St. Louis Browns outfielder/pinch hitter Charles Henry Shorten was born on April 19, 1892 in Scranton, Pennsylvania. Better known as "Chick", he would enjoy a 16-year baseball career that would include teammates like Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, and George Sisler. He would play for ten different teams, tallying a total of 1492 hits in 1464 games which included a .311 lifetime batting average.
Chick Shorten began his baseball life with his hometown Scranton Miners in 1911, as a 19-year old outfielder prospect. He would go on to play for the Worcester Busters (1912-14), and the Providence Grays (1915). While with the Grays, he led the International League with 175 hits and a .322 batting average. This led the Boston Red Sox to offer Shorten a late-season call up, and he made his MLB debut on September 22, 1915. He would play most of two seasons (1916-17) with the Red Sox, which included going 4-for-7 in Boston's 1916 World Series win over the Cubs.
With the involvement of the United States in World War I, Shorten enlisted in the US Naval Reserve and was assigned to an enrollment office in Boston. He was able to play for the local Navy team, but he missed the entire 1918 season while in the service.
On January 17, 1919, Shorten was involved in a four-player deal that sent him from Boston to the Detroit Tigers. He batted a strong .293 in 303 games with the Tigers over the next three seasons (1919-21).
The Browns acquired Chick Shorten on December 14, 1921, when the Tiger placed him on waivers. The Browns had one of the best outfields in the game (Jacobson-Williams-Tobin) and Shorten excelled in the role of pinch hitter and versatile outfielder. In 31 games in which he played in the Browns' outfield, he started five games in left field, 17 games in centerfield, and nine games in right field. Shorten would serve as a pinch hitter in 25 games in 1922. He would record a total of 36 hits in 152 plate appearances (.275 average), including 12 doubles, five triples, two home runs, while scoring 12 runs and driving in 16. While he proved to be a valuable part of the roster, the Browns' crowded outfield would lead to St. Louis placing Shorten on waivers in February of 1923.
He would be claimed by the Cincinnati Reds, who assigned him to the St. Paul Saints. He refused to report to St. Paul, so his contract was sold to the Nashville Volunteers, which he would also refused to report. These disputes would cause Chick Shorten to miss the entire 1923 season. He eventually played for the Minneapolis MIllers (1924), Cincinnati Reds (1924), Reading Keysones (1925), and Newark Indians (1926), before returning to his hometown team, Scranton Miners (1927-28).
After retiring from baseball, Chick Scranton returned home and joined the rest of his family in the grocery business. He would serve as a regional scout for the Cleveland Indians from 1950-59, but stepped away as the role became too intensive.
There is an interesting footnote on the career of Chick Shorten. It has been written that he was upset with the Boston Red Sox after they replaced him in the outfield with a young Babe Ruth. The story states that he placed a "curse" on the team for this betrayal, and they failed to win another championship until 2004. Whether there is any proof of this "curse" is strictly left to baseball lovers, it is a fun story to pass on.