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Mordecai "Three Finger" Brown

Baseball Player

Name at birth: Mordecai Peter Centennial Brown

Mordecai "Three Finger" Brown lost part of his hand to a corn shredder at age 7. (Brown actually lost only one finger; two others were bent out of shape.) The misfortune turned into an advantage when, as a young man, Brown discovered that his reconfigured hand gave him an excellent grip for throwing curveballs. Brown became a dominant major league pitcher of the early 20th century, winning 239 games and compiling a remarkably low career ERA of 2.06. He played on the Chicago Cubs championship teams of 1906, 1907, 1908 and 1910 -- the same Cubs teams which featured the famous Tinkers-to-Evers-to-Chance double-play combination. Brown was elected to baseball's Hall of Fame in 1949.

Extra credit: According to the Library of Congress, Brown was also called "Miner" Brown "because before he was a ballplayer he worked in a coal mine for several years."

Brown joins the Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia in our loop on Celebs Missing Fingers.

Other famous ballplayers include Babe Ruth, Jackie Robinson and Mickey Mantle.

Four Good Links

Mordecai Brown Official Site

Sanctioned by his estate, with a good biography and a few other tidbits

Mordecai "Three Finger" Brown

Brief profile, with links to other great players

Mordecai Brown Stats

A list of his career statistics

Library of Congress: Mordecai Brown

Short bio notes his other nickname, "Miner" Brown

Vital Stats

Birth

19 October 1876

Birthplace

Nyesville, Indiana

Death

14 February 1948
(age 71)

Best Known As

The hotshot pitcher with a mangled hand, ca. 1910