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Forest Hill and Calvary Cemetery

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James Harding “Lefty” LaMarque was born in Potosi (73 miles south of St. Louis), Missouri on 29 July 1920. LaMarque was discovered by Kansas City Monarch secretary William “Dizzy” Dismukes who had read about Lefty’s pitching exploits with the Potosi Tigers in the St. Louis Argus. LaMarque then join the starting rotation of Satchel Paige, Hilton Smith, Booker McDaniel and Jack Matchett and play for the Monarchs until 1948. 


Lefty LaMarque

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LaMarque headstone

Plant, Tree, Cemetery, Grass

Buck O'Neil, Chico Renfroe and Lefty LaMarque in Mexico

Sports uniform, Baseball, Photograph, Bat-and-ball games

LaMarque would pitch in three East-West All-Star games and play in two World Series. After the 1946 season, he joined the Satchel Paige All-Stars and toured the country playing a host of exhibition games against the Bob Feller All-Stars.

The quiet and unassuming man with a full head of black silk hair was an assassin on the pitcher’s mound. In a 1944 game against Josh Gibson of the Homestead Grays, he retired Gibson twice on strikeouts. “I always liked letting a man go back to the bench carrying his bat,” LaMarque recalled. On Gibson’s third at bat, LaMarque had him in the hole, 0-2, so he decided to waste a pitch, throwing one shoulder high, about six inches outside.

“Well, the last I saw of that ball, it was sailing over the top of the outfield bleachers and it was still going,” LaMarque said smiling.

Manager Buck O’Neil bragged that LaMarque had a good fastball that usually sank, with a decent curveball and a zany change-up. LaMarque’s talent would take him to the Puerto Rican Winter League with Santurce Crabbers in 1948, 1949 and to the Mexican League with the Mexico City Red Devils in 1950. He also made a brief stop in Japan with a Fort Wayne (IN) K-Parts team in the 1950s.

LaMarque shared that his starting salary with the Monarchs was $125 a month and eventually grew to $500 a month in his final season, 1948, with the team.

With no Black high school in Potosi, LaMarque was only able to complete the eighth grade. Despite the educational constraints he went on to work for Ford Motor Company in Claycomo for 30 years on the assembly line.

At the age of 79, Jimmy LaMarque passed away on 15 January 2000 at the North Kansas City Hospital with his wife and youngest daughter at his bedside. He is buried in Forest Hill Cemetery om Block 10. 

Forman, Ross. Negro Leagues Baseball Museum breaks ground in K.C. . Sports Collectors Digest . July 9th, 1993. 182 - 183.

Kelley, Brent. Growing Up in the Shadow of a Legend. Sports Collectors Digest. July 9th, 1999. 112 - 113.

Penn, Steve. "Lefty's Baseball Legend Lives On." Kansas City Star (Kansas City) February 9th, 2000. Evening ed, City Beat sec, 3-3.

Lester, Larry. Miller, Sammy J.. Black Baseball in Kansas City. Edition First. Chicago, IL. Arcadia Publishing, 2000.

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Larry Lester

Larry Lester

Lefty LaMarque