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30 Μαρ 2016 · Between the end of the Gilded Age and the beginning of the Progressive Era, the name August “Garry” Herrmann (born May 3, 1859 in Cincinnati, OH; died April 25, 1931 in Cincinnati, OH) was known throughout the United States.
18 Αυγ 2024 · The Poltergeist house, located outside Los Angeles, was listed for $1.174 million. It has a 16,000-square-foot lot, four bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms, a large swimming pool, and a jacuzzi. The official address is 4267 Roxbury Street in Simi Valley, California. The company selling the house is Equity Union Real Estate.
August "Garry" Herrmann (May 3, 1859 – April 25, 1931) was an American political operative for Cincinnati political boss George B. Cox, an executive of the Cincinnati Reds baseball team, and president of National Baseball Commission. In 1946, he was named in the Honor Rolls of Baseball.
It is a simple telegram, dated March 24, 1911, stating that Cincinnati Reds owner August “Garry” Herrmann has been requested to be a pall bearer at the funeral of St. Louis Cardinals owner Stanley Robison, who died that morning.
August “Garry” Herrmann helped baseball thrive as the chairman of the National Commission in the early 1900s. His papers from that tenure and from his time as president of the Reds serve as an invaluable look into that era of the National Pastime. (National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum)
August Herrmann was known to many as the “Father of the World Series” and delivered the first Fall Classic title to his beloved Cincinnati. Nearly nine decades after his retirement from the game, he is a candidate for the Class of 2016 at the Hall of Fame.
11 Ιαν 2022 · August Herrmann, better known as Garry, did not own Inwood Park, but he enjoyed gazing upon it from his back yard. August “Garry” Herrmann was reputedly a jolly fellow, but as one of Boss Cox’s lieutenants, power players learned not to cross him.