Frank Duncan (1901-1973)
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Frank Lee Duncan, Jr., was an outstanding catcher and manager for the Kansas City Monarchs. In 1941, his son Frank Duncan III joined the team, and they became the first father-and-son battery in major league baseball. In 1945, as Monarchs manager, Duncan became Jackie Robinson’s first manager in professional baseball. For a time, he was married to Blues and jazz singer Julia Lee, At the age of 72, Duncan passed away on 4 December 1973 in Kansas City, Missouri, and buried in Highland Cemetery.
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Kansas City was a catcher & manager for the Kansas City Monarchs
Backstory and Context
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Born 14 February 1901 in Kansas City, MO, Frank Duncan started his professional with the Chicago Giants in 1920 before going to the K. C. Monarchs at the end of the 1921 season. He would end his stellar career the Monarchs until 1945 with some stints with the New York Cubans, New York Black Yankees, Pittsburgh Crawfords, Homestead Grays, Satchel Paige All-Stars, and the Chicago American Giants, where he made his only East-West All-Star appearance in 1938.
An outstanding receiver with a powerful throwing arm, he caught two no-hitters in 1923 and 1929. Duncan also appeared in two Negro World Series, as a player in 1942 and as a manager in 1946, losing to the Newark Eagles four games to three.
“It was like clockwork pitching to that man. I guess I could throw harder than anybody. I musta could throw hard because nobody ever hit me hard. But Frank was the man who kept me going,” said Satchel Paige. He added, “Frank was one of the top men, the No. 1 as a manager. He knew how to handle men and no maybe-so about it. He never did get up in the air about nothing.”
Speedster and renown base stealer James “Cool Papa” Bell recalled, “he could throw . . . you had to get a bigger lead on the pitcher with Frank behind the plate. If you didn’t, you might as well turn right around and go back to first. Nobody could hardly beat him throwing.”
After the 1947 season, Duncan turned over managerial duties to Buck O’Neil, and became an umpire in the Negro American League.
Sources
Gib Twyman. Frank Duncan: Well-Known in Obscurity. Kansas City Star. P4S
Larry Lester, Black Baseball’s National Showcase: The East-West Game, 1933 – 1953, by NoirTech Research Publishing. 2020.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Duncan_(catcher)#/media/File:Frank_Duncan_1924.jpg
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/113896951/frank-duncan#view-photo=84502268