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Remembering Ray Brown, Alger's forgotten baseball star

A black and white photo shows 10 boys on a local baseball team.
Courtesy of Jerry Cramer
An Alger baseball team poses for a photo circa 1926. Ray Brown played as a shortstop on the high school team.

Before Jackie Robinson integrated Major League Baseball in 1947, was making a name for himself in the Negro Leagues.

Today, he鈥檚 one of just a few dozen recognized in the Baseball Hall of Fame.

But his hometown of Alger in west central Ohio never recognized him for his accomplishments. Until now.

The community is refurbishing a park in his honor.

Growing up in Alger

In the 1920s, the Village of Alger had a reputation.

鈥淭丑别 was literally the onion capital of the world. More onions were grown here than any place else in the country,鈥 said lifelong local Jerry Cramer.

Back then, his parents weeded the onion fields alongside Brown鈥檚 family.

鈥淭丑别y all played together, grew up together,鈥 Cramer said.

His dad and Ray Brown even played high school baseball together. Cramer has an old photo of the team.

鈥淭丑别re are 10 players. That鈥檚 all they had. And their uniforms are a hodgepodge of whatever the guys could find,鈥 Cramer said.

But despite the lack of resources, they were good, especially Brown.

鈥淗e was in the Hall of Fame as a pitcher 鈥 one of the best ever, of course,鈥 Cramer said. 鈥淏ut in high school, he was a shortstop. His senior year, they never lost a ball game.鈥

A forgotten star

Brown went on to play for the 鈥 a Pittsburgh team in the Negro Leagues. During his tenure in the 鈥30s and 鈥40s, the team won in a nine-year span.

The plaque recognizing Ray Brown at the Baseball of Fame
Courtesy National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
Ray Brown was inducted in the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2006, decades after his death.

鈥淗e was a heck of a pitcher,鈥 said David Strittmatter, a self-proclaimed baseball nut and a history professor at Ohio Northern University, located just five miles north of Alger.

鈥淗e had a great curveball. There's one year that he won the pitching Triple Crown, where he led the Negro Leagues in wins, lowest ERA and most strikeouts,鈥 Strittmatter said.

But Brown was never recognized for his success during his lifetime. When he died in 1965, he was buried in an unmarked grave in Dayton.

He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame 40 years later, as part of a special election to honor players from the Negro Leagues.

Even then, he was mostly forgotten in his hometown of Alger.

鈥淭丑别re was just no mention of this guy,鈥 Strittmatter said. 鈥淗is name is not on the water tower. When you drive into Alger, it doesn't say, 鈥楤irthplace or hometown of Hall of Famer Ray Brown.鈥 There鈥檚 nothing, nothing at all.鈥

But now, that鈥檚 changing.

Refurbishing a local park

When Strittmatter learned of Ray Brown鈥檚 Alger upbringing, he tasked his students with drafting a nomination for an Ohio Historical Marker to commemorate him. His students proposed placing it in Alger Village Park.

The greenspace is modest with some playground equipment, a couple picnic pavilions and a few baseball fields.

Strittmatter pointed to a spot between a concession stand and a row of bleachers.

鈥淥ver here, behind the backstop, this is where the marker will be installed,鈥 he said.

But at this point, about five years on, the plans to memorialize Ray Brown don鈥檛 end with a historical marker.

In 2021 and 2023, Alger鈥檚 Village Administrator received grants from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources to refurbish parts of the park.

Plus, Strittmatter and ONU art professor Melissa Eddings-Mancuso received another grant too 鈥 to the tune of $110,000 from .

鈥淓specially for the scope and scale of Alger and the project, that is a lot of money,鈥 Eddings-Mancuso said.

They were one of just eight projects selected for the grant, which was focused specifically on helping rural Midwestern places tell stories commemorating people of color.

The money will help the village further improve the park with everything from a new outfield fence to a hand-painted mural depicting Ray Brown winding up for a pitch.

鈥淚 think it's a story that needs to be told and it's a point of pride for the community,鈥 Strittmatter said.

But not everyone in Alger agreed. Tomorrow, we鈥檒l learn about the controversy over renaming the park after Brown.

Erin Gottsacker is a reporter for The Ohio Newsroom. She most recently reported for WXPR Public Radio in the Northwoods of Wisconsin.
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