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Lester "Slim" Haynes
Right-handed pitcher, Stavely, Alberta
1909-1943. 6'2", 185 lb
The
Stavley-area farmer was an outstanding pitcher for more than 30 years in
Southern Alberta. An erroneous newspaper headline led to even more
fame - with an entry in Ripley's Believe It Or Not.
Haynes,
then just 22, and his wife May had come to the area in the winter of
1908 from Pullman, Washington. In a 1968 interview with
Washington's Tri-City Herald, Haynes said he couldn't remember just why
he left the state, "I'm not really sure why I went to Canada," he said.
"I think I was just tired of fighting all that damn Palouse mud."
The newspaper carried a feature on him after his induction into the
Alberta Sports Hall of Fame. By this time he was back in
Washington living near his daughters in the Kahlotus area (he returned
to Washington in 1944 after a big sendoff party in Stavely).
"I
pitched five no-hitters. The fast ball was my best pitch and I had a bit
of a curve, but, more than anything - and I'm bragging now - I had
control. Got to have that. I didn't use the spitter much. I
never did know where that one was going." (TRI-CITY
HERALD, December 11, 1968)
Haynes
pitched his first game for Stavely in 1909 after a resident offered to
drive his tractor if he would pitch for the local team. He made an
early, favourable impression :
STAVELY
BEAT CLARESHOLM : In a scheduled game in the Southern Alberta
Baseball League played in Claresholm on July 8, Stavely defeated
Claresholm by a score of four to seven. Ardell, the ex-Medicine
Hat pitcher, received a severe bumping, while Haynes for Stavely pitched
masterly ball, only two hits being made off his delivery, and he did not
issue a pass. He had the much touted Claresholm batters completely at
his mercy, striking out twelve men. Claresholm was lucky to get their
four runs as they scored on three errors and two hits. Those were
the only errors made by the Stavely team. Claresholm tied the
scored in the sixth inning but were never dangerous after that, while
Stavely in the first half of the ninth made four hits in a row, scoring
three runs. (The Lethbridge Daily Herald, July 10,
1909)
He
continued to pitch until 1943 in Canada and even tossed a few innings in
1944 upon his return to Washington. He drew headlines for over 34
years in Alberta, once for a pitching victory over his son.
(Clipping from The Albertan, Monday, July 18, 1938)

Haynes won
a prominent spot in Stavely's history with an entry in Butte Stands
Guard, the publication of the Stavely and District Historical
Society.
Lester
"Slim" Haynes and May Moore were married in 1908 and in December of the
same year came to Stavely where they purchased a half section of Calgary
and Edmonton Railway land north of town.
Before coming to Stavely, Slim was a graduate of Washington State
College at Pullman, Washington and while living there had been offered
contracts to pitch baseball for both the American and National League
baseball clubs.
It was fortunate for Stavely sports fans that he chose to go farming
in Alberta for in the spring of 1909, Slim, then 22, started pitching
for the Stavely club. That launched his phenomenal baseball career
and he soon became known and feared by every batter in the country
because of his fast ball, good curve and pinpoint control.
In Stavely "Slim" found a group of young enthusiasts with a desire to
play ball and with his coaching, encouragement and leadership they
became a winning club which won the Southern Alberta Baseball
Championship.
.
. . Because of his activities and participation in all sports another
honor came to him when, on November 23, 1968 he was inducted into the
Alberta Amateur Hall of Fame. Two days later a banquet was held in
his honor in the Community Hall, sponsored by the Stavely Elks when a
huge crowd assembled from many points in southern Alberta to pay tribute
to a distinguished sportsman who had donated so many years of volunteer
service to our community. At this event, which is still remembered
as "Haynes Night", Slim was presented with a framed photograph of
himself, taken in his heyday as a pitcher with the Stavely team, and
also with the guest book signed by 349 people.
May Haynes also took a lively interest in sports and their four
children who attended Parkland school and later Washington State
University were well known for their sports ability.
In February 1944, Mr. and Mrs. Haynes left our district for Spokane,
Washington. In June 1951, May Haynes passed away and Les, at the
age of 88, makes his home in Kahlotus, Washington near his daughters,
Elizabeth and Doris. Another daughter, Jessie, lives in
Bakersfield, California while a son, Laird, a former football and
basketball star and a World War II pilot in the R.C.A.F. is now farming
in Nebraska. (pages 247-248)
The
bane of print reporters - headline writers - led to wider recognition
for Haynes in late 1940. Ripley's Believe It Or Not carried
an item on Haynes noting his 31 years with Stavely and his three
shutouts in one day. (Ripley's clipping from the
Syracuse Herald Journal, November 30, 1940)
Years
later, Barry Broadfoot, his his 1973 book, Ten Lost Years, 1929-1939 :
Memories of Canadians Who Survived the Depression, picked up and further
exaggerated the achievement. Broadfoot not only had the game in
the wrong decade (it happened in 1922) but was incorrect in most of his
"facts".
There
was one guy that Stavely brought in and he was a pitcher, a fast-baller,
but he had a nice curve too and a curve wasn't seen much at those
tourneys, and he pitched a no-hitter the first game, a one-hitter and a
two-hitter, and Stavely won the tournament. Naturally. If
you don't believe me you can look it up. It was in Robert Ripley's
Believe It Or Not. Three great games in one day. This big gink had
played pro ball for Seattle or San Francisco and hadn't got the
attention he probably through he deserved, but he sure did on the
Canadian prairies.
The citation at the Alberta Sports Hall of Fame took it a step further
and said one of Haynes' three shutouts in 1922 was a perfect game
(which, of course, due to an error, it was not perfect).
Now,
Haynes did have a good day that July in 1922. He did hurl a
no-hitter in the first game (albeit a seven inning affair) and he did
throw a shutout in the money game (holding the opponents to just six
hits) but it wasn't up to the Broadfoot or Ripley standard. The
headline was likely the problem.

While the
headline suggested Haynes pitched at least two no-hitters and played in
three games, the actual story set out the day's events pretty well.
STAVELY,
July 27 - On Wednesday Alec Allan and his up-and-coming bunch of ball
artists took in the sports day in Barons with blood in their eyes and a
fixed determination to oust the Barons outfit from top place in the
leaguel and, incidentally they did it, and now repose on the top rung of
this ladder of fame.
The program of the day was made up of two league fixtures - Champion
v. Barons, and Vulcan v. Stavely, the winners of these draws to play off
for the purse. The day was featured by three ball games such as
are seldom seen on one occasion, each game resulting in a shut-out.
The opening game between Barons and Champion ended in a 3-0 victory
for the latter team. Both Siler for Champion and Pendergast for
Barons pitched good ball; but the Barons aggregation lacked their usual
pep and support, Williams the Barons centre fielder making a most costly
error when he did not move for an easy fly driven out to him. The
batteries were: Champion, Siler and Callahan; Barons - Pendergast
and Wobeck.
The second game between Vulcan and Stavely resulted in a no-hit
no-run game for Slim Haynes, only one of the Vulcan men reaching first
on an error of second baseman. Haynes certainly pitched wonderful
ball, and had airtight support from his team. Score :
R H E
Vulcan 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 0 2
Stavely 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 - 3 6 1
The batteries were : Stavely - Haynes and Allan; Vulcan -
Carruthers and Recore
Shut Out Champion
With just 5 minutes rest the Stavely boys went into the final game with
Champion for first money, shutting out their opponents 4-0. In the
fourth innings, with Champion at bat, M. Jenkins, playing deep off
second base, tried hard for a fly which bounded off his glove over his
head; Malchow in right field coming up fast behind him gathered it in,
making a most spectacular catch. Young Anderson, playing deep in
centre field, with Champion again at bat in the eighth, made a wonderful
throw-in, fielding a fly which had gone over his head and pegging in
clear to the home plate, cutting off Glenn. Batteries : Vulcan -
Siler and Graham; Stavely - Haynes and Allan.
R H E
Vulcan 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 6 2
Stavely 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 - 4 11 2
The Stavely nine, by winning their league fixture with Vulcan, and
Barons losing theirs with Champion, now heads the league.
(The Lethbridge Daily Herald, Saturday, July 29, 1922)
The local
paper, the Stavely Advertiser, carried only a short report under
the headline, Barons Tournament.
Three
shut out games in one afternoon - one of them a no run no hit game -
looks like a record: Stavely won two of them and copped all the honors,
incidentally stepping into first place in the southern Alberta League.
The Stavely-Vulcan game put Haynes name in the coveted roll of honor,
when he whiffed 11 batters and did not allow a semblance of a hit. An
error by M. Jenkins allowed the only runner in the game to reach first
base. While Stavely was winning from Vulcan, Champion was lowering the
colors of the pace making Barons tribe, by the shutout route. In the
third game for the money Stavely trimmed Champion 4-0."
(Friday, July 28, 1922)

Even without the notoriety from the erroneous information (repeated
again in the item in the Lethbridge Herald on his departure from Stavely)
and the Ripley's presentation, Haynes was an exceptional sportsman and
citizen of the community. He died in 1982 at age 94.
" ... Slim Haynes was recognized as the best pitcher in the area.
He always has a soft spot in his heart for young players just starting
to play. I have had him tell me when I first started to play,
'Stand up there and take a good cut at the ball, as I will never hit
you.' If I was lucky enough to get a hit off him he seemed almost
as pleased as I was. He left Stavely after many years of playing
ball there. he came back for a visit, so the community put on a
'Slim Haynes Day.' They had a ball game slated and invited a
number of us old bas-beens from the surrounding towns, who had played
with and against him, to participate. My brother, Linden, and I
were invited ... The most memorable thing about this day was the
fact Slim pitched three of four innings of incredible ball at the young
age of 56 years. I have been told that his name is in the
'Baseball Hall of Fame' not only for his athletic ability, but for the
interest he took in developing young ball players. A fine man !"
Bert Kellicut, Early History of Sports in the Granum Area, Leavings
by trail, Granum by rail.
(Thanks
to Bill Malchow for the photographs of Haynes, and the Stavely
championship team of the 1930s) |