Chuck Kress


Charles Steven Kress was an American professional baseball player and manager. The first baseman played in all or parts of four seasons in Major League Baseball between and for the Cincinnati Reds, Chicago White Sox, Detroit Tigers and Brooklyn Dodgers, appearing in 175 games. His 17-year active career was interrupted by three years' service in the United States Army during World War II. Kress was born in Philadelphia, where he attended Frankford High School.
Kress threw and batted left-handed, and was listed as tall and. In MLB, he appeared in one full season,, and parts of three others. In that full campaign, he began the year with the Reds, got into 27 games, then was sold to the White Sox in June. In Chicago, he batted.278 in 97 games with 104 hits and became the White Sox' regular first baseman. But only one of his hits was a home run, and after Kress began by going hitless in eight at bats, he was sold to the St. Louis Cardinals' organization and returned to the minor leagues.
In his 175 big-league games, Kress batted.249 with 116 hits, including 20 doubles. His lone MLB home run was a solo shot off the Tigers' Fred Hutchinson on July 1. As a minor leaguer, he got into 1,745 games and became a manager in the Tigers' and Philadelphia Phillies' farm systems. He retired from baseball in 1961, and moved to Rush Lake, Minnesota, in 1973, to St. Joseph, Missouri, in 1980, and to Sandpoint, Idaho, in 2002.