
Yesterday was the 105th anniversary of the death of Big Ed Delahanty, the hall-of-famer who died in his prime after having a run in with the majestic
So pour one out for our fallen friend this Independence Day weekend and celebrate the life of one of baseball's best, Big Ed Delahanty.
THE DEATH OF BIG ED DELAHANTY
from Vol. 1: Frozen Ropes and Dying Quails
(My brother wrote a poem –I bastardized it and blended it and put a beat to it, and now Big Ed’s mysterious death can be discussed, fantasized, danced to. I’m sure he deserves all the above. One thing seems quite certain: the days of the boozing and brawling ballplayers are mostly behind us, no slight to the occasional throwbacks like David Wells, a man mentioned twice elsewhere on this album.)
Sometimes, hungover, he might lose a pop fly in the glare of the
In July 1903 he was hitting .333; for him that was a little bit under par. On the 2nd he jumped the team and jumped a train from
The night watchman said he’d seen a man, ended up wearing his bowler hat; he heard a splash but he didn’t see him fall. For a week no one found a clue of him. What good’s it do to question death when it makes a bad call? But I don’t think he killed himself. I think some strange notion drew him to
