St. Louis Browns 2B Bill Kenworthy was born on July 4, 1886 in Cambridge, Ohio. Throughout his 17-year professional baseball career, he would excel at every position on the field. His pitching career would result in a 75-47 record as he became one of the finest hurlers in the minor leagues. His batting statistics would show that he would be one the most feared hitters in the Federal League. Over his career, he would be known by several nicknames like "Duke", "Judge", "Lord", "Kopecks", and "Iron Duke".
Prior to his baseball career, Kenworthy would attend Muskingum University (New Concord, Ohio) where he earned a teaching degree. He would teach during the winter months of his first six baseball seasons.
Kenworthy would begin his career with the Beaver Falls Beavers, and later East Liverpool in 1907. He would jump to the Zanesville Infants of the Central League were he would become a duel-threat player. Over the following three seasons (1908-10) Kenworthy would average 21 wins in over 300 innings, while averaging 52 hits and a .243 average. His contract was purchased by the Denver Grizzlies in 1911, where he batted .315 and pitched to a 9-3 record.
The following season saw him play ever position on the field. After a late-season workout with the Washington Senators in 1912, Kenworthy would spend one year with the Sacramento Solons (1913), before becoming a star with the Kansas City Packers of the Federal Baseball League (1914-15). In 1914, "Judge" Kenworthy finished in top ten in every offensive category in the FBL, and when the league collapsed in 1915 he would be the franchise leader in most categories.
The Browns would acquire Bill Kenworthy from the Oakland Oaks in the Rule 5 draft on September 15, 1916. He would make his Browns debut on April 15, 1917 as a pinch hitter for RHP Bob Groom. His best game with the Browns came in the second game of a double-header against the Chicago White Sox on May 8, 1917. He would get his first hit off Sox pitcher, Lefty Williams in the bottom of the second inning. He would score his only run, when OF Burt Shotton singled to left field. After just five games with the Browns, Kenworthy's contract would be sent to the Los Angeles Angels of the Pacific Coast League. His final numbers with the Browns include 11 plate appearances resulting in one hit, one run, one walk, one strikeout, one RBI, and a .100 batting average.
"Duke" Kenworthy would finish out the season with the Angels, and then "Lord" Kenworthy would be a star in 1919. Between these seasons, Bill Kenworthy would serve in the Navy shipyard in San Francisco during World War I in 1918.
The post-war seasons of Bill Kenworthy saw him play for the Seattle Indians (1919-21), Portland Beavers (1922, 24), and Columbus Senators (1923). He would spend time as a player-manager for each one of these organizations, and the Seattle newspapers would often refer to him as "Kopecks" Kenworthy. He would continue to coach for the rest of his days, including time with the Oakland Oaks (1939-41) and St. Mary's College (1948).
Bill Kenworthy would spend his entre life around the game he loved. He would suffer an untimely passing as he drowned in a boating accident in 1950.