Jimmy Wood


James Leon Wood was an American second baseman and manager in early professional Major League Baseball who hailed from Brooklyn, New York. He was the player-manager for four teams in the early National Association of Professional Base Ball Players - the predecessor of the modern National League of Professional Baseball Clubs - later known simply as the National League, of modern Major League Baseball, where he spent his entire base ball career in the 1860s into the 1870s.
Wood's career in organized baseball began as early as 1860 when he began play for the Eckford of Brooklyn, with whom he played for nine seasons during the following decade. In 1870, he took the position of player-manager for the Chicago White Stockings. It was here that he is credited for inventing the program of spring training when he moved his team down to New Orleans, Louisiana prior to the upcoming season to train in warmer weather. For the 1871 season, the team became a charter member of the newly organized NAPBBP - the National Association, but folded the following season, and Wood moved on to manage two other short term ill-fated teams; the Troy Haymakers and his old Eckford team. The next season, 1873, he managed the Philadelphia White Stockings for a year until he was able to reorganize a new Chicago team.
In 1874, he tried to lance an abscess on his leg with a pocketknife. This caused an infection which led to an eventual amputation of the leg. This did not end his managerial career, though; he returned to the Chicago White Stockings, and managed them for two seasons before the National Association folded in 1875. He then retired from professional baseball and moved to Florida and began investing in citrus interests. His daughter, Carrie, married William Chase Temple, who was at one time, the owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates. It was he who the Temple Cup was named after. Wood's granddaughter, Dorothy Temple, married pitcher Del Mason. Wood's whereabouts had been debated for years until recently. In 1885, he operated a sporting goods store in Chicago. He was traced all over the United States and Canada and eventually wound up in San Francisco, where he died and is interred at Greenwood Cemetery in New Orleans.