St. Louis Browns LHP George Mogridge was born on February 18, 1889 in Rochester, New York. Mogridge would appear in just two games for the Browns, but would enjoy a 16-season career that would leave him in the record books of Major League Baseball. He would never forget his roots in Rochester, where he attended the University of Rochester and where he returned in his retirement.
Mogridge began his career with the Galesburg Pavers in 1911. It did not take long before he impressed the Chicago White Sox where he spent portions of the 1911-12 seasons. He would return to the minor leagues with the Lincoln Railsplitters (1912), Minneapolis Millers (1913), and the Des Moines Boosters (1914-15).
The New York Yankees were in need of a left-handed pitcher, and signed Modgridge in August of 1915. He would spend six seasons with New York, and become the first Yankee to pitch a no-hitter (April 24, 1917 vs. Boston Red Sox). He would pitch five seasons for the Washington Senators (1921-25), before joining the Browns on June 18, 1925.
The Browns would trade their longtime catcher, Hank Severeid, to the Senators for Mogridge and catcher Pinky Hargrave. Mogridge would pitch just two games (15.1 innings) for the Browns, including one complete game victory over the Chicago White Sox. In July of 1914, George Mogridge was shut down for the rest of the season due to synovitis in his pitching arm. The inflammation resulted in his arm being placed in a cast, and he was lost for the season. The Browns would trade George Mogridge to the New York Yankees for catcher Wally Schang on February 6, 1926.
The Yankees were going to send him to the St. Paul but Mogridge exercised his right to block the move, and he was sent to the Boston Braves. He finished his MLB career with the Braves (1926-27), before moving on to manage his hometown Rochester Tribe in 1927.
The St. Louis Cardinals purchased the Tribe in 1928, and did not renew Mogridge's contract.
George Mogridge would spend the rest of his life making Rochester a better place for its citizens. He opened the Mogridge Inn, a popular restaurant and 'gambling' hall that included a baseball field for the local semipro team. He would later go on to open a sporting good store, and then sell storm doors for the Weathermaster Company. He would raise his family in Rochester and spend time telling stories of playing with the Browns and Yankees.