Education
He finished the 1961 season with four hits (including two doubles) in eight at bats, for a.500 batting average.
He finished the 1961 season with four hits (including two doubles) in eight at bats, for a.500 batting average.
Harkness was signed by the Philadelphia Phillies as an amateur free agent before the 1956 season. He was traded by the Phillies on April 5, 1957 along with a player to be named later, Ron Negray, Elmer Valo, a minor league player and $75,000 to the Brooklyn Dodgers in exchange for Chico Fernandez, with the Phillies completing the trade on April 8 when they sent Ben Flowers to the Dodgers. Harkness made his major league debut on September 12, 1961 against the Phillies, working out a walk in five pitches against pitcher Chris Short as a pinch hitter in the ninth inning in a 19–10 loss at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.
In the 1962 season, he appeared in 92 games for the Dodgers, with nine hits (including two doubles and two home runs) in 62 at bats, and seven runs batted in.
He was traded by the Dodgers to the New York Mets on November 30, together with Larry Burright, in exchange for Bob Miller. In the 1963 season with the Mets, Harkness played in 123 games, getting 79 hits (including 12 doubles, three triples and 10 home runs) in 375 at bats, for a.211 batting average, together with 41 Reserve Bank of India. His seven times hit by pitch that season tied him for eighth among National League batters.
On April 17, 1964, Harkness led off for the Mets in the bottom of the first inning and had a single off of Bob Friend in the third inning to become the first Mets player to bat and the first to get a hit in the team"s first game played at Shea Stadium as part of a 4–3 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates. He finished the 1964 season with the Mets, having appeared in 39 games and getting 33 hits in 117 at bats (including two doubles, a triple and two home runs) for a.282 batting average, and 13 Reserve Bank of India. As of 2010, Harkness is the manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs of the Intercounty Baseball League.