| Bob Quinn (baseball) |
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Born in Columbus, Ohio , he was a Catcher in Minor League Baseball during the 1890s, also managing some of the teams for which he played. From 1900 to 1917, he served as General Manager of the Columbus team in the American Association ; he was also among the founders of that league. He became general manager of the St. Louis Browns from 1917-1922, developing the perenially poor team into one which lost the 1922 American League pennant by a single game. In 1923 , he purchased the Boston Red Sox , and as team president worked to restore the credibility of a franchise whose best players had been sold off by previous owner Harry Frazee . After selling the Red Sox to Tom Yawkey in 1933 , Quinn became general manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1934-1935. He then joined the Boston Braves as team president and part owner from 1936 to 1945. After his 1945 retirement, he briefly served as a sporting goods executive, and then became president of the Baseball Hall Of Fame from 1948 to 1951, leaving that position after suffering two Stroke s. Quinn died at age 84 in Providence, Rhode Island , and was buried near Columbus. His son John J. Quinn served as general manager of the Braves following his father's retirement, continuing after the team moved to Milwaukee in 1953, and later served as GM of the Philadelphia Phillies . His grandson Robert E. Quinn served as general manager of the New York Yankees , Cincinnati Reds , and San Francisco Giants between 1988 and 1996, and his grandson Jack Quinn served as general manager of the St. Louis Blues franchise in the National Hockey League . His great-grandson '''Bob Quinn''' (born 1968 ) is the current senior vice president and chief financial officer of the Milwaukee Brewers .
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