Dan Brouthers briefly claimed baseball’s career home run crown during the late 1880s. Before and after Brouthers held the record, Harry Stovey ruled as the game’s premier slugger.
Stovey changed baseball’s power standards during the sport’s early years. A five-time home run champion, he became the first major leaguer to reach double digits in homers. When Stovey launched his fourth homer in 1885, he surpassed Charley Jones’ previous career mark of 40. Stovey finished that season with 13 home runs and secured his third home run title in six years.
By the close of 1886, Stovey pushed his career total to 57. Brouthers followed closely behind with 53. Brouthers overtook him in 1887 after out-homering Stovey by a 12-4 margin. Both sluggers blasted nine home runs in 1888, allowing Brouthers to keep baseball’s top spot for another season.
Stovey reclaimed the crown in 1889 with 19 home runs. When he retired in 1893, he became baseball’s first all-time home run king to leave the sport holding the record. Later legends followed the same path, including Roger Connor, Babe Ruth, Henry Aaron, and Barry Bonds.
The pair of Boston Red Sox season passes shown here connects directly to Stovey’s legacy. One dates to 1932 during Bob Quinn’s final season leading the franchise. The second comes from 1933, the opening year of Tom Yawkey’s long ownership reign. Both passes include Stovey’s signature on the reverse side.
The story of Stovey’s career as well as his case for Cooperstown can be seen by clicking here. The link also shows the back of these passes that includes signatures of Stovey.
Dan Brouthers was huge at 6-2 200lbs one of the biggest men back then.