St. Louis Browns 1B John "Jack" Black, was born on February 23, 1890 in Covington, Kentucky. His story is one of the more mysterious of any in Browns history. There is no record of Black playing college or semi professional baseball. There is no transaction history between him and the Browns or any other baseball team. His entire baseball career seems to have lasted only two seasons, with just one being at the MLB level. Then he vanished from the Browns roster as fast as he arrived.
John Black began his career with the Harrisburg Senators of the Tri-State League in 1910. In the "B" level league, he recorded 22 hits, including two doubles, two triples, a home run, and a .222 batting average. Black was invited to the Browns spring training and would share duty at first base with seven other players.
Black would see the most action at first base, 53 games, between the group of players through the 1911 season (Joe Kutina - 26 games, Pat Newman - 20, Dave Rowan - 18, Dode Criss - 14, Hap Myers - 11, Ernie Gust - 3, Jim Duggan - 1). Black would make his MLB debut on June 20, 1911, tallying one hit in his four at bats against the Chicago White Sox. He would become a consistent addition to the Browns lineup over the next 55 games, where he started 52 games at first, as a defensive substitute at first for one game, a sub at third base for a game, and a pinch runner once. Black would have 202 plate appearances, scoring 13 runs on 28 hits, while driving in seven players. His batting average was .151 was well below the team average, but his .972 fielding percentage kept him on the roster. Black would record five games of multiple hits, and one game with three hits (First game of a double header on August 22, 1911 vs. the Philadelphia Athletics). His offensive production was probably the reason for him not receiving an invitation to the 1912 Browns spring training.
There is little known of his life after the 1911 season. He would live a long life and eventually settle down in Rutherford, New Jersey. John Black reached his dream as a major league baseball player. As short as this experience was, he was able to reach a pinnacle that many of us will never make.