Landis, Kenesaw Mountain

Landis, Kenesaw Mountain
born Nov. 20, 1866, Millville, Ohio, U.S.
died Nov. 25, 1944, Chicago, Ill.

U.S. federal judge and first commissioner of professional baseball.

Landis was named for a Georgia mountain where his father had been wounded as a Civil War soldier. He practiced law in Chicago (1891–1905) before being appointed a U.S. district judge (1905–22). In 1907 he presided over a famous case in which Standard Oil Co. was found guilty of granting unlawful freight rebates and fined $29 million (his decision was later reversed). He was named baseball commissioner in 1920 in the aftermath of the Black Sox scandal and became noted for his uncompromising measures to preserve the game's integrity. Though widely disliked for his stern, autocratic rule, he kept the post until his death.

Landis, 1928

UPI-EB Inc.

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▪ American baseball commissioner
born Nov. 20, 1866, Millville, Ohio, U.S.
died Nov. 25, 1944, Chicago
 American federal judge who, as the first commissioner of organized professional baseball, was noted for his uncompromising measures against persons guilty of dishonesty or other conduct he regarded as damaging to the sport.

      He was named for a mountain near Atlanta, Ga., where his father, a Union soldier, was wounded during the Civil War. Landis attended the University of Cincinnati and in 1891 was graduated from the Union College of Law, Chicago. He practiced law in Chicago until March 1905, when President Theodore Roosevelt appointed him U.S. district judge for the northern district of Illinois. Two years later, Landis won nationwide fame by fining the Standard Oil Company more than $29,000,000 for granting unlawful freight rebates. (The decision was reversed on appeal.) During World War I he presided at sedition trials of Socialist and labour leaders.

      In 1915 the Federal League, a “third major league” operating outside the structure of organized professional baseball, brought suit against the American and National leagues. The case came before Landis, who neither granted nor denied the injunction that was requested but withheld his decision until the Federal League had disbanded on terms satisfactory to all three leagues. Following the Black Sox (Black Sox Scandal) baseball scandal (in which eight Chicago White Sox players were accused of accepting bribes to lose the 1919 World Series), Landis was proposed for the office of commissioner. Replacing the three-man National Baseball Commission, which had failed to deal adequately with the Black Sox problem, Landis took office in January 1920.

      Although disliked and even feared for his autocratic methods and patriarchal sternness, the commissioner held office until his death, and none of his decisions ever was reversed. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1944.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Landis, Kenesaw Mountain — (20 nov. 1866, Millville, Ohio, EE.UU.–25 nov. 1944, Chicago, Ill.). Juez federal estadounidense y primer comisionado del béisbol profesional. Su nombre de pila corresponde al de una montaña del estado de Georgia en que su padre había sido herido …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Landis,Kenesaw Mountain — Lan·dis (lănʹdĭs), Kenesaw Mountain. 1866 1944. American jurist and baseball commissioner (1921 1944) remembered for curbing corruption in professional baseball. * * * …   Universalium

  • Kenesaw Mountain Landis — Kenesaw Mountain Landis, né le 20 novembre 1866 et décédé le 25 novembre 1944, était un juriste américain qui fut juge fédéral de 1905 à 1922 puis commissaire des ligues majeures de baseball de 1920 à …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Kenesaw Mountain Landis — (November 20 1866 ndash; November 25 1944) was an American jurist who served as a federal judge from 1905 to 1922, and subsequently as the first commissioner of Major League Baseball.Personal lifeBorn in Millville, Ohio, to Abraham Hoch Landis… …   Wikipedia

  • Kenesaw Mountain Landis — K.M. Landis en 1907. Kenesaw Mountain Landis (20 de noviembre de 1866 25 de noviembre de 1944) fue un jurista norteamericano, que fue juez federal desde 1905 hasta 1922 y primer Comisionado del béisbol de las Grandes Ligas desde 1920 hasta su… …   Wikipedia Español

  • mountain — mountainless, adj. /mown tn/, n. 1. a natural elevation of the earth s surface rising more or less abruptly to a summit, and attaining an altitude greater than that of a hill, usually greater than 2000 ft. (610 m). 2. a large mass of something… …   Universalium

  • Mountain — (as used in expressions) Kings Mountain, batalla de Landis, Kenesaw Mountain Rocky Mountain, parque nacional …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Kenesaw Mountain Landis — n. (1866 1944) United States jurist who was the first baseball commissioner from 1920 to 1944 and most famous for restraining corruption in professional baseball …   English contemporary dictionary

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