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Pete Milne

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William James Milne

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Pete Milne was signed as an amateur free agent by the Cleveland Indians before the 1943 season. The young outfielder was farmed out to the Batavia Clippers of the class D PONY League and played in 69 games, hitting at a .332 clip his first season in pro baseball. Milne would be absent from pro ball for the next two seasons (1944-1945), serving with the United States Navy during World War II.

Pete spent the next two years (1946-1947) in the minors with four different clubs, hitting .326 for the Spartanburg Peaches of the class B Tri-State League in 1947 and was drafted by the New York Giants on November 17, 1947 in the Rule V Draft. Milne became a .233 hitter in portions of three seasons with the Polo Grounds team from 1948 to 1950.

Milne had his greatest thrill in the majors when he struck his sole career home run in a seventh-inning pinch-hit stand-up inside-the-park grand-slam on April 27, 1949 off of Pat McGlothin of the Brooklyn Dodgers, and past a diving Duke Snider. New York won the game 11-8, with the homer being the final four runs scored in the game.

Pete would spend the last six years (1951-1956) of his baseball career in the minors, hitting an even .300 for the Minneapolis Millers of the American Association in 1951 and having another good season with the Oakland Oaks of the Pacific Coast League in 1953, hitting at a .323 clip and playing 174 games. He finished up his baseball time in 1956 with the Mobile Bears of the Southern Association and ended his 12 year career with a .293 hitting average and 51 home runs while appearing in 1,282 games.

After baseball Pete owned an automobile agency in his hometown of Mobile, AL, where he died on April 11, 1999, at the age of 74.


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Baseball Players of the 1950s



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