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Ernest Sargent Barnard

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Ernest Sargent Barnard

Birth
West Columbia, Mason County, West Virginia, USA
Death
27 Mar 1931 (aged 56)
Rochester, Olmsted County, Minnesota, USA
Burial
Mayfield Heights, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Father: Rev. Elias Barnard

Mother: Mary Dillion Sargent

Spouse: Josephine E Flicek - 1890 - 1989

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Baseball Executive. Barnard served as the second president of the American League from 1927 to his passing. After graduating from Otterbein College in 1895, he moved to Columbus, Ohio, where he became the sports editor of the Columbus Dispatch. He was hired by the Cleveland Indians in 1903 and spent the next 24 years serving as traveling secretary, vice president and general manager, and finally team president. When American League owners removed League President Ban Johnson from office in 1927, Barnard was chosen as the replacement. He was re-elected to a 3-year term on December 9, 1930, but on March 27, 1931, just before a medical examination, he passed away at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.∼He was the American League President in the MLB from 1927 till his death in 1931. Born in West Columbia, West Virginia, Ernest Sargent Barnard later resided in Delaware, Ohio. After he graduated from Otterbein College in 1895, Barnard became a football and baseball coach there until 1898. Moving to Columbus, Ohio, he became secretary of the local Builders Exchange and coached football at Ohio Medical University. In 1900 he became sports editor for The Columbus Dispatch.


Ernest Barnard first got involved in professional baseball in 1903 when he was hired by the Cleveland Bronchos of the newly formed Americana League, serving as traveling secretary from 1903-1908, then becoming Vice President and General Manager 1908-116, 1918-22 as the team changed names and became the Naps then the Indians in 1915. Bancroft would later become President of the Cleveland Indians in 1922. During this time Barnard would often act as a mediator between American League President Ban Johnson and Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis. When AL owners in 1927 forced Johnson, the league's founder to resign, Barnard was chosen to replace him after agreeing to sell the Indians.


After three years at the helm, Barnard was re-elected to a 3-year term on December 9, 1930. However, he died suddenly just before the 1931 season as he awaited an examination at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota on March 27, 1931. Ironically Ban Johnson the man he replaced as American League President died the following day.

Father: Rev. Elias Barnard

Mother: Mary Dillion Sargent

Spouse: Josephine E Flicek - 1890 - 1989

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'

Baseball Executive. Barnard served as the second president of the American League from 1927 to his passing. After graduating from Otterbein College in 1895, he moved to Columbus, Ohio, where he became the sports editor of the Columbus Dispatch. He was hired by the Cleveland Indians in 1903 and spent the next 24 years serving as traveling secretary, vice president and general manager, and finally team president. When American League owners removed League President Ban Johnson from office in 1927, Barnard was chosen as the replacement. He was re-elected to a 3-year term on December 9, 1930, but on March 27, 1931, just before a medical examination, he passed away at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.∼He was the American League President in the MLB from 1927 till his death in 1931. Born in West Columbia, West Virginia, Ernest Sargent Barnard later resided in Delaware, Ohio. After he graduated from Otterbein College in 1895, Barnard became a football and baseball coach there until 1898. Moving to Columbus, Ohio, he became secretary of the local Builders Exchange and coached football at Ohio Medical University. In 1900 he became sports editor for The Columbus Dispatch.


Ernest Barnard first got involved in professional baseball in 1903 when he was hired by the Cleveland Bronchos of the newly formed Americana League, serving as traveling secretary from 1903-1908, then becoming Vice President and General Manager 1908-116, 1918-22 as the team changed names and became the Naps then the Indians in 1915. Bancroft would later become President of the Cleveland Indians in 1922. During this time Barnard would often act as a mediator between American League President Ban Johnson and Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis. When AL owners in 1927 forced Johnson, the league's founder to resign, Barnard was chosen to replace him after agreeing to sell the Indians.


After three years at the helm, Barnard was re-elected to a 3-year term on December 9, 1930. However, he died suddenly just before the 1931 season as he awaited an examination at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota on March 27, 1931. Ironically Ban Johnson the man he replaced as American League President died the following day.



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