liked the man at the plate.
He was arrogant, mean and extremely prejudiced. He was also perhaps
the greatest hitter that ever played the game of baseball. Ty Cobb
was twenty-three years old in the spring of 1910. He had won the
American League’s Triple Crown in hitting in 1909, leading
the Detroit Tigers to their second consecutive American League pennant.
The Tigers held their annual spring training camp in San Antonio.
St. Louis College, on the west end of town, had fielded a baseball
team for fifteen years. In the spring of 1910, the Rattlers were
undefeated going into an exhibition game against the visiting major
leaguers.
A lean country boy with forearms like Popeye’s took the mound
for St. Louis College. Melvin Gallia was an electrical engineering
major from the small South Texas town of Woodsboro in Refugio County.
The eighteen-year-old found himself facing Ty Cobb at the plate.
Cobb let Gallia’s first two pitches go by for strikes, sizing
up the young pitcher. He dug in expecting the third pitch to be
a fastball. Instead, Gallia threw a spitball that Cobb reportedly
missed by a foot . The crowd cheered wildly. The kid from Woodsboro
had struck out the best hitter in baseball!
Cobb was a fierce competitor. The next time he came to bat, he had
fire in his eyes. He hit a Gallia pitch far into the mesquite brush
for a home run and the Tigers won the game. Ty Cobb went on to have
the best season of his legendary career that year. Melvin Gallia
went home to Woodsboro at the end of the school year, having set
a collegiate record by striking out one hundred and fifty batters
in fifteen games .
Yankee soldiers are credited with introducing the
game of baseball to Texas. The bluecoats arrived in force to occupy
the Lone Star State at the end of the War Between the States. The
first games in San Antonio were played in Military Plaza and at
San Pedro Springs . Baseball became not only a means of recreation
for the soldiers, but also a way to interact with the locals. By
the end of the occupation in 1870, baseball was on its way to becoming
established. In the early 20th century, nearly every small town
in Texas, as nearly everywhere else in America, had its own baseball
team. Baseball was not just the national pastime, but the national
passion. It was about the hometown nine beating the team from the
neighboring city. As the intensity of competition rose, teams supplemented
local talent with outside players they managed to attract, sometimes
for a few dollars a game. Yet, for the most part, the game remained
pure and pastoral. Baseball was about green grass and the bright
sunshine of a hot summer afternoon. Townspeople congregated around
the local ball field, shared picnics and courted. The pop of the
hardball in the leather mitt and the crack of the bat connecting
with a ball punctuated conversations.
In the spring of 1910, even as St. Louis College was losing its
unbeaten record to the Detroit Tigers, a group of prominent Texas
along the central coast organized a local baseball league. The owners
obtained Class D status from the National Association of Professional
Baseball Leagues . Beeville, Victoria, Corpus Christi, Laredo, Brownsville
and Bay City fielded teams. The Southwest Texas League was “composed
of the smallest cities comprising any professional baseball league
in the United States” . The Beeville Bees signed Melvin Gallia,
his reputation having spread after he struck out Ty Cobb that spring
.
Victoria, the largest city in the central coastal region, had had
a powerhouse baseball team for years. The town’s 1909 “amateur”
team boasted a 51-14 win-loss record and featured players from Houston,
Galveston, San Antonio, Corpus Christi and one from Vera Cruz, Mexico
. When the Southwest Texas League was formed, Victoria’s newspaper
publisher organized townspeople to supplement the team’s budget
and weekly published the list of contributors . Hundreds of players
from around the country reportedly responded to an ad in Sporting
News, which announced tryouts for the Victoria team in the spring
of 1910 . Among the players signed by Victoria was former major
leaguer Howard Wakefield , who led the Texas League in hitting while
playing for San Antonio.
Melvin Gallia made his pitching debut for Beeville against the Victoria
club. He had the Rosebuds stymied for seven innings. But in the
eighth with Beeville leading 1-0, Gallia gave up a three-run homer.
Later that same inning, a hit to the outfield was lost in the high
grass and another run scored . His professional debut ended with
a loss. Gallia saw only limited action that season, appearing in
six games, winning three and losing one, while posting twenty-one
strikeouts . The highlight of his season was a two-hitter against
Laredo . The season ended with Brownsville upsetting Victoria in
the post-season championship playoff .
Melvin Gallia graduated from St. Louis College the following spring
of 1911 and returned home to Woodsboro. He spent a few days with
family and friends before heading for Beeville for the Southwest
Texas League’s second season. The Gallia family had moved
from Beeville to Woodsboro in 1907 when Melvin’s father, A.
C., was hired as land agent for the new town to recruit other Czech
families from the Texas Hill Country.
The Skidmore baseball team came to Woodsboro for a game and Gallia
agreed to pitch for the hometown team. Skidmore featured a big catcher
named Gourley, who hit a home run that the Woodsboro sportswriter
speculated would have been traveling yet, had it not been for the
railroad track. But Gourley’s swat came with no men on. Gallia
scattered seven other hits, striking out fifteen and going the distance,
leading Woodsboro to a win .
Beeville had a new player-manager that second season of league play.
Billy Disch had just assumed the position of head baseball coach
at the University of Texas, where he would compile a remarkable
collegiate record through the 1930’s. Disch released Gallia
, who managed to get on with the league’s Laredo Bermudas.
When the league had formed, there was some question about allowing
the Laredo team to play after Manager Alfred Pogenphol signed some
“Mexican” players. The Victoria Advocate noted that
“The success of the Laredo nines has for many years past been
largely dependent on their foreign players” and speculated
on the “probable ineligibility of chocolate colored players.”
Pogenphol insisted that his players were “ … as much
American in respect to citizenship and maybe more so than some of
the other players signed by other clubs, and some of them speak
as good English.” Laredo’s lineup also included some
Cubans, whom Pogenphol reported were “as gentlemanly and manly
young men as I have ever had dealings with …” . The
decision as to whether Hispanic Texans, Mexicans and Cubans would
be allowed to play in the league was not even broached at the meeting
of league owners and the matter ultimately was “ … left
optional with the various clubs to play whomsoever they please.”
It went without saying that the option did not include Blacks, who
would not be allowed to integrate baseball until the end of the
1940’s.
Melvin Gallia, having grown up in South Texas, spoke Tex-Mex with
ease and fit in well with the Laredo ball club. In fact, Melvin,
until he began school as a young boy in Beeville, spoke only Czech,
which he learned in the home, and Tex-Mex, which he picked up in
and around town from the fieldworkers. Cotton, the major cash crop
on the Texas Coast, was picked by hand for many years and thousands
would move up the Texas Coast from Laredo and Mexico as early as
July and work through August. English was the third language young
Melvin Gallia learned .
On July 15, 1911, Melvin Gallia took the mound in his first game
for Laredo. The opponent was Beeville. However badly he wanted to
prove to “Uncle Billy” Disch that he made a mistake,
Melvin Gallia was rocked by the Beeville batters and lost the game
by a score of 10-to-1. One reporter called it “one of the
poorest and most one-sided games ever played in Laredo.” But
Gallia was determined to prove himself. Ten days later, he pitched
both games of a doubleheader and led Laredo to a pair of victories
over Corpus Christi. A week later, he was “in excellent form”
, beating Brownsville. Three days later, Laredo’s victory
over Corpus Christi was heralded as “a case of too much Gallia”
. When Gallia pitched Laredo to victory over Victoria on August
9, the Victoria paper declared “Gallia pitched one of the
finest games witnessed here this season and had the Buds at his
mercy, allowing but three hits.”
In Laredo’s final series of the season, Gallia pitched Laredo
to two victories over Beeville. Gallia finished the season with
nine wins. His teammate, a hard-throwing Cuban named Hernandez,
won twenty games. Laredo, which had finished in the cellar at the
end of the first half of the season, ended the second half in fourth
place . Billy Disch’s Bees, despite the humbling by Gallia
at season’s end, won the second half of league play and subsequently
claimed the league title by forfeit. Bay City, citing financial
problems, declined to playoff. The Southwest Texas League, while
popular, struggled with the expense of transportation by rail and
the league disbanded after the 1911 season.
The league’s better players moved up to the next level of
play . Among these was Melvin Gallia, whom Beeville catcher Harry
Brammel predicted “would develop into a second Joe Wood”
. Others would make the same comparison as Gallia pitched with his
elbow and wrist in the style of the legendary Boston Red Sox pitcher
. Particularly noteworthy was Gallia’s “ …fast
one that wobbles when he shoots it over the plate” .
Gallia signed with the Kansas City Blues of the Class A American
Association League . The KC manager took one look at the kid and
sent him down to Okmulgee in the Oklahoma State League for seasoning.
Gallia pitched in three games and struck out a total of fifty-four
batters . In the third game, he had a no-hitter until the ninth
inning, striking out 17 along the way. The Blues promptly recalled
Gallia for American Association play. The Kansas City Star headlined
the return of “Chief” Gallia, no doubt influenced by
his prominent high cheekbones and swarthy complexion. Later, the
Star sports staff determined that Gallia was “Mexican”
, perhaps because he was also a South Texan and spoke Tex-Mex. It
was one of the unexplainable aspects of the institutionalized racism
of early baseball that Native Americans and Latin Americans were
considered unique and perhaps “foreign”, and thus allowed
to play professional baseball, despite their darker skin, while
African-Americans were excluded. Czech-Texan Melvin Gallia provided
ethnic flavor for the otherwise-Anglo 1912 American Association
League.
Baseball in these early days remained the nearly exclusive domain
of the Anglo-Saxons. There were not yet any Italians or Jews, much
less Blacks or Latins, in the major leagues or the American Association
League. DOUBLE CHECK American Association Park in Kansas City had
a segregated seating area for Blacks who attended Blues games .
The park even insisted on segregated seating when the Negro League
Kansas City Monarchs began play at the park in 1920!
That baseball was a game loved by all Americans, black or white,
Latin or not, was clear. It was an important part of the overall
American identity. Harold Seymour wrote in his classic America:
The People’s Game: “One way children of foreign birth
or parentage could fit into the new culture was to take part in
baseball, and early on, many of them perceived it their badge as
Americans.” Ethnic groups in the major cities formed athletic
associations for the game. Melvin Gallia, being raised a country
boy, had little sense of the ethnic divisions that epitomized major
American cities in that period. Small rural populations did not
lend themselves to exclusions of others, particularly when forming
baseball teams with nine on a side. He played athletics alongside
the sons of wealthy Anglo ranchers and developed fast friendships.
On the day that Gallia arrived in Kansas City, Blues Manager Charlie
Carr put him on the mound against Indianapolis. Gallia responded
by pitching a five-hit shutout. The Kansas City paper declared “Melvin
Albert Gallia, Texan, broke into the league with a splendid splash.”
Gallia won his next two games and became a mainstay of the Blues’
pitching staff with a promising future. Carr told a reporter “I
believe this boy is a second Walter Johnson. I never saw an inexperienced
youngster like him show so much speed …” .
Blues teammate Nick Altrock was a thirty-five year old veteran,
whose accomplishments included winning twenty games for the 1906
World Champion Chicago White Sox “Hitless Wonders” .
Altrock took an interest in Gallia and worked with him on his delivery.
Gallia ever after gave Altrock credit for teaching him the finer
points of the game . Altrock was also one of the game’s renowned
comedians and Melvin Gallia’s own fine sense of humor likely
cemented what became a lifelong friendship. When Altrock was called
up later in that same season to help coach the major league Washington
Nationals, he told manager Clark Griffiths about Gallia . Griffith
sent scout Mike Kahoe to see the kid pitch at Toledo in the first
week of August. Kahoe was impressed with Gallia’s “quick
breaking curve and terrific speed” and the Nationals gave
Kansas City two players and cash for Gallia. Melvin Gallia made
his major league debut on September 4, 1912, not quite twenty-one
years old. He pitched two innings, allowing no hits or runs . Gallia
saw no further action that season.
When the Nationals’ spring training camp opened in Charlottesville,
Virginia in the spring of 1913, an anxious Gallia was among the
last to report. Woodsboro, Texas was under quarantine for meningitis
. After an agonizing three weeks, Gallia could wait no longer. He
slipped out of town, riding forty-five miles in the bottom of a
farmer’s wagon to Placedo, Texas near Victoria where he boarded
a train on the St. Louis, Brownsville and Mexico Railroad for San
Antonio .
When Gallia finally arrived at Charlottesville, the Washington paper
reported: “Tex Gallia … probably in better shape than
any pitcher in the camp, due to working out in his home in the far
South …”. The Post declared Gallia almost sure of a
position on the team, noting that Griffiths “ … bubbled
over with enthusiasm in discussing the work of Gallia, the big Texas
ranchman” and compared his blazing speed to that of teammate
Walter Johnson . The press began referring to Gallia as “Bert”,
apparently deriving that from his supposed middle name of Albert
- in fact, it was Allys. The name stuck. Melvin Gallia of Woodsboro
became Bert Gallia of major league baseball.
The Nationals were fighting for second place in the American League,
having been resurrected by their new manager, the legendary Clark
Griffith, and the even more legendary pitching phenomenon, Walter
Johnson. Melvin Gallia made his major league debut on September
4, 1912, not quite twenty-one years old. Gallia, a swarthy-skinned
Czech kid, took the mound in the nation’s capital in Clark
Griffith Park, the newest and most modern stadium in baseball .
He pitched two innings, allowing no hits or runs . That was the
extent of his play for the season.
Baseball was in its heyday. Boston’s Fenway Park opened in
1912 and Brooklyn’s Ebbets Field in 1913. Many of the legendary
players of the game were still playing. Many were just appearing
on the scene.
The Washington Nationals finished the 1913 season
in second place in the league standings, the highest finish up to
that time for the franchise - and this in just the second year under
manager Clark Griffith. Griffith previously had broken the color
barrier in baseball in 1911 when, as manager of the Cincinnati Reds,
he signed two Cubans. The Reds managed to ease tensions and ultimately
cast off racial objections by arguing convincingly that the two
were “Castilian Spanish”, rather than “African”
in origin . It has been suggested that both men were “light-skinned
enough to find brief acceptance …” . Griffith pushed
the door open further in 1913 when he signed two Cubans to play
for Washington. The fact that both men later played in the professional
Negro Leagues attests to their darker skin . But there was no hint
of racism in the feature articles in the Washington Post that highlighted
these two during the pre-season, referring to Jacinto Calvo as “
… a perfect specimen of budding manhood” and to sixteen-year-old
Baldomero Acosta as “one of the sensations in the National
training camp” . Although neither Calvo or Acosta ever broke
into a starting lineup in the major leagues, no other major leaguer
again played in both the major leagues and the professional Negro
leagues until Jackie Robinson with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947.
Melvin Gallia surely developed a bond with these fellow rookies,
as he was the only other player on the Nationals who spoke their
language. He was witness to a grand experiment, one that failed
in the absence of television to revolutionize the game.
President Woodrow Wilson threw out the first ball when Washington
opened the season. The Nationals’ opponents in that opening
day game were the New York Yankees, who had just changed their name
from the Highlanders . The Nationals finished the 1913 season in
second place behind the performance of league MVP Walter Johnson
. Melvin Gallia saw action in thirty-one games in the 1913 season.
He posted but one win against five losses . Most noteworthy was
a game against the Yankees, in which Gallia entered the record books
upon hitting three of the first four batters to face him . Melvin
spent most of the campaign on the National’s bench from which
vantage point he witnessed young Walter Johnson’s phenomenal
season that earned the American League Most Valuable Player award
. Gallia always remembered Johnson, whom many still regard as the
greatest pitcher in the history of the game, as a wonderful person
.
Gallia began the 1914 season showing promise in the Nationals’
spring training camp, throwing with “bewildering speed”,
excellent control and a curve “as good as any in camp”.
There was no mention of his spitball pitch, despite the fact that
it was still a legal pitch in those days. Speculation continued
that the twenty year old “… may develop into the league’s
real wonder in another season.” But Gallia struggled with
control in exhibition play and the Nationals sent him back to Kansas
City for experience. The spitball, while a formidable pitch when
mastered, was a difficult pitch to control . By mid-season, the
Kansas City Star was declaring “Mexican Hurler Invincible”,
praising the speed of “Chief Gallia, bronze-skinned Senor
from the land of Madero” . Meanwhile, professional baseball
survived the challenge of the upstart Federal League. And a rookie
pitcher was made his debut in Boston for the Red Sox - his name
was George Herman Ruth.
He had a fine year with Kansas City, leading the American Association
League in innings pitched, and winning 26 games and losing 12. Gallia
returned to the Nationals at the beginning of the 1915 season, heralded
as the “Star A. A. Hurler". The Texan continued to hear
himself referred to in an ethnic perspective. He wrote home to Woodsboro
that spring, “Do you know they say I look like a real Indian,
now do I? Honest tell me.”
Both Manager Cal Griffith and Coach Nick Altrock considered Gallia
to “have more stuff than any other pitcher on the local staff,
not even barring Walter Johnson.” . Gallia started the season
strong. He threw the first complete game of his major league career
on April 16, 1915, giving up only five hits and not a single walk
in a 3-2 win over the Yankees . The Washington Post described Gallia
in the write-up of the game on the next day as “The chief,
as he was dubbed last year in the American Association” and
later as “the boy from the Rio Grande” . Gallia completed
his second game, without giving up a single walk . He was on his
way.
Gallia pitched against the Detroit Tigers on June 18. Ty Cobb stole
home in the first inning, scoring by ripping open the arm of the
Washington catcher with his spikes. On July 1 against the Yankees,
Gallia “ … had perfect control, and he was unhittable,
turning the Yankees back in every inning … It is doubtful
if any ball club could have beaten this youngster today, so good
was he.” On July 11, he halted a Nationals’ losing streak
with a big win over the White Sox, pulling himself out of a jam
and going the distance for a complete game . Gallia established
himself as the number two pitcher on the staff, behind Walter Johnson
. One sportswriter suggested “… today he ranks with
the best of them in the business.” . It soon began apparent
that Gallia would become a presence on the Washington pitching staff
and the Post essentially dropped reference to the ethnic aspect
of the young man. The Czech from South Texas shed his Indian and
Mexican labels and became the All-American golden boy, a major league
pitcher.
Gallia threw a brilliant one-hitter against Cleveland on July 27,
the Post suggesting he “ … will probably never pitch
a more brilliant game” . In a classic matchup of spitball
artists, Bert Gallia beat the Chicago White Sox’s great Eddie
Cicotte 3-1, going the full nine innings and giving up only four
hits . In mid August, Gallia “… turned back the flower
of American League sluggers just as fast as they came to the bat”
, throwing a brilliant three-hitter against the Detroit Tigers.
Ty Cobb went 0-for-4 at the plate and The Post declared the game:
“… a Gallia victory in every sense of the word”
. Gallia “twirled one of the finest games in his career”
less than a week later, allowing only two hits and not a single
walk against Smoky Joe Wood and the Boston Red Sox.
Baseball is very much an individual battle between the pitcher and
the batter. The uncertainty for a batter facing a spitball pitcher
gave the man on the mound a decided edge. By the latter part of
the 1915 campaign, “Griffith’s sensational spitballist
... was mowing down his rivals with great regularity.” The
front page of the September 12 edition of the Post featured Gallia’s
photo along with teammate Nick Altrock under the headline “Two
Mighty Valuable Assets to Washington Baseball Club”, referring
to Gallia as the “Pitching Sensation”. Gallia finished
the season with 17 wins and 11 losses and 130 strikeouts . This
was particularly impressive in that the Nationals were a notoriously
poor hitting team . The Boston Red Sox won the American League pennant
and the World Series that year with rookie pitcher Babe Ruth playing
a key role.
Gallia started the 1916 season strong. He “pitched a wonderful
game of ball” and “had perfect control” in thrashing
the Cleveland Indians on May 20. But the glory was short-lived.
On the last day of May, the World Champion Red Sox crushed the Nationals
10-to-1 at Boston. Gallia took the loss, giving up four runs in
the fourth inning, the Post suggesting “Gallia had never been
hit harder in his life …”. Gallia worked hard throughout
the 1916 campaign. In early July, he went all the way to beat the
Yankees 6-4, surviving a blast over the fence by Frank “Home
Run” Baker and shutting down a Yankee rally in the ninth .
Two weeks later, Gallia threw a complete game to beat the Cleveland
Indians 3-2. The deciding moment was a rare error by the great Tris
Speaker on a fly ball hit by Gallia with men on . Both Gallia and
the Nationals slumped in August. In a game against the St. Louis
Browns, Gallia had his worst control problems of the year and the
Post remarked that the performance “reminded one of this pitcher
some years back” . September was no better and the season
closed with the Nationals in seventh place. After a spectacular
start, Gallia’s struggles in August and September left him
with only a 17-13 season with 120 strikeouts and a 2.76 earned run
average .
Gallia’s performance never again attained the level of the
1915 or 1916 seasons. The nation was on the verge of entering World
War I in the spring of 1917. The debate raged as to whether baseball,
as the national pastime, was an essential wartime industry. American
League President Ban Johnson ordered baseball teams to practice
drilling in formation. A photographer caught the Washington Nationals
in formation, being led by Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Franklin
Delano Roosevelt . He had his moments in 1917. Gallia came into
a game against two-time World Champion Boston on June 25 and closed
down the Red Sox with the bases loaded and shut them down for two
additional innings . Two days later, Gallia pitched a solid eight
innings against the Red Sox before needing relief in the ninth .
But Gallia ended the season with a 9-13 win-loss record and an earned
run average of 3.0 per game. Manager Cal Griffith was determined
to look for new talent and traded Gallia in the off-season to the
St. Louis Browns for two players and $15,000 cash .
Branch Rickey, the Browns manager for the previous five seasons,
had just left to manage the National League St. Louis Cardinals.
Gallia worked hard on the mound for the Browns in 1918, but there
was little hitting support other than that of future Hall-of-Famer
George Sisler. He won 8 and lost 6 in 1918 with a 3.5 earned run
average. In July 1918, Gallia wrote home to his mother in Woodsboro:
“ … everything is so uncertain at the
present. We don’t know whether we shall play baseball or not
next year, further we don’t know if shall finish this year
… for myself I would not mind staying in Woodsboro, because
I can’t stand city life … I am used to being out in
the country and I can’t get rid of that feeling.”
Gallia did finish the 1918 season. He opened the 1919 season for
the Browns, beating the eventual American League pennant-winners,
Shoeless Joe Jackson and the Chicago White Sox , on opening day.
In early June, Gallia beat his old teammates in “A real pitcher’s
duel” with none other than Walter Johnson on the mound for
the Nationals. On June 20, Gallia threw against Babe Ruth, who was
pitching for the Red Sox. With the Browns leading 1-0 in the seventh
inning, Ruth tripled off Gallia and scored to lead the rally and
the Red Sox won 3-1 . Gallia got back at the Red Sox, beating them
on August 17 in a 4-3 game during which Gallia hit Ruth with a pitch
.
None of Ruth’s major league record twenty-nine home runs that
season were off Gallia. He finished the 1919 season with a 12-14
win-loss record and a 3.6 earned run average . Near the end of the
season, Gallia faced Ty Cobb for the last time in his career. Cobb
went three-for-four to lead the Tigers to a 12-3 win, giving Gallia
the loss .
The summer of 1919 was a terrible time for America. Chicago was
the scene of race riots, that ultimately led to the killing of a
young Black on a lake beach. Blacks across the U. S. erupted in
two weeks of rioting, the end result of which was nearly forty dead
and hundreds injured . The turmoil led to even greater segregation
in America, on and off the baseball diamond.
The 1919 season ended with the infamous “Black Sox”
scandal, in which eight Chicago players charged with throwing the
World Series were banned from baseball for life. Among the perpetrators
was Chick Gandil, who had been a teammate of Gallia’s on the
Nationals. The popularity of major league baseball fell to an all-time
low. Baseball officials outlawed the previously legal spitball in
the hopes of winning back fans with more home runs by Ruth and others
- although pitchers already in the majors using that pitch, including
Bert Gallia, were allowed to continue.
The hated reserve clause, by which each player was the exclusive
property of his team, was in effect. The Browns traded Gallia to
the Philadelphia Phillies of the National League for the 1920 season.
Outfielder Casey Stengel was among his teammates. 1920 was the dawn
of a new era for baseball. Babe Ruth became a New York Yankee, arriving
in the nation’s media center as the first radio stations were
going on the air . Bert Gallia was far from the limelight. There
were no more personal battles with Cobb or Ruth. Gallia saw action
in only 18 games, finishing with a 2-6 win-loss record for the last-place
Phillies. He left major league ball at the end of the season. He
could still throw a baseball and there were plenty of semi-pro teams
across America looking for a strong country arm .
Gallia led Mahanoy City to the 1922 league championship of the Hard
Coal League of Pennsylvania , where his “drop, fast curve
and puzzling inshoot … completely buffaloed” opponents
. The setting was far different from the big show, in which Gallia
and his family lived in fashionable surroundings, eating in the
best of restaurants. He coached the Racine (Wisconsin) Athletics
for two years, the local paper describing him as “a rather
quiet, unassuming man as baseball managers go” . In 1926,
he played for Lowell in the Boston Twi-Light League. While Ruth
electrified the crowds in Yankee Stadium, Gallia was a journeyman
in the semi-pro leagues. By 1927, the year Ruth and Gehrig formed
what many have called baseball’s greatest ever team, Bert
Gallia decided it was time to return home full-time to South Texas
.
Baseball remained in Gallia’s blood and the people of South
Texas were thrilled to have the opportunity to again see the lean
right-hander throw his stuff at batters. There had been little opportunity
for local folks to follow the hometown hero’s career in the
big show. There were no radio broadcasts of major league games until
1921 and newspaper coverage of major league baseball in small town
newspapers was non-existent. While Woodsboro remained a small stop
along the railroad, times were changing. Prohibition had closed
down the town’s saloons and the oil boom was just getting
underway on the Central Texas Coast. The Houston Oil Company contracted
with Bud Coyle Drilling Company to drill for them in Refugio County.
Coyle made the La Rosa Hotel in Woodsboro his headquarters and Gallia
obtained employment as a roughneck on one of Coyle’s rigs
. Coyle shared Gallia’s passion for baseball and they organized
the Gulf Coast Community League. Gallia led tiny Woodsboro to two
consecutive pennants in 1927 and 1928 . Just as the discovery of
significant oil in Refugio County in July 1928 transformed the county,
the return of Gallia brought Woodsboro to athletic prominence.
While Melvin Gallia missed the thrill of the big show, there was
plenty of competition. But baseball on the Texas Coast, as across
the nation, remained segregated. There were no Blacks nor Latins
in the Gulf Coast League in which Woodsboro competed. Baseball great
Rube Foster of Calvert, Texas had formed the Negro National Baseball
League in Chicago in 1919. The Texas Negro League and other smaller
regional leagues for African-Americans formed shortly thereafter.
Coastal newspapers like the Victoria Advocate offered good coverage
of not only their well-regarded Anglo white team, but also of the
Victoria Black Rosebuds and the Victoria Mexican Eagles . But interracial
competition was non-existent.
In the summer of 1929, ever-powerful Victoria was cruising to another
fine season. After the local Victoria nine had crushed Yorktown
by a score of 17-6, the Victoria Advocate noted that Port Lavaca
had lost at home to Woodsboro. Port Lavaca was the only team offering
much competition against Victoria and was almost unbeatable at home,
leading the Advocate to conclude “Woodsboro must have an unusually
strong club” . The mainstay of the Woodsboro team was thirty-eight
year old Bert Gallia, whom local folks referred to as “Old
Bones”, a reference to his 165 pounds spread over his six
foot frame. The scrappy Gallia had Woodsboro hustling every minute
of the game. The Piehl brothers, Lon at short and Lee at first base,
batted first and second in the lineup. Lonnie Piehl, “The
Little German Flash” , had received offers in the past to
play professionally and “could step right up into any Texas
League team”. Amos “PeeWee” Demmer played rightfielder
and batted third. Demmer, a big man of 250 pounds, held bragging
rights for the longest ball ever hit in Woodsboro . His size belied
his quickness and speed and PeeWee’s sensational catches on
the run were his trademark. The Woodsboro Times suggested that the
fielding of PeeWee Demmer alone was worth the price of admission
. Demmer attributed his athletic ability to the many hours he spent
following his team of horses led by Old Beck up and down half-mile
rows of corn on his farm in Woodsboro . Gallia hit cleanup, followed
by Rafe Thomas, the center fielder and catcher Pat Autry, who had
tried out with the Chicago White Sox . The Hausmann boys at second
and third and Maurice Luker in left field rounded out the lineup
for Woodsboro.
Victoria and Woodsboro clashed at Victoria’s Rio Vista Park
on July 28. Victoria started Art Salziger, their ace pitcher, known
for his fast moving curveball off the outside corner . On the following
morning, the Victoria Advocate declared “Major Leaguer Too
Much For Rosebuds” , citing “The score in the baseball
game yesterday was Gallia 3, Rosebuds 1” and “There
is no mistaking the fact that Bert Gallia is still a great pitcher”.
PeeWee Demmer contributed three hits and tiny Woodsboro established
a claim as a regional baseball power.
Woodsboro opened play in 1930 in the South Coast League, defeating
Corpus Christi 1-0 on the heroics of PeeWee Demmer at the plate
. In early May, Woodsboro surprised a well-regarded team from Texas
Chiropractic College of San Antonio, the Times declaring “Bert
Gallia, our noble hurler, had the boys from the Mission City hoodooed
practically throughout the session, his fast ones were plenty hot
and his curves did everything but say the A B C’s.”
PeeWee Demmer again led the Woodsboro sticks, getting two hits in
two at-bats. The San Antonio Hawks returned to Woodsboro and avenged
their previous loss with a thrilling 3-2 win when Gallia tired in
the eight . In the following week against Beeville, Gallia held
the Bees to four hits, having struck out seven going into the ninth
with the score 1-to-1. But again Gallia tired and the Bees jumped
on him for five runs in the ninth .
The Beeville squad was beginning to reflect the ethnic changes that
were taking place on the Texas Coast. Phil Ramirez managed the Beeville
nine and Pomerajo was his standout pitcher . In the same month that
Beeville faced Gallia’s Woodsboro squad, they traveled to
San Antonio for a doubleheader with the Cuban Stars, a Mexican all-star
team “generally considered to be one of the fastest aggregations
of baseball players in amateur or semi-professional ranks.”
Woodsboro suffered through a three-game losing streak before beating
Yoakum. Gallia pitched so well in that game, despite the pain, that
the hometown sportswriter wrote, “ … if his arm was
sore we would like to see it sore throughout the remainder of the
playing season.” Gallia began to give up the pitching slot
to play the outfield. In a game with Corpus Christi on June 12,
“The Mighty Gallia hit a line drive to center and labeled
it for two bags, scoring the Piehl boys” and again later “
… socked one for two bases … like he used to hit –
hard and rising.” When an all-star team from Beeville, led
by former Cotton Leaguer Bill Kring, came to town to play the Woodsboro
nine, Gallia returned to the mound. The Woodsboro Times noted, “
… Woodsboro respected no stars or leaguers … Gallia
of Woodsboro was invincible in the box….” . He struck
out Beeville slugger Wayne Gore with men on second and third and
centerfielder Baron Bee with three consecutive curves.
Gallia spent the winter of 1931 re-organizing the team . “Peewee”
Demmer retired, his role as team slugger assumed by Rice Institute
standout Jack Modisett. The Piehl boys returned, as did Autry, Skeen,
Luker and Modlin all returned . In March, Gallia drove up U. S.
Highway 77 to Victoria for an organizational meeting to form a new
league, the Southwest Texas Amateur Baseball League. Port Lavaca,
Edna, Yoakum, Goliad and Tivoli joined Woodsboro. League play began
April 12 with twenty-one Sunday games to be played .
The 1931 season began well for Woodsboro. After the Athletics won
their third victory in three outings, the Woodsboro Times declared
“The home town boys seem to be getting back into their old
time stride after a slight slump last year” . Woodsboro’s
success attracted attention and the next game was played before
a large crowd of enthusiastic fans. Gallia pitched a complete nine
innings against Edna in the fourth game, striking out thirteen.
The game was a shutout until the top of the sixth when an Edna player
made it to first on a dropped third strike and then scored to give
Edna a 1-0 lead going into the bottom of the ninth. After Weaver
singled for Woodsboro and Skeen walked, Modlin, pinch-hitting for
Lee Piehl with two outs, hit a two-strike pitch into left field,
scoring both runners and winning the game for Woodsboro. The Times
called it “one of the best ball games played on the Woodsboro
diamond for many a day.”
The next week against Goliad, anchored by the Angerstein boys, Gallia
again pitched nine innings, striking out seven and walking none
while Woodsboro shelled the Goliad hurlers for sixteen hits. Woodsboro
won 13-6 for their fifth straight victory of the year . Another
victory upped the record to 6-0. But Woodsboro’s dreams of
an unbeaten season vanished when a tough Port Lavaca team drove
a tired Gallia from the mound in the eighth inning with the score
tied 2-2 . Woodsboro avenged the loss by beating Port Lavaca at
home the following week. The game was a thriller with Woodsboro
coming from behind to score two runs in the ninth to win. Countless
errors caused the Times to refer to the contest as “one of
the best punk baseball games ever witnessed in this section”
. “Old Bones” Gallia went the distance for Woodsboro,
striking out ten. It was the bright spot of an otherwise dismal
week, the Piehl’s cotton gin in Woodsboro having burned down
on Wednesday morning .
Woodsboro and Victoria, tied for first place, faced off the following
Sunday. A large number of fans made the trip down U. S. 77 from
Victoria for the game at Woodsboro’s Rooke Field. The game
was so one-sided in favor of Victoria that no one delivered the
score card to the office of the Woodsboro Weekly Times after the
game. The editor simply declared a “trouncing” . Woodsboro
had a chance to even the score at Victoria the following Sunday.
Another sellout crowd gathered in the grandstands with many more
along the foul lines. It was Victoria’s Al Salziger against
Woodsboro’s Bert Gallia. The game “ … had the
entire section on its toes” . Kelly Scott, Woodsboro’s
leadoff hitter, beat out an infield hit to begin the fourth. Pat
Autry then beat out a bunt and moved Scott to second. Jack Modisett
advanced both men into scoring position with a sacrifice. Rafe Thomas,
Woodsboro’s cleanup hitter, popped out to short. With two
outs, Lee Piehl beat out a grounder to third base and both runners
scored. The Woodsboro paper attributed the runs to a squeeze play,
while the Victoria paper referred to the turning point as a muffed
grounder. In the seventh, Victoria’s Dewitte Holleman, who
had played Class A ball , hit a booming home run. But that was all
the Rosebuds could muster, Gallia giving up only three other hits.
Woodsboro won the game 2-1 and took sole possession of first place
.
Victoria had one last chance at Woodsboro, the winner to claim the
league for the first half of the season. The Times warned fans to
show up early if they wanted a seat in the grandstands. A quarter
page ad in the newspaper advised “For Real Thrills, Be There
Sunday”. Admission was 50 cents. The revival commencing at
First Baptist Church that same day had serious competition.
Victoria again put ace pitcher Al Salziger on the mound and Gallia
was the man for Woodsboro. Woodsboro led 3-1 when Victoria loaded
the bases in the eighth with one out. An easy grounder was thrown
wild to home, allowing two runs across the plate to tie the score.
Moments later, a wild infield throw allowed the go-ahead run to
score for Victoria . Gallia pitched well, striking out eleven and
holding Holleman to an 0-for-4 day at the plate. The Times declared
“ … a hard luck game for Gallia of Woodsboro, who pitched
a cracking game from start to finish”. Victoria won the first
half of the season.
As the second half began, Gallia was forced to acknowledge the limits
of his arm. Jack Modisett assumed the pitching chores and led the
Athletics to victory . He pitched again a week later and beat Port
Lavaca in a game in which Kelly Scott hit a homerun and Pat Autry
hit two. Spirits were high, as Port Lavaca had defeated Victoria
on the previous Sunday . Later in the month, Woodsboro again won
with Modisett on the pitching mound. Gallia played left field, hitting
2-for-3 with a double and a triple and scoring twice in a 5-3 victory
. All eyes were on the August 2 game against Victoria.
A rested Bert Gallia took the mound against Victoria. He gave up
no hits and no runs, falling just two walks short of a perfect game.
The Times pronounced “Old Bert Gallia was in rare form, striking
out 16 of the Buds, and was in complete control of the game from
start to finish.” The Athletics batters roughed up the Victoria
hurlers, scoring twelve runs for a resounding 12-0 kayo of the first
half champs . There was joy in Woodsboro as the hometown nine moved
into a tie for first place with Edna.
Woodsboro and Victoria met again on the following Sunday, both sides
primed for the re-match. In the first three innings, Woodsboro shelled
Art Salziger, Victoria’s ace pitcher for seven hits, including
three triples. Woodsboro with six runs on the scoreboard seemed
certain to again defeat Victoria. Victoria manager W. C. Erwin replaced
Salziger on the pitching mound with Koch, the Victoria catcher.
Koch stopped Woodsboro cold, while Victoria scored two runs and
four more with a big inning in the seventh to tie the game. The
game went into extra innings with Gallia and Koch locked in a pitching
duel. Woodsboro had yet to score on Koch. Woodsboro finally scored
and went ahead in the eleventh. Victoria responded in its half of
the inning to tie the game. In the bottom of the twelfth with two
outs, Weaver singled off a tired Gallia. He advanced on a Texas
Leaguer by Riley, bringing up Harrison, who was having the game
of his life for Victoria. Harrison, an average hitter, already had
four big hits in the game off the Great Gallia. Harrison came through
with the big clutch hit, winning the game for Victoria, 8-7 in twelve
innings. Koch and Harrison’s unexpected heroics overshadowed
Gallia’s performance on the mound, which included fifteen
strikeouts .
Woodsboro played well the remainder of the second half with Jack
Modisett leading the league in hitting and Kelly Scott third in
that category. At the end of the second half, Woodsboro and Edna
were tied for first-place with two rained-out games to be played.
For six weeks, Woodsboro refused to play a weekday game or a Sunday
doubleheader, perhaps hoping to utilize Gallia pitching in more
than one game against the powerful Edna lineup. Ultimately, Edna
was awarded the second half and defeated Victoria in the end-of-season
playoff championship .
By the beginning of the 1932 baseball season, Gallia was forty-one
years old and had been throwing hard for well over twenty years.
The hard-fought campaigns of 1930 and 1931 were particularly wearing.
There were no anti-inflammatory drugs to ease pain and discomfort
and Gallia’s problems with his arm steadily increased. The
Great Depression dominated the national psyche. Major league attendance
fell dramatically as people simply could not afford the tickets.
Local baseball was what the people needed and wanted.
Woodsboro played the 1932 baseball season in the Gulf Coast Amateur
League with Corpus Christi, Refugio, Ingleside, Aransas Pass and
Taft. Bert Gallia’s most serious challenge came from a thirty-three
year old pitcher named Johnny Lynum. Lynum had been an outstanding
collegiate pitcher in 1928, leading Southwestern University to an
upset victory over Uncle Billy Disch’s University of Texas
squad. Lynum had turned down a contract to play in the Cubs organization
and most recently starred with Kingsville in the Missouri-Pacific
League. His friend, Hally Crumpton, convinced him to play for Taft.
Taft boasted an outstanding infield with Hally at shortstop and
his brother David at second. Hally had played AAA ball and David
had turned down a professional contract to stay home to work and
play ball with his family .
Woodsboro and Taft both started strong at the beginning of the season.
On May 12, days before his first game against Gallia, Lynum wrote
a feature for the Taft Tribune:
“Just wondering how it would feel to get beat.
We haven’t been beaten in such a long time … You have
often read and heard of ‘cocky nines’ but if you will
take a look at the Taft Tigers you will really see one. It takes
a cocky nine to hustle like the Tigers …”
That Sunday, Taft and Woodsboro, tied for first
place, met at Rooke Field in Woodsboro. Not on earned run had been
scored on Lynum and he was leading the league in hitting. Woodsboro’s
Modisett was second . A large contingent of Taft fans drove up to
Woodsboro for the game. Many others drove in from nearby towns to
see the match up. The game was a pitcher’s duel, as anticipated.
Taft scored first when speed merchant Lynum singled, stole second
and scored on Louie Lawler’s single. Woodsboro evened the
score when May singled, was sacrificed to second and scored on a
close play at the plate when Clark singled to right. In the seventh
inning, Neumann got his second hit of the day and scored when Rafe
Thomas doubled. Taft threatened in the ninth when Lynum singled
and moved to second on a Lawler single with only one out. But Gallia
tightened up and retired the side for a 2-1 win . A sportswriter
wrote: “Bert Gallia pitched a masterful game. He threw the
fastest ball Sunday that we have ever seen him throw.” Lynum
and his Tigers felt the sting of defeat.
Woodsboro and Taft shared the league lead as the first half wound
down in mid June 1932. They met on June 19 to begin a three-game
playoff to determine the winner of the first half. In the first
game, Woodsboro jumped on Lynum for a run in the fourth inning when
Clark doubled and scored on Modisett’s single. Gallia pitched
nearly flawless ball, giving up only two hits, both to Hally Crumpton.
In the sixth inning, Hally singled with no outs, went to second
on a passed ball and was sacrificed to third by Lynum. With the
squeeze play on, Lawler was called out for stepping out of the batter’s
box. Gallia struck out Hartt to end the inning and Woodsboro went
on to win 1-0. Gallia finished the game with ten strikeouts. Taft
sportswriter “Speed” Sanders wrote afterwards:
“We hate to pan a ballplayer for fanning out
when he is facing Bert Gallia for that is no disgrace at all. The
Woodsboro veteran has found many a good ballplayer during his twenty-five
years in baseball – eight of them in the big show. In the
previous game with Taft, Gallia came in with his curve ball when
he got two strikes on the batter. Sunday the Tigers went to Woodsboro
determined to watch for the curve ball on two strikes but Gallia
was wise and after he had a 2-0 or 2-1 count he came straight down
the middle with a fastball and in most cases the Tigers were off
balance and unable to do anything with it. It doesn’t pay
to outguess a pitcher – with Gallia in the box one never knows
what is coming next.”
One Taft ballplayer remembered:
“Gallia still had plenty on his pitches …
He threw pretty fast when he wanted … threw that leg up pretty
high and he’d go way back. It was deceptive. You couldn’t
tell where that ball was coming from … He mixed ‘em
up …. Threw to the outside corner a lot …“
Woodsboro and Taft played again on June 26. Gallia
rested his arm and Taft won 2-1 in extra innings . Game three of
the first-half playoff was played on July 3, 1932. Taft jumped to
an early four run lead and seemed certain victors. But Woodsboro
climbed back. In the seventh inning, with Woodsboro down by one
run, Modisett and Gallia singled and scored on a double by May to
win the game and clinch the first half of the season .
Taft took an early lead in the second half of the season. Woodsboro
struggled, as Gallia, trying to rest his ailing arm, did not pitch
many games. A controversy ensued in mid-season when Taft signed
hard-hitting Wayne Gore of the Corpus Christi Internationals. One
fan remembers Gore as “a big guy who could hit the hell out
of the ball and run like a wild horse on the bases.” Gallia
appealed to the league secretary, who refused to approve Gore’s
release. Gallia added fuel to the fire, suggesting the arrangements
between Taft and Gore might not have been consistent with the league’s
amateur status . The Taft Tribune insisted that if the Tigers were
able to pay money for services, they would go after someone like
Chicago Cubs star Rogers Hornsby .
Woodsboro and Taft met on August 7. The rivalry had become intense.
Gallia was determined to pitch against Taft and started the game
on the mound for Woodsboro. Taft scored in the first inning when
Lynum got on base on an infield error. The speedy Lynum then scored
from first base when Louie Lawler’s drive to rightfield bounced
over the outfielder’s head. From that time until the seventh
inning, it appeared that Taft would win the game on the freak bounce.
In the Woodsboro seventh, Modisett struck out but was safe at first
after Lawler missed the third strike. Lawler redeemed himself by
picking off Modisett with his rifle arm. Gallia singled and advanced
to second on Newman’s single. After Lynum struck out Pat Autry,
May singled to center to score Gallia and tie the score at 1-1.
In the ninth, Taft’s Pal Maurin doubled and advanced to third
but was unable to score. Lynum did not allow Woodsboro a hit from
the ninth inning to the fifteenth inning and retired the sides by
strikeouts in the thirteenth. Gallia was equally fearsome for Woodsboro.
In the fourteenth, Maurin singled and advanced to third with only
one out, but again Taft could not push the run across.
In the Woodsboro half of the fifteenth inning, Pat Autry go on base
on an infield error. May hit a fly ball to right field. Taft’s
Palmyre Maurin, a Frenchman, raced in, so intent on doubling up
Autry that he dropped the ball and Woodsboro ended up with men on
second and third base. Lynum walked Skeen to load the bases. With
two strikes and two balls, Woodsboro’s Lee Piehl, the Athletics’
number eight hitter, singled to left to win the game .
Taft won the second half of the season, setting up the league playoff
with first-half winner Woodsboro. The first game of the 1932 Gulf
Coast Amateur League Championship was played on September 11. Taft
recruited and signed Tommy Jordan of Aransas Pass for the playoffs.
The Taft Tribune called Jordan “one of the best fielding first
baseman in baseball – bar none” . Jordan had played
all season for Bartlesville (Oklahoma) in the Western League, hitting
twenty-two triples and stealing forty bases as their leadoff hitter.
Lynum inserted Jordan in the cleanup spot in the Taft batting order
.
Sixteen-year-old Woodrow Crumpton, younger brother of infield sensations
Hally and David, had grown up playing ball with his older brothers
and always went along with them to their games. On that particular
day, Woodrow got the nod to start in left field for the absent Noel
Brittain. Brittain was a big man, affectionately called “Old
Lectrolux” by his teammates, making reference to the large
gas-powered refrigerator of the time that had no moving parts. Crumpton,
in contrast, was a gazelle.
The game was a classic Woodsboro-Taft matchup with Gallia and Lynum
pitching masterfully and the fielders making great defensive plays.
Woodsboro nearly scored early on when Rafe Thomas tripled with one
out and Fred Autry walked. But Lynum got Clark to pop up attempting
to squeeze Thomas in and Autry was doubled off first base. The score
was zero-to-zero after eight full innings of play. In the Taft half
of the ninth inning, the speedy Lynum beat out a bunt down the third
base line. He stole second and went to third on Jordan’s fly
to centerfield. He scored on a Gallia pitch that got past catcher
Pat Autry. Pal Maurin then beat out an infield hit, went to second
base on an error and advanced to third when an attempted pickoff
throw went wide. David Crumpton then singled to score Maurin and
give Taft a big 2-0 lead.
Woodsboro had its big bats up to hit in their half of the ninth.
Clark singled with one out. Jack Modisett, Woodsboro’s best
hitter, was up next. Modisett hit a sharp line drive. Sixteen-year-old
Woodrow Crumpton took off running and made a brilliant one-handed
falling shoestring catch. “I come up with it all right”,
Woodrow Crumpton recalls, adding “They would have run me off
if I had missed it. He’d (Modisett) have gone for two bases
maybe three if I had missed it. We didn’t have fences in those
days and that ball would have gone a long ways.” The kid was
Taft’s hero of the day.
In the aftermath of the big game, Woodsboro protested Taft’s
use of Jordan, a man who had not played a single regular season
game for Taft. Taft’s first victory was declared no contest
and re-played on September 18. Again the game was hard-fought. Former
Woodsboro ballplayer Amos “PeeWee” Demmer umpired behind
home plate. At one point, Demmer called what even the Taft Tribune
referred to as a “bad strike” on a pitch to Woodsboro
shortstop Scott Clark. Clark was well known for his “famous
grin” and highly thought of by even opposing fans as a player
who never “rawhided” umpires. He looked back at Demmer
and “did nothing but grin” .
In the second inning of that game, Taft’s Pal Maurin singled
to right field. He made his move to steal second and catcher Pat
Autry’s throw hit him in the leg and careened off into the
outfield. By the time Woodsboro recovered the ball, the speedy Maurin
had scored and Taft led 1-0. In the third inning, Woodsboro’s
Lee “Spotlight” Piehl led off with a triple. Taft’s
Johnny Lynum struck out Fred Autry, got Clark out on a pop up while
attempting to bunt Piehl in and struck out Lonnie Piehl. In the
eighth inning, Woodsboro’s Pat Autry hit a Texas Leaguer for
a double and moved to third base on a passed ball. Autry was injured
on the slide and replaced by a Brem to pinch-run. Lynum picked Brem
off to end the threat. The game ended 1-0. Lynum struck out eleven
Woodsboro hitters, including Modisett three times.
On October 2, Woodsboro and Taft met again at Rooke Park in Woodsboro.
The game was tight until the top of the fourth inning. Taft jumped
on Gallia for seven runs and the game was essentially over at that
point. Gallia was suffering, his arm too tired to do more than just
throw the ball across the plate. The headline in the next edition
of the Taft Tribune read “Tigers Defeat Galliamen 8-0 to win
Gulf Coast Championship” . Lynum had thrown his third straight
shutout of Woodsboro. Taft sportswriter “Speed Sanders wrote
“ … very few pitchers are able to beat Bert Gallia and
his gang when a championship is at stake” . Lynum went on
to throw a two-hitter to lead Taft to victory over Victoria, champions
of the Southwest Texas Amateur League .
There was little, if any, interplay between the Anglo teams of the
Texas Coast and the Black or Latin teams. Lynum used to take the
Taft squad south of the border once a season to play a doubleheader
against Monterey. In the late 1930’s, an aging star from San
Antonio named Naranjo pitched for Taft . That was nearly the extent
of interplay.
The 1932 season was Bert Gallia’s last great year. The Great
Gallia was forty-one years old and his arm was worn. He struggled
along for a couple of more seasons. By the 1934 season, while newspapers
along the coast referred to Gallia as “the old master”
and “the grand old man” , his famed fastball and curves
no longer bedazzled. Gallia rarely pitched and Woodsboro did not
win a single game. He took the mound in the ninth inning to finish
a game in May with his team down 16-5 . Gallia umpired the bases
in mid-July while Beeville thrashed his Woodsboro club . A week
later, he took the mound for Woodsboro, determined to hold the line,
only to lose to Beeville by a score of 20-0 . When Woodsboro dropped
out of the Southwest Texas League in August, a sportswriter for
Beeville’s Bee-Picayune wrote:
“ … show me a more game or better bunch
of sports in this league. There’s not a club in south Texas
that could have taken the beatings which the Athletics have suffered
in the past two years and yet stick in place and scrap as they have.”
There was no glorious finale for former major leaguer
Bert Gallia. He slipped out of the limelight, accepting the end
of his career with the class that had typified it throughout. A
reporter who interviewed him just three years later noted that the
unassuming Gallia did not talk much of his pitching highlights,
but did recall with amusement his major league record of once hitting
three batters in a single inning .
Melvin Gallia continued to work in the oilfields around Refugio
County into his late 40’s. He moved to Brazoria County in
1943 to work at Dow Chemical’s Freeport plant. Gallia coached
the plant baseball team and occasionally even took the mound to
pitch an inning or two . He and his wife left the Texas Coast in
1946 to move to the small town of Natalia, outside of San Antonio,
to be close to their daughter, who had married and settled there.
Gallia helped to get baseball going in Natalia, laying out a field
and wiring it for lighting. He coached a men’s baseball team
and a women’s softball team for several years in Natalia.
The Great Gallia continued to take the mound occasionally to pitch.
By this time, town baseball had largely disappeared from rural America.
The phenomenal popularity of town ball and regional competition
in the many amateur and semi-professional leagues across rural America
became a thing of the past. Radio and, later, television brought
increased coverage of major league play to the nation. When the
big leagues began to racially integrate in 1947, the nation followed
the momentous event. The major-affiliated minor leagues, including
the Texas League, began to integrate in the early 1950’s.
One can only imagine the impact that might have been made across
rural America if small-town baseball had still been thriving at
the time.
Gallia followed major league baseball with great interest. He read
the sports section of the San Antonio Sun-Express every day and
subscribed to Baseball News. But he was a personal man and rarely
discussed baseball with others. He lost contact with most of his
friends from major league baseball other than his good friend, Nick
Altrock, whom he rarely saw . Major League Baseball invited Gallia
to the All-Star Game every year, but he never did attend one . Yet,
the modest Gallia was quietly proud of his athletic accomplishments.
He shared stories with his grandson in vivid detail, remembering
the count in balls and strikes for a moment fifty years earlier.
A scrapbook of old newspaper clippings was among his most valued
possessions. In the early 1960’s, he loaned the scrapbook
to a friend, whose house burned down that night. Gallia was devastated.
Melvin Gallia spent the remaining years of his life in Natalia,
Texas. He worked as an electrical and plumbing contractor and graciously
did work for many in town who could not afford to pay him for his
services. He drove around town in a faded, blue Chevy pickup truck
until the day he quit driving .
Melvin Gallia, like so many country boys, did not talk much, although
he did enjoy a good joke. He spent a great deal of time outdoors,
hunting and fishing with his wife and grandson. He loved children
and they flocked around him wherever he went in Natalia. He would
offer them pennies or pieces of candy from his pocket. He and a
partner opened the first movie theater in Natalia. The theater did
well for a couple of years until someone opened a drive-in movie
theater in the next town. He took out the seats and converted his
theater into a roller-skating rink. Lupe Losa grew up in Natalia
and knew the old gentleman in town as Grandpa Gallia. She remembers
him treating her as one of his own daughters . She knew that he
had been a baseball player, but, like most of the residents of the
small town, never appreciated just how successful he had once been
in his career. “He was the quiet type. He never bragged about
himself.”
People in Natalia knew that Gallia had played baseball. But few
had any appreciation as to the extent of his one-time fame as a
major league star. The mild-mannered man was more thought of for
his work in building the local Catholic Church . Melvin Gallia was
a devout Catholic for his entire life, a reflection of his Czech
heritage. He regularly attended Mass alongside Natalia’s many
Hispanics in the local church community of the parish of St. John
Bosco. He is remembered by at least one person as “the best
parishioner we ever had” . The church members met for a time
in a local home. When the congregation became too large, Gallia
allowed the church to hold Mass at his skating rink. Later, he played
an important role in raising money to build Natalia a church and
he donated his time to run the electrical wiring for the new church.
Melvin Gallia died in 1976. Few who knew him imagined that the old
man had once challenged the likes of Ruth and Cobb. Ironically,
even after Gallia’s passing, some who did know of the man’s
exploits thought of him as an Hispanic ballplayer. One writer, who
contacted the family, was disappointed that he would not be able
to include Gallia in his study of early Hispanic baseball players
of Texas. In fact, as a Czech-Texan, Bert Gallia was the ethnic
side of baseball in his day.
The Great Gallia has been long forgotten along the
central Texas coast where he once thrilled crowds of cheering fans.
Woodsboro no longer fields a baseball team, nor does Washington,
the nation’s capital. That was in another time when men played
baseball for the love of the game and nearly every town, even towns
the size of Woodsboro, fielded a team. Sunday afternoon was about
baseball and those who could afford the price of admission paid
25 cents to get out of the hot Texas sun and sit in the covered
grandstands. It was a time when baseball truly was the national
passion.
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