Doc Sykes

American baseball player From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Doc Sykes

Frank Jehoy Sykes (April 10, 1892 November 10, 1986), nicknamed "Doc", was an American Negro league pitcher in the 1910s and 1920s.

Quick Facts Negro league baseball debut, Last appearance ...
Doc Sykes
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Pitcher
Born: (1892-04-10)April 10, 1892
Decatur, Alabama
Died: November 10, 1986(1986-11-10) (aged 94)
Baltimore, Maryland
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
Negro league baseball debut
1914, for the Brooklyn Royal Giants
Last appearance
1924, for the Baltimore Black Sox
Teams
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A native of Decatur, Alabama, Sykes was the brother of fellow Negro leaguer Melvin Sykes. He attended Atlanta Baptist College and Howard University College of Medicine.[1] He broke into professional baseball in 1914 with the Brooklyn Royal Giants, but his longest tenure was with the Baltimore Black Sox in the early 1920s. In 1922, Sykes tossed a no-hitter for Baltimore against the Bacharach Giants at Maryland Baseball Park.[2]

After his baseball career, Sykes returned to Decatur to practice dentistry.[3] While living in Decatur in 1931, he provided critical testimony in the Scottsboro Boys trial, challenging the fairness of an all-white jury in the case. The backlash of his involvement in the case eventually caused him to move to Baltimore, Maryland, where he continued his dental practice and lived until his death in 1986 at age 94.[4]

References

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