[Biography written by Stew Thornley, Member of SABR.]
Don
Wheeler was an outstanding athlete from Minneapolis, Minnesota, who had a nine-season career in
professional baseball over a period of 12 years. A catcher, Wheeler spent his first years in
pro ball in the shadow of another Minnesota catcher, Wes Westrum, but Wheeler got
his chance to play in the major leagues after he was drafted out of the New
York Giants organization.
Wheeler
was born in Minneapolis on September 29, 1922, the only child of Archie, a railroad
mail clerk, and Marion, a housewife. He
grew up in south Minneapolis, originally in a house near
East 25th Street and Bloomington Avenue and later at East 26th Street and Elliot Avenue, a site now occupied by
Abbott-Northwestern Avenue.
After
elementary school at Greeley Elementary and one year at
Phillips Junior High School, Wheeler started in tenth grade at
South High School, where he played on the varsity teams
for baseball and hockey. The baseball
coach was Frank Cleve, who coached other sports and later achieved prominence
for coaching the Minneapolis Henry basketball team to two consecutive state
high-school championships. One of
Wheeler’s baseball teammates at South was pitcher Francis “Red” Hardy, who was
later a teammate on the Minneapolis Millers.
Wheeler
said he acquired his love of sports from his dad. “My dad never played athletics, but he was a
fabulous fan,” he said in an interview November 28, 2003, 12 days before his death. “He’d go to high-school football—a game in
the afternoon and then the night game at Nicollet Park.
He followed athletics real close.”
Wheeler
himself made many trips to Nicollet Park, but mainly to watch the Millers
baseball team. “I used to crank the
numbers on the old scoreboard out there,” he said. Wheeler and his friends in could get free
admission to the games, and, although he was a long way from home plate,
Wheeler could see the game from his perch within the center-field
scoreboard. “We got paid a little, but
mostly we got in and had the chance to get the balls and bats and stuff we
could use in the neighborhood.” They’d
often run errands for players, and Wheeler recalls going to a nearby drugstore
between games of doubleheaders in 1938 to get ice cream for Ted Williams, who
was in the process of winning the American Association Triple Crown.
Wheeler
played sandlot baseball at Stewart Field on East 25th Street and 10th Avenue, not far from his home. American Legion
baseball was not available to him at this time since the post in his area had
dropped its league membership. Wheeler
instead played in a men’s league starting the summer after his junior year of
high school.
Wheeler
graduated from South in June 1940 and had a scholarship to play baseball at the
University of Minnesota.
He began attending the university while also working in the equipment
room at the university’s athletic department.
But Bob Evans, a scout for Mike Kelley, owner of the Minneapolis
Millers, convinced him to sign a professional contract.
Wheeler
was assigned to Eau
Claire
(Wisconsin) in the Class C Northern League, where
he received the nickname of Scotty after teammate Dave Garcia, during a
friendly argument, called him a “dirty little Scotchman.” (Wheeler is Irish, English, and Scotch in his
ancestry.)
Wheeler
had a .280 batting average in Eau Claire in 1941.
He also drew 62 walks and had an on-base percentage of .379. Westrum, from Clearbook, in the northwestern
part of Minnesota, played 98 games for Eau Claire that season, displacing Wheeler from
behind the plate. “I ended up playing
the outfield and second base.”
Wheeler
and Westrum started the 1942 season with the Minneapolis Millers in the Class
AA American Association. Both made their
Millers debut in the team’s home opener, on April 23 against Kansas City.
Although starting catcher Bob Linton hit three home runs, all over the
center-field fence, Minneapolis trailed, 11-7, going into the last of
the ninth. Wheeler came up in the ninth,
as a pinch hitter for Joe Lafata, and walked. This was after the Millers had
already scored four runs to tie the game.
In
the top of the 10th, Westrum replaced Linton at catcher and Wheeler
went to second base. Still another
Millers catcher, Angelo Giuliani, who had pinch hit in the last of the ninth,
went into the game at first base. The
Millers won the game in the last of the 10th on a home run by Joe
Vosmik, his second of the game.
Wheeler
was sent back to Eau
Claire,
this time producing a .432 on-base percentage in 96 games, before returning to
Minneapolis to finish the season with the Millers.
That
fall Wheeler was drafted into the Army and sent to
Camp Hood (now Fort Hood) near Killeen, Texas, where he was assigned to the tank
destroyers. “While I was there the
colonel of the weapons school was a baseball nut, and his prime thing was to
beat the OCS [Officer Candidates School] team there.” Upon learning of Wheeler’s baseball skills,
the colonel had him transferred to the weapons school. Wheeler played in semi-professional tournaments
in Texas.
“We played a naval air team that Birdie Tebbetts had. [Tebbetts was a major league catcher who
later had a long career as a manager and scout.] Birdie was going to have me transferred to
the naval air corps, but the push came all at once.”
The
“push” brought about Wheeler’s transfer to the infantry in England for in 1943. In the latter part of 1944, several months
after D-Day, Wheeler’s unit made it to the European continent, crossing the English Channel, landing at peaceful
Omaha Beach, which was by this time peaceful, and
marching through France into Germany.
A sergeant in the 398th infantry regiment, Wheeler received
for bronze star for, as his citation read, “heroic achievement on 13
April 1945 in
the vicinity of Lowenstein, Germany.
Leading his squad forward in an advance, Sergeant Wheeler observed
hostile activity on a ridge which was his objective. Aware that a frontal assault might result in
severe casualties, he ordered his men to take cover while he advanced along to
a vantage point from which he directed mortar fire upon the opposing
forces. He then summoned his men forward
and led them in an attack in which six hostile riflemen were captured and the
position secured without casualty to his squad.”
After
Victory in Europe Day (May 8), Wheeler
was informed that “we would probably be coming home and then going the other
way [the Pacific theater]. Then V-J Day
[Victory in Japan] came along.” With the war over, Wheeler remained in Europe until returning stateside on a
Liberty ship in November. “On Thanksgiving Day, we sailed from
Marseilles [France].
They got us up at three in the morning, gave us turkey, we went to the
dock at noon, they fed us turkey, we got on the ship
at night, they fed us turkey.”
Along
with many other veterans whose careers had been interrupted by the war, Wheeler
was back in 1946 and started the season with the Millers. In April, longtime owner Mike Kelley sold the
Millers to the New York Giants, the end of Minneapolis as an independent team. Wheeler split the season between the Millers
and the St. Cloud Rox of the Northern League.
In
1947, he was in Sioux
City
in the Class A Western League, playing for Joe Becker, whom he described as
“the greatest manager I ever saw. He was
the only manager in baseball that I saw, when he came out to the mound to get
the pitcher that didn’t talk him out of it.”
(The next year, Becker’s son was one of the Duluth Dukes players
injured, along with several who were killed, in a bus crash. Joseph Becker, a 19-year-old shortstop,
suffered burns and a compound fracture of a leg.)
For Wheeler, another season with Minneapolis followed in 1948. That season, he set an American Association
record with a .998 fielding percentage for a catcher (.9977116 to be
exact in 93 games with 393PO, 43A and 1E). This record stood until 1993
when Matt Walbeck had a percentage .9982174 (79 games with 496PO 64A and 1E).
By
1948, Wheeler was working in the off-season at the post office in downtown
Minneapolis, and it was there that he got the news from a co-worker on November
10, 1948 that he had been drafted out of the New York Giants system by the
Chicago White Sox. Wheeler saw this as
an opportunity for him, as Westrum was catching for the Giants, who also had
Walker Cooper behind the plate.
Wheeler
made the White Sox in 1949 and played in his first major league game on
Saturday, April 23, against the St. Louis Browns in Chicago.
Wheeler entered in the second game after the team’s regular catcher, Joe
Tipton, jammed his thumb in the top of the second inning. In the last of the fifth, Wheeler had a
run-scoring single to cut the Browns’ lead to 4-3. The White Sox went on to
win, 12-5, as Wheeler was hitless in his other four at-bats.
He
hit his first, and only, home run at home in the second game of a doubleheader
against the Boston Red Sox on Sunday, June 12.
The home run came off Ellis Kinder.
On
July 30 in New
York,
he had four hits on the birthday of Yankees manager Casey Stengel. The first was a run-scoring triple off Vic
Raschi in the second inning, which made the score 2-0 for the White Sox. Wheeler added two singles and a double as
Chicago won, 9-2. “After the game, Casey walked by me and said,
‘You had a great day, but it was a lousy birthday present.’”
Of
his year in the majors, Wheeler commented on the strong clubs of
Boston and Cleveland, Boston for its outstanding batting order. He also enjoyed reconnecting with Ted
Williams before a game. “We passed and I
said, ‘Hi, Ted.’ He looked at me and
said, ‘I know you from somewhere.’ I
asked him, ‘Could it be 1938?’ And
Williams remembered.”
Wheeler
recalled the Cleveland pitching staff, with its rotation of
Early Wynn, Bob Lemon, Bob Feller, and Mike Garcia. “Wynn was the toughest because he would knock
you down if you took a good swing,” Wheeler said, adding a memory of a plate appearance
against Bob Feller, when he was looking for a fastball on a 3 ball, 1 strike
count. “He threw me a curve that was
unreal. They say what a great fastball
he had. I still think his curveball was
so good that it set up his fastball.”
Wheeler
played in 67 games with Chicago, producing a batting average of .240 and
an on-base percentage of .333. He played
three more seasons in organized baseball, with Memphis (Southern Association), Colorado Springs (Western League), and the American
Association team that played in both Toledo in 1952.
He was gone from Toledo by the time the team moved to
Charleston, West Virginia.
In June, the White Sox recalled him and tried to sell him to
Buffalo in the International League, but Wheeler
decided to retire at that point. “I had
an agreement with [general manager] Frank Lane that if I was sold, I was supposed to
get a percentage,” said Wheeler in a follow-up conversation via phone on December
6, 2003. Wheeler said when Lane refused to give him
any of the proceeds from the sale, Wheeler returned to Minnesota and went to
Detroit Lakes, approximately 200 miles northwest of
Minneapolis, to play semi-pro ball.
Over
the next two seasons, he played with semi-pro teams in Glencoe and
Rochester, cities close to Minneapolis to allow him to commute to games. The Rochester Aces played in the Southern
Minnesota League. “Good ballclubs,”
Wheeler said of the teams in the Southern Minny League. “Some of those payrolls were as good as they
were in the [American] Association.”
After
baseball, Wheeler worked full-time at the post office. In the late 1950s he began pitching batting
practice for the Millers, who by this time were playing at Metropolitan Stadium
in suburban Bloomington and were managed by Gene Mauch. Wheeler remembered the frustration of a young
Millers player, Carl Yastrzemski, who had trouble hitting Wheeler’s pitches in
1960 after Mauch had left to become manager of the Philadelphia Phillies and
the team was managed by Eddie Popowski.
“He [Yastrzemski] yelled at me, ‘Throw one over the plate, will
you?’ Popowski was standing behind me
and told me to ignore him. But I
hollered, ‘Well, put your bat out, and I’ll hit it.’ That was stupid and I apologized after—but he
was really a nice guy.”
In
August of 1960, the Millers were short on catchers and asked Wheeler to
accompany them to Denver, where they would be playing five games
against the Bears in three days. Wheeler
took vacation time from the post office to make the trip. He also had to secure his release from the
Chicago White Sox. Wheeler wrote a
letter to the White Sox, assuring them that he had no intention of re-entering
professional baseball on a regular basis, and was given his release, freeing
him to play for the Millers. Wheeler got
into the final game of the series, on Friday, August 26, as a late-inning
defensive replacement at catcher for Bob Tillman.
In
the 1950s, Wheeler got involved in sports officiating, first in hockey and then
in football and baseball. He gave up
on-ice hockey officiating when he was in his 50s, but by this time he was an
off-ice official for Minnesota North Stars games in the National Hockey League,
first working as a goal judge and then as a penalty time keeper. Wheeler continued longer with football and
baseball. During the 1960s, he worked
Minnesota Gophers baseball teams, then coached by Dick Siebert, who could
dictate which games of a doubleheader that each member of the two-umpire crew
would work behind the plate. In the
mid-1960s, the Gophers had an outstanding righthanded pitcher, Frank Brousseau,
who went on to a major league career.
Wheeler said he’d know which game of a doubleheader Brousseau would
pitch when Siebert gave him his assignment.
If Siebert said he had the plate for the second game, Wheeler knew that
was the one Brousseau would pitch.
Wheeler’s partner, Swede Terres, used the protective balloon. Those with the balloons were considered
high-ball umpires (more likely to call higher strikes). Wheeler wore an inside protector, making him
a low-ball umpire, one more conducive to Brousseau’s style.
Wheeler
retired from the post office in 1981. He
lived in Bloomington, his home since the 1950s, with his
wife, Helen (birth name Downs), whom he met while playing in Eau Claire and whom he married in 1943 while on
furlough from the Army.
Wheeler,
who was in good health at the time he did the interview for this biography,
died of a heart attack while blowing snow out of the driveway of a neighbor the
morning of Wednesday, December 10, 2003.
The Wheelers have four children, Terry, Ron, Debbie, and Scott.
Sources:
Interview with Don Wheeler, Friday,
November 29, 2003
(with phone conversation December 6, 2003)
Old-Time Data, Inc. Professional Baseball
Player Database playing record for Don Wheeler
Don Wheeler playing record on
http://www.baseball-reference.com
“Vosmik, Linton Spark 12-11 Miller Win”
by George A. Barton, Minneapolis
Tribune, Friday,
April 24, 1942,
p. 15
“Millers Service Flag Dotted with 20
Stars” by Halsey Hall, The Sporting News,
December
24, 1942, p. 2
“Sox Defeat Browns, 12-5” by Irving
Vaughan, Chicago
Tribune, Sunday,
April 24, 1949,
p. 1
“Sox Lose 2 to Boston, 15-3 and 7-5” by Irving Vaughan,
Chicago
Tribune, Monday,
June 13, 1949
“White Sox Bat Out Raschi in 4th
and Down Bombers” by Louis Effrat, New
York Times, Sunday, July 31, 1949, p. 1S
“Ten of 21 Draftees of Last Fall
Continued in Majors Through ’49,” The
Sporting News, November 23, 1949, p. 14
“Millers Lose 14-3 to Bears; Err 4
Times,” Minneapolis
Tribune, Saturday,
August 27, 1960,
p. 22