The Alabama-Florida Baseball League – Glenn Perdue Interview

GLENN
PERDUE

Glenn Perdue pitched for Andalusia and
for Geneva.  In November of 1999, Glenn and Marvin Walker
organized the first AFL reunion in Andalusia.  I interviewed
Glenn in May of 2000.

 [View
Glenn Perdue’s Stats]
 

SP:    
Tell me about your relationship with Early Wynn.

GP:    
Well, you know he died this last year down in Florida. 
He was a wonderful pitcher up there in Cleveland.  In 1954,
they had him, Lemon, Garcia, Feller.  Wynn’s daddy and my
daddy were raised up together in Hartford, Alabama, and I went
down to Samford, Florida, to a baseball tryout school. I had
about 6 or 8 of my buddies and we rode a bus down there. 
Early Wynn was one of the instructors there and got me in with
one of the scouts and took me over to Orlando and I had a good
showing.  They didn’t sign a whole lot of us. I was fortunate
to be one of those that did get signed.

SP:    Was
this a team tryout?

GP:    No,
just a general tryout.  I can’t remember the name of the
fellow that signed me, but he was a scout for the Cincinnati
Reds.  Early Wynn introduced me to him and he carried me
over to Orlando.  He (the scout) had a mitt with him, I
don’t know if he was a catcher or what, but he signed me and
they sent me over to Muncie, Indiana, in the Ohio State League.

SP:    You
only spent about a half season there?

GP:    Yes,
after about a half season there, I came back to Andalusia. 
Andalusia traded me the next year to Geneva. Then Geneva traded
me to Opelika (Georgia-Alabama League).

SP:    Did
Muncie trade you or release you?

GP:    They
released me.  I’ve got no excuse,  I was young and
just didn’t take it seriously enough.  Of course I was kind
of wild then too.  I couldn’t find the plate at times there.
That’s when I came to Andalusia.

SP:    How
did you make the connection to the Andalusia team?

GP:    An old
boy that I played high school football and baseball with, a fellow
named John Hitson, he told the manager, Bob Engle, about me. 
Hitson was Andalusia’s third baseman.  His dead and gone
now, alcohol ruined his life.  So, I went down there and
pitched.  Pitched the opening game against Brewton one year
and struck out 17 batters.

SP:    Were
you traded to Geneva in 1948?

GP:    Yes,
I was traded over to Geneva for Marcus Davis’ brother. 
He was a big left hander, but he never did anything.  In
fact, he quit playing that year and became a deputy sheriff or
something like that.  Let me tell you an experience I had
(with Geneva).  In those days, the ball parks didn’t have
but one shower so after a game you’d go and get wet, then get
out and soap up while somebody else would get wet.  Then
when you were ready to rise the soap off you get back in. 
We were playing in Dothan one night at Rip Hewes Stadium. 
The shower was up under the stands, under the bleachers and concrete
above the shower had a big crack running across it.  I got
wet and came out and was soaping up, and of course we were all
as naked as jaybirds, and I looked up and said, « God, y’all
look at that snake up there! ».  There was a 6 to 8
foot snake up in that crack over the shower.  You talk about
some naked boys getting out from under that shower!  I remember
another thing that happened to me (at Opelika).  There was
this ol’ boy, named Billy Kilgore.  He was a pitcher, then
after playing baseball he became a professional boxer. 
The way I first met Billy was he had been in some trouble up
in Birmingham, and he was out at Kilby prison.  When I played
semi-pro ball, we used to go out and play the Kilby prison team.  
He was as mean as hell, but he had a good heart.  Anyway,
when I got to Opelika, he was there.  He took me aside and
told me, « You left-handed bastard, don’t you ever tell anybody
where you first met me ».  I said, « I ain’t gonna
tell nobody where I first met you, Bill ».   Well,
we were playing up in LaGrange, Georgia, one night and Billy
was pitching.  He was quite a pitcher.  I didn’t chew
tobacco but I’d chew a lot of bubble gum.  I’d chew a piece
and I didn’t wad the paper up and put it in my pocket, I’d just
throw it on the ground in front of the dugout.  That night,
ol’ Billy Kilgore didn’t have it and they knocked him all over
that ballpark.  When he came in after pitching, he saw all
those gum papers in from of the dugout and said, « Who threw
these all over here ».  I said, « Well, I did ». 
He said, « Well, that’s the reason I got knocked out tonight! ». 
You know ballplayers are superstitious.  A lot of them would
come to the dugout and wouldn’t step on that chalk line, they’d
straddle it.  Another time we was playing up in Alex City
(Georgia-Alabama league), and the field there was poorly lighted. 
We had an outfielder named Buck Julian and he went back to the
fence to catch a ball and the ball went out of the park and hit
a parked car and bounced back in.  Buck picked that ball
up and threw the runner out at third base.  The umpire said
that he thought it went out but because the lighting was so bad,
he could tell for sure, and that guy was out at third. 
You know, they say it’s never over until it’s over.  I was
pitching up at Lanette (Valley of the Georiga-Alabama League)
one night and I was doing real well.  The score was 11-4,
we were ahead in the ninth.  Man, I started to get wild
and they started to hit me. They took me out and put Claude Jackson
in and then Billy Kilgore and they ended up beating us 12-11. 
We were in the showers saying, « Lord, how did that ballgame
get away from us like that! ».

SP:    So after
Opelika, you just decided you’d had enough?

GP:    Well,
I did go out to Kingsley, Iowa, and played some semi-pro ball
out there.  Lot of ex-ballplayers would play in that league. 
That was some fast baseball.   It was a little farming
area out there.  I went out there and played and that where
it (my career) wound up.

SP:    How
did you find out about playing in a place like that when you
were back in Opelika?

GP:    I think
just from word of mouth.  I made some good money playing
out there though.

SP:    Was
the money as good as the pros?

GP:    Oh,
sometimes it was better than pro.  You know, the Alabama
State League was some pretty fast ball.  In fact, I believe
the play would be classed as « A », maybe ever « AA »
ball today. We all loved playing.

SP:    So was
it hard to give up?

GP:    Well,
I saw where I wasn’t going to go up (to a higher level) so I
gave it up and went to work.  I wonder what percentage of
players make it to the big show.  It’s got to be kind of
small.

SP:    I saw
a boxscore of a game you pitched where the opposing manager stole
home in the ninth to win the game.  I think it was Bob Benish.

GP:    Bob
Benish was the Troy manager.  He was a left-handed batter
and I had his number pretty good.  He was a pitcher and
quite a manager.  Troy, I think, was a Detroit Tigers farm
team that year (1947).  And of course Greenville was associated
with the Pittsburgh Pirates.

SP:    What
was it like for you playing the the AFL.  How were the living
and travel accommodations?

GP:    It was
rough, boy I’ll tell you.  Getting on that old bus and those
bus rides got mighty old.  It was a converted school bus,
no air conditioning of course. We’d put all our equiptment and
uniforms in the bottom part (of the bus) and tied it all up so
it wouldn’t fall out. I was making about $100 to $125 a month.

SP:    Did
the teams stay in hotels?

GP:    No,
we’d never spend a night out of town. We’d get about $1.00, $1.25
meal money for the day.  Course, a dollar was a dollar back
then.  But you know, we had some wonderful times together.

SP:    Greenville
had a great team arounf 1947 and 1948.

GP:    Oh they
had a heck of a  team. There were two brothers there, one
played first and the other catcher (Dick and Glenn Lindermuth). 
They had old Purkey (Bob Purkey) and he’d just have to throw
his glove on the mound to beat us.  He was tough.

SP:    
I noticed that when  the Montgomery Advertiser published
the preseason schedule for the 1947 season, they had Andalusia
listed as the Cubs.

GP:    I don’t
know where they got that from,  I never heard of that. 
We were called the Andalusia Arrows because there used to be
an Arrow shirt factory there.

SP:    Here’s
some players from 1947:  Luther Brown.

GP:    Yeah,
he died about a year ago. (Looking at list of players) Manny
Russo, oh boy.  He got wounded in the service.  He
was some kind of Hawaiian, or something (Russo was Italian),
but he had a bad arm from getting wounded in the service. 
But he could hit that ball, I ain’t joking.

SP:    I understand
(from Bernie « Bubba » Donner’s account) that Russo had
been macheted during the war and had part of his hand missing.

GP:    Yeah,
I think that’s what it was.  Part of his had and this part
under here (points to lower forearm around the wrist). 
He had a smaller arm up here.  I think it was a machete. 
He sure could hit.  He managed a little later in his career. 
You mention Bubba Donner, he played down there and he had a friend,
still lives in Andalusia, named Chick Earle.  I think Chick
played second and Bubba played shortstop.  We were playing
in Andalusia one night, and Chick Earle was coming into second
base.  You know, if you’re gonna slide, you’d better slide. 
You’ve got to make your mind up one way or the other but don’t
be thinking about it. Chick couldn’t make his mind up and finally
slid in and broke his ankle or leg.  He never did play any
more baseball.  He and Bubba Donner were raised up together
in Virgina somewhere.

SP:    Manny
Russo also managed at Andalusia (1949).

GP:    And
I remember a guy named Hal Fehrenbacher (Geneva 1948). 
He was from somewhere in California. I’d like to know whether
he’s still living.  He was a good manager and a good fellow.

SP:    Another
guy who managed that year was Emory Lindsay (Dothan).

GP:    Oh yeah,
I don’t know if he’s still living.  He might have died. 
He had a pawn in Dothan and I think he got shot.  He was
a heck of a manager and a heck of a good catcher too.

SP:    Lot’s
of player-managers in the league, like Frank Martin.

GP:    Oh yeah,
he was a catcher, too.  He was originally from Birmingham. 
He was a mean guy!  Lord, he’d block that plate and we’d
try to slide in there and he’d just knock us all over the place.

SP:    Here’s
another teammate: Stan Strickler.

GP:    Stan
was a pitcher.  If fact, he was also a preacher.  He
wouldn’t play ball on Sundays.
He lives down around Pensacola or Fort Walton.   Everyone
called him « Strick ».  (Looking at player’s
list) 
Here’s another guy, Scotty Byrne.  He pitched
at Enterprise that year (1947).  He came to the reunion
(1999).  He lives down around Brewton.  He was a sheriff
down in Escambia county for quite a few years.   Here’s
Wilbur Hester.  When I was playing with Geneva, we went
to Greenville one night and he had a home plate wedding that
night.  He’s originally from Greenville but he retired to
Troy and worked in the Post Office there.  Here’s Chase
Riddle.  He’s living down in Troy.  He was quite a
college player.  He carried Troy State to the championships. 
Bill Buchanan, he’s a good one too, a third baseman.  He
played in Geneva when I was there. He’s originally from Oklahoma. 
He played football at Oklahoma State.

SP:    The
Ozark manager was Dolly Lambert.

GP:    Yeah,
he was a pitcher, too. After he got through playing ball, he
was an umpire in the league.  Spencer Davis pitched at Ozark.
After he got through, he was a school principal and superintendent
in Georgia somewhere.

SP:    The
league seemed to be a pretty interesting mix of old timers not
able to give it up and young kids just starting out.  Doc
Wingard has been a pitcher in the majors in the twenties, and
was in the AFL twenty years later.

GP:    I remember
Doc.  Boy, he sure could he chew a lot of tobacco.

SP:    What
about the stadiums, were any outstanding or awful?

GP:    No,
they were all just about equal.  In Andalusia, the ball
park was next to the high school and that old principal from
the school would have to come out and quiet us down. We’d get
loud out there.

SP:    How
about attendance?  Some places must have been kind of small.

GP:    
Yes, sometimes you had to wonder how they (the teams)  made
ends meet.  I’ll tell you though, we loved the game though.

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