Gordon Hopkins Sr.,
71, Negro leagues ballplayer
By
Gayle Ronan Sims
Inquirer Staff WriterGordon "Hoppy"
Hopkins Sr., 71, a former second baseman in
the Negro American Baseball League who
played with such greats as Hank Aaron and
Willie Mays before they joined the majors,
died of heart failure last Friday at home in
West Philadelphia.
A native of rural Montgomery County, Md.,
he fell in love with baseball as a boy,
watching his uncle kick up dust with his
spikes. He spent summer afternoons watching
the Sandy Spring Stars and Washington
Potomacs play near his house.
"At age 8 or 9, I was going to the
games," he told the Washington Times in
1999. "I knew all the players. I never paid
to get into a game."
As a teen, he played with the House of
David ball club, a Michigan-based religious
team.
He played infield from 1952 to 1954 with
the Indianapolis Clowns, sharing the dugout
with Aaron, who began his career with the
Clowns. In 1953, Mr. Hopkins batted .400 in
a postseason barnstorming tour of star
players. He played with one of the few women
in the Negro leagues, Mamie "Peanut"
Johnson, who pitched for the Clowns. And he
played against Mays when the future Hall of
Famer was with the Birmingham Black Barons.
At 5-foot-9, Mr. Hopkins was nicknamed
"Flash Gordon" because he was fast.
"He ran so fast that infielders sometimes
would not even try to throw him out at first
base," his son Paul said, adding that his
father was fond of saying: "I love that
diamond dust that flies when I slide into
second."
Mr. Hopkins never made much money playing
ball, no more than $150 a week. But he loved
the game just the same, his son said. "One
summer night, my father told me, he hit a
bases-loaded triple, and a fan gave him $20
and a standing ovation. He never forgot
that."
Mr. Hopkins joined the Marines in 1955,
and played ball on the military teams,
including the All Navy Game and All Marines
Championship Team at Parris Island, S.C.,
and in Puerto Rico.
When he was discharged in 1958, he moved
to Germantown to take care of a sickly aunt,
his son said.
By then, however, his baseball career was
over. Soon after Jackie Robinson joined the
Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, major-league
baseball began recruiting the best black
players, and the Negro leagues began their
decline. Mr. Hopkins never again played
professionally.
Mr. Hopkins, who dropped out of high
school early to play baseball, decided to
continue his education. He graduated from
Bok Vocational High School in 1960,
specializing in cabinetmaking. That year, he
married the girl next door, Barbara Benton.
After she died in 1969, Mr. Hopkins moved to
Maryland. He returned to the region in 2003,
settling in West Philadelphia.
For most of his adult life, Mr. Hopkins
made custom cabinets and traveled the
country signing memorabilia, promoting the
history of the Negro leagues and fighting
for medical benefits for former players.
Until his death, he was secretary for
Yesterday's Negro League Baseball Players
Foundation, based in Milwaukee.
Mr. Hopkins was honored in 1991 by the
Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y.,
as one of the living legends of Negro
leagues baseball. And in 2002, he was
inducted into the Milwaukee Brewers' Walls
of Honor, a memorial in Miller Park honoring
Negro leagues baseball.
Mr. Hopkins played the tenor saxophone
and enjoyed jazz. He also was a gifted
golfer and often played with Earl Woods, his
son said.
In addition to his son Paul, Mr. Hopkins
is survived by sons Gordon Jr. and Gregory
and one granddaughter.
A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m.
today at Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church, 230
Coulter St., Germantown. Burial will be in
Fairview Cemetery, Willow Grove.
Donations may be made to the Gordon "Hoppy"
Hopkins Foundation, Diamond Dust
Enterprises, 534 W. Queen Lane, Philadelphia
19144. The foundation works to provide
medical assistance for former players of the
Negro leagues.
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/obituaries/14774756.htm |