Bob Wilson

From BR Bullpen

Note: This page is for IF/OF Bob Wilson who played in the majors in the 1940s and 1950s; for others with similar names, click here.

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Robert Wilson

  • Bats Right, Throws Right
  • Height 5' 11", Weight 197 lb.

BR page

Biographical Information[edit]

Outfielder Bob Wilson was recommended to the Brooklyn Dodgers by Jackie Robinson, from their years together in the Negro Leagues, where he was a third baseman with the Newark Eagles and a teammate of Monte Irvin. He was signed as a free agent before the 1950 season. Wilson spent his first two years in pro ball with the class A Elmira Pioneers of the Eastern League, hitting .299 in 65 games in 1950 and .313 with 8 homers in 1951.

Bob was a .300-plus hitter for several seasons in the 1950s - with the St. Paul Saints of the American Association in 1952, where he hit at a .334 clip and hammered 13 home runs, and again with the St. Paul team in 1958, when he carried a .349 average. In between these years, he had three other seasons in which he bettered the .300 mark.

Wilson, who had been battling Carl Furillo for the right field slot for the previous few seasons in spring training, earned one brief chance with the Dodgers, in their first year in Los Angeles in 1958, picking up 1 base hit in 5 at-bats in 3 games. This would be the sum total of his major league career.

Bob spent 1959 with the Toronto Maple Leafs and Montreal Royals, where he hit .325 with 17 home runs, but the now 35-year-old chose to wind up his eleven-year minor league run in 1960 with a career .311 average and 100 home runs while playing in 1,358 games. Wilson had also spent the 1952-53 season in the Cuban Winter League.

Wilson died April 23, 1985, at age 60 in his native Dallas, TX, where he was employed as a custodian and caretaker at a swimming center.

Sources[edit]

Baseball Players of the 1950s

Related Sites[edit]