Career
As a catcher, he participated in one of the most publicized baseball stunts of the century"s first decade. As a manager, he led the Saint Louis Cardinals to two National League championships (1930-1931) and one world title (1931). And as a broadcaster, he entertained Saint Louis baseball fans in the years following World World War World War II Born in Huntsville, Alabama, Street (who batted and threw right-handed) was a weak hitter.
He batted only.208 in a seven-year playing career (1904-1905.
1908-1912) in 502 games with the Cincinnati Reds, Boston Beaneaters, Washington Senators, and New York Highlanders. Apart from 1908 to 1909, when he was the Senators" first-string catcher, he was a part-time player.
Street holds the record for the longest gap between Major League games – 19 years (1912–1931). After muffing the first twelve balls thrown by journalist Preston Gibson, he made a clean reception of number thirteen.
In addition, Street was fabled as an early catcher and mentor of the American League"s nonpareil right-handed pitcher, Walter Johnson.
After Street"s playing career ended, he managed in the minor leagues before joining the Cardinals" major league coaching staff in 1929. They replaced 1928 skipper Bill McKechnie before the season with Billy Southworth. Then, when Southworth couldn’t get results, they brought back McKechnie on July 24.
In between, Street served as acting manager for one game on July 23: an 8–2 triumph over the Philadelphia Phillies.
At the close of the 1929 season, McKechnie left to manage the Boston Braves and Street became the Redbirds" full-fledged manager. The Old Sarge promptly led the Cardinals to consecutive National League pennants.
Then, in the 1931 Series against those same A"s, pitchers Wild Bill Hallahan and Burleigh Grimes dominated and Pepper Martin had 12 hits, batted.500, drove in five runs and stole five bases to lead the underdog Redbirds to a seven-game world championship against the last Connie Mack dynasty. The Cardinals faltered in 1932, winning only 72 games and finishing tied for sixth, 18 games out, and had improved only to fifth in July 1933.
Street was dumped and replaced by his second baseman, Frankie Frisch.
He managed in the Associate of Arts American Association for a couple of seasons, then made a return to the Mound City as skipper of the 1938 Saint Louis Browns. The habitually bottom-feeding Brownies finished seventh in an eight-team American League, winning only 53 games. The "38 season put a cap on Street"s major league managerial career.
After battling cancer successfully in 1949, Street fell victim to heart failure in his adopted hometown of Joplin, Missouri, in February 1951.
He died at 68 years of age.