Fred Doe

He allowed 10 hits, eight earned runs, seven base on balls, and struck out two Boston Reds hitters over 6.0 innings.

One week later, on August 30, Doe pitched for the Pittsburgh Burghers in a game against the Boston Reds.

Doe pitched 4.0 innings for Pittsburgh, and allowed four hits and two earned runs, while collecting two strikeouts.

[7] In 1906, he purchased the Worcester Busters, New England League team managed by future Baseball Hall of Famer Jesse Burkett.

Doe would become a driving force in the movement to allow baseball to be played state-wide in the late 1928.

[1] Doe died on October 4, 1938, in Quincy, Massachusetts, and is buried in Oak Grove Cemetery in Gloucester.