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Frank Thomas "The Original One"
Contact Information (where autograph
requests should be mailed to):
Contact Person and/or Name of
Organization: Frank Thomas
Address:
118 Doray Lane
State: PA City:
Pittsburgh Zip Code: 15237-3681
Charity
Information:
Name of charity or charities
the donations go to: Camp Happy Days and Special Times, Courageous Kidz,
Meals on Wheels
Signing Habits:
1) If you sign items for free,
what are the maximum number of items you will sign for free? Only sign
for donation, but no limit
2) Do you answer questions
sent by fans? Yes
3) Do you prefer when fans
send you their own pens/markers? Does not matter
4) What can fans do to make it
easier for you to sign their items?
__________________________________________________________________
Donation Charges:
| Item |
Price |
Item |
Price |
| Cards |
$5 |
Flats up to 8x10 |
$5 |
| Flats up to 16x20 |
$10 |
Baseballs/small
footballs |
$10 |
| Magazines |
$5 |
Flats larger than 16x20 |
$10 |
| Mini Helmets |
$10 |
Gloves |
$20 |
| Large Helmet |
$25 |
Bats |
$25 |
| Jerseys |
$50 |
Inscriptions |
No charge |
| Other: _________ |
|
Other _________ |
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Who should the check/money
order be made out to: Frank Thomas
Payment can be made by: Cash,
Money Orders, Cashier’s Checks
Frank Thomas's
Message to the Fans
Biography
Frank Joseph Thomas was born
on June 11, 1929 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to parents Frank and
Anna Thomas (his father had emigrated from Eastern Europe). At an
early age, he began to discover his love of baseball and was
encouraged to pursue his dreams by his parents. His father did not
have an arm and the young Frank was taught the fundamentals of the
game by uncle Mike.
Frank Thomas was a strapping
200 plus pound, 6 foot 3 slugger when he first came to play for his
own home town team of the Pittsburgh Pirates in the summer of 1951,
where he saw only a little bit of action. In 1952 he mostly played
in the minors, and tore up the Southern Association by hitting .303
while leading the league with 112 runs scored, 35 Home Runs and 131
RBIs. By 1953 he had learned the ropes and played his first full
season. With the departure of Ralph Kiner in June of that year, the
pressure was on the young outfielder as the Hall of Famer’s
replacement, and he did not disappoint, belting in 30 home runs that
year. In fact he kept on hitting the ball and 21 or more homers for
the next nine years, with the lone exception of 1959 (when he did
not play the full year). He was also a formidable fielder and
played all three outfield positions as well as various infield
positions when needed by his team.
He played on the Pirates team
through the end of the 1958 season, and was honored with three NL
All-Star selections in 1954, 1955 and 1958. In 1958 he was the
starting third baseman and came through with one hit and a walk in
three at bats. In January of 1959 the Pirates traded Thomas along
with Whammy Douglas, Johnny Powers and Jim Pendleton to the
Cincinnati Reds for Smoky Burgess, Harvey Haddix and Don Hoak.
Although the trade dropped the Pirates from second to fourth place
in 1959, Burgess, Haddix and Hoak were big reasons for their
championship year in 1960.
He only played in 108 games in
1959 for the Reds while batting a dismal .225 and was shipped off to
the Cubs in a 3-for-1 trade in December of that year for Lee Walls,
Lou Jackson and Bill Henry (who was an All-Star the following year).
Thomas’ time in Chicago was also fairly short lived and he was
traded to the Milwaukee Braves in May 1961 for Mel Raoch. Although
Thomas hit .284 with 25 Home Runs in 124 games, he was traded once
again in November 1961. He was now sent over to New York to play
with their start up Mets with a player to be named later (Gus Bell)
for cash and a Brave’s player to be named later (Rick Herrscher).
Thomas was the only real offensive star on a team that finished the
year 40-120, by hitting .266 with 34 Home Runs and 94 RBIs on a team
that hit .244 with a total of 139 Home Runs and 573 RBIs. His 34
Home Runs remained a team single season record for thirteen years
until a young slugger named Dave Kingman hit 36 dingers in 1975.
Although Thomas may have been the team’s shining light, aging future
HOFer and fan favorite Richie Ashburn (.306) recieved the nod for
the All-Star team that year.
In 1963 Frank Thomas’ playing
time and productivity began to fade and hit less than 20 home runs
for the first time since his injury shortened season in 1959 with
15. In August of 1964 the Mets traded him to the Philadelphia
Phillies for Wayne Graham, Gary Kroll and cash to help with their
pennant run. Although Thomas came through by hitting .294 with 7
Home Runs and 26 RBIs in only 39 games, he broke his thumb on
September 8th, and the Phillies had one of MLBs worst declines and
ended the season tied for second place (with Cincinnati) only one
game behind the eventual World Series winning St. Louis Cardinals.
The Phillies were not in contention for the pennant by the summer of
1965 and after an argument with Richie Allen, was sold to the
Houston Astros in July. In early September of that year, he was sent
packing once again, this time to the Milwaukee Braves for a player
to be named later (Mickey Sinnerud). The Braves, now in Atlanta,
released Thomas in April. He was signed as a free agent by the Cubs
in May, but after only 5 games he was released, playing his final
game after sixteen season on June 11, 1966.
Source:
www.FrankThomasTheOriginalOne.com
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