The
Honor Rolls of Baseball were established in 1946
by the National Baseball Hall of Fame and
Museum
's Permanent
Committee to establish as a second level of induction designed to recognize non-playing
contributors. The committee designed the Honor Rolls to
commemorate
managers,
executives,
umpires and
sportswriters, as an addition to their
regular
vote of old-time players. Though
sportswriter Henry Chadwick was elected in 1938, the Hall had not
devised a plan to extend recognition to these contributors, and
this was the first attempt.
On April 23, 1946, the Permanent Committee voted to induct 11
players into the Baseball Hall of Fame, along with 39 non-players
into the Honor Rolls, separated into their respective category.
This second-tier list consisted of 5 managers, 11 umpires, 11
executives and 12 sportswriters.
Key
Abbreviations
| Name |
Name of the person by official records |
| Year inducted |
Year inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame |
| † |
Elected to the Baseball Hall
of Fame |
| § |
Indicates that person was also player |
Honor Rolls of Baseball recipients
Executives


| Name |
Year Inducted |
Notes |
Ref |
| † |
1953 |
Barrow was the New York
Yankees' President and general manager from 1920 to 1945. He was
also the on-field manager for the
Detroit Tigers from 1903 to 1904, and
the Boston Red Sox from 1918 to 1920,
which included their World Series
victory in 1918. |
|
|
|
Barnard was the second President of
the American League. His tenure
lasted from 1927 to 1931. |
|
|
|
Bruce secretary of the National Commission, the
forerunner of Baseball's Commissioner's Office, from 1903 to 1920.
He was previously a legal counsel to the American League president, and was a part
owner of St. Louis Browns from
1902 to 1916. |
|
|
|
Brush was the principal owner of both the Cincinnati Reds and the New York Giants. |
|
| † |
2008 |
Dreyfuss owned the Pittsburgh
Pirates franchise from 1900 to 1932. |
|
|
|
Ebbets was an owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers franchise, also serving
as President and, for one season, the
on-field manager. |
|
|
|
Herrmann was an owner of the Cincinnati Reds franchise from 1902 to
1927. |
|
|
|
Heydler started in Major
League Baseball as an umpire,
and later became the National League
President in 1909, and then again from
1918 to 1934. |
|
|
|
Quinn was the priciple owner of the Boston Red Sox from 1923 to 1933. |
|
|
|
Soden was the National League
President in 1882. |
|
|
|
Young was a manager and
umpire in the National
Association before he became the National League President in 1885, an office he held until
1902. |
|
Managers

| Name |
Year Inducted |
Notes |
Ref |
| § |
|
Carrigan played 10 seasons with the Boston Red Sox from 1906 to 1916, and was
also their manager from 1913 to
1916. He was a part of three World
Series championship teams with Boston, two as their player-manager. He later returned as Boston's
manager in 1927 and stayed until 1929. |
|
| † § |
1996 |
Hanlon had a playing career that lasted from 1880 to 1892, and
a managerial career that lasted
from 1889 to 1907. As manager, he led his teams to 5 National League titles, three with the
Baltimore Orioles
and two with the Brooklyn
Superbas. He later became part owner of the Brooklyn
franchise. |
|
| † § |
1964 |
Huggins had a 13-year playing career that included time with
the Cincinnati Reds and St. Louis Cardinals. He began his
managerial with the Cardinals,
and later managed the New York
Yankees from 1918 to 1929. As their manager, the Yankees made
six appearances in the World Series,
including four championships. |
|
| † |
1999 |
Selee managed the Boston Beaneaters from 1890 to 1901, and
claimed five National League
championships. Later he managed the Chicago
Cubs from 1902 to 1905. |
|
| † § |
1964 |
Ward had a 16-year playing career that lasted from 1878 to
1894, and was a manager for seven
of those seasons. Was a part of three National League championship teams. He
pitched the second perfect game in
Major League Baseball history
on June 17, 1880. |
|
Umpires
Writers

| Name |
Year Inducted |
Notes |
Ref |
|
|
After graduating from Harvard, Barnes joined the staff of
The Boston Post in 1880. He
was also a sports editor of The
Boston Journal, the Boston
Herald and The Boston
Globe. When he retired in 1939, he was the oldest member
of the BBWAA, holding card
#1. |
|
|
|
After
attending Harvard
University in 1905, Cross worked for various New York newspaper
covering sports. He worked for The New York Times from 1909 to
1920, and again from 1924 to 1925, then was the sports editor for
the New York Evening post
from 1920 to 1924, and the New York Herald Tribune from
1926 to 1941. He was also worked for the New York Giants, and was a member of
the Baseball Hall of Fame committee from June 1945 until his death
in 1946. |
|
|
|
After
attending Lafayette
College , Hanna worked for various New York newspaper
covering sports. He first worked for The Kansas City
Star before moving to New York . He
was writer for the the New York
Herald in 1892 and the New York Press in 1893. He
also wrote for the The
Sun for 16 years before he returned to the
Herald. After 8 years, he moved over to the New York Herald Tribune and
worked there until his death in May 1930. |
|
|
|
Hough was a baseball writer for The Philadelphia Inquirer and
was given part ownership of the Philadelphia Athletics when he lent money
to Connie Mack so he could launch the
team in 1901. He later sold his interest in the club to Mack and
became sports editor of the Inquirer. |
|
|
|
Mercer
worked for the St. Louis
Post-Dispatch before moving to New York and writing
for The New York Evening
Globe. He later became president of the BBWAA, and wrote for
the New York Journal
American until his death in 1945. |
|
| § |
|
Murnane played seven seasons from 1872 to 1878 for various
major league franchises, then was player-manager for the 1884 Boston Reds of the Union Association. He later became a
long-time sportswriter for The
Boston Globe. |
|
|
|
Richter's career as a baseball writer lasted from 1870 until
his death in 1926. Influential in the development of sports
journalism, he began writing for the Philadelphia Day, and
the Sunday World. He later developed the first newspaper
sports department at the Public Ledger. He founded
the Sporting
Life, an all-sports journal. |
|
|
|
Sanborn, a graduate of Dartmouth,
wrote for the Chicago
Tribune for 40 years, retiring in 1930. He was one of the
founding members of the BBWAA. |
|
|
|
Sheridan, St. Louis sports writer, wrote for the Sporting News. |
|
|
|
Slocum wrote for the New York Journal American,
and was a ghostwriter for Babe Ruth. The Slocum Award, presented annually by
the New York Baseball Writers Association to a person judged to
have a long and meritorious service to baseball, was named in his
honor. |
|
|
|
Tidden was a writer for the New York Journal
American. |
|
|
|
Vila was a writer for the New
York Morning Sun, and later became the sports editor and
columnist for the New York Evening Sun. |
|
References
- General
- Cook, William A. 2007. "August Garry Herrmann: A Baseball
Biography". McFarland. ISBN 0786430737.
- James, Bill. 1995. "Whatever happened to the Hall of Fame?:
baseball, Cooperstown, and the politics of glory". Simon and
Schuster. ISBN 0684800888.
- Lieb, Fred; Ritter, Lawrence. 1977. "Baseball As I Have Known
It". University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0803279620.
- Redmount, Robert. 1998. "The Red Sox Encyclopedia". Sports
Publishing LLC. ISBN 1582610126.
- Specific
- James, p. 46
- Cook, p. 2
- Redmount, p. 200
- Lieb, p. 32
- Lieb, p. 32