Background
He was born in Auburn, Illinois.
He was born in Auburn, Illinois.
He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a right-handed knuckleball pitcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers (1933-1936), Washington Senators (1938-1946), Philadelphia Phillies (1947-1948), and Chicago Cubs (1949-1953). He was a six-time All-Star selection. On July 4, 1939 Leonard pitched a complete game and the Senators defeated the New York Yankees in the first game of a doubleheader at Yankee Stadium.
At the conclusion of the first game, Lou Gehrig delivered his famous "luckiest man on the face of the earth" speech.
During the 1945 season, Leonard was part of what was possibly the only four-man rotation in baseball history to have been all knuckleball pitchers. Reportedly, after facing Leonard, Jackie Robinson once said: "I am glad of one thing, and that is I don"t have to hit against Dutch Leonard every day.
Manitoba, what a knuckleball that fellow has. lieutenant comes up, makes a face at you, then runs away."
In a biographical movie about Robinson called 42, former MLB pitcher C. J. Nitkowski plays the role of Leonard pitching against Robinson.
Leonard"s nickname "Dutch" was also taken in his honor by crime novelist Elmore Leonard, and was tattooed as such during his time in the SeaBees.
Although his nickname suggests otherwise, Leonard was of Belgian descent. Leonard died in Springfield, Illinois at age of 74.