St. Louis Browns catcher Grover Hartley was born on July 2, 1888 in Osgood, Indiana. He would accomplish everything that baseball had to offer in the first-half of the twentieth century. He served as a player, coach, manager, umpire, owner, union supporter, and business manager over the course of his 40-plus years in organized baseball.
Grover Hartley began his love of baseball playing for the local baseball team in Osgood in his early teens. At the age of 20, he signed his first contract with the Battle Creek Crickets in 1909. The following year saw him jump between thee teams (Decatur Commodores, Springfield Senators, Toledo Mud Hens), making more money at the end of that he ever dreamed ($200/month). The New York Giants took notice and drafted Hartley in the 1910 Rule 5 Draft.
Hartley would spend three seasons (1911-13) with the Giants as a backup catcher, never appearing in more than 35 games in a season. In January of 1914, Hartley was present at a meeting of the Baseball Players Fraternity, which served as the first union of players to approach management on issues of pay and compensation. During the same offseason, he would be traded from the Giants to the Cincinnati Reds.
Believing he was heading toward another backup role, Grover Hartley jumped to the newly established Federal Baseball League and signed with the St. Louis Terriers. His two years with the Terriers as their starting catcher were the best seasons of his career. He would record 169 hits in 206 games, including 34 doubles, eight triples, two home runs, 75 RBIs, and a .279 batting average.
When the FBL collapsed after the 1915 season, Hartley was one of 11 players to be signed by the St. Louis Browns on February 10, 1916. Harltey returned to the backup role, as the Browns already had a star catcher with Hank Severeid. His production dropped as his playing time fell to just 113 games in two seasons (1916-17). Hartley would only tally 54 hits, with nine doubles, and just 12 RBIs. His .231 batting average would not reward him with a contract in St. Louis the next season.
Hartley would be assigned to the Columbus Senators, where he would play the next seven seasons (1918-24). While playing for Columbus, he would et his first taste of coaching and managing that would fuel his baseball career for the next 25 years. Grover Hartley would return to the Giants (1924-26), before spending time with the Boston Red Sox (1927), and the Cleveland Indians (1929-30). Harltey would spend three seasons (1930-32) on the Pittsburgh Pirates coaching staff.
Grover Hartley would return to the Browns in 1934, when manager Rogers Hornsby suspended catcher Rollie Hemsley. Harltely would get a hit in four plate appearances. He would also help develop the Indianapolis Indians (1926), Louisville Colonels (1930), and the Findlay Browns (1937-39). There was one report that stated he was traded to the Los Angeles Angels, but no transaction records to support this deal.
While playing for Findlay, Hartley would eventually become the partial owner of the team while managing. He would spend most of the 1940s, managing minor league teams throughout the midwest. He managed the Logan Indians (1942), Marion Diggers/Cardinals (1944-45), Daytona Beach islanders (1947), and the Lima Chiefs (1949).
In his career, there is nothing that Grover Hartley did not succeed. He would be one of the first players to be involved in labor talks, and one of the first to jump to the Federal League. In fact, Grover Hartley was the last surviving player to play in the Federal League. He would finally settle down in Daytona Beach, Florida where he raised his family and enjoyed the sunshine.