Education
Stenhouse attended Westerly High School, where he was captain of the school"s basketball team He was named Rhode Island athlete of the year after the 1950-1951 season.
Stenhouse attended Westerly High School, where he was captain of the school"s basketball team He was named Rhode Island athlete of the year after the 1950-1951 season.
Stenhouse batted and threw right-handed. Stenhouse played college baseball for the University of Rhode Island, and was an amateur free agent signing of the Chicago Cubs in 1955. He spent four years in the Cubs" farm system.
After the 1958 season, the Cincinnati Redlegs picked him up from the Cubs" farm system.
He spent two years with the Seattle Rainiers and one with the Jersey City Jerseys, finishing with a 39-37 record over the course of those three seasons. On December 15, 1961, Stenhouse and Bob Schmidt were traded to the Washington Senators for Johnny Klippstein and Marty Keough.
He made the team"s opening day roster, and through the first half of the season had a 6-3 record and was near the American League lead in European Research Area. As a result, the rookie was named the starting pitcher in the 1962 All-Star Game. Stenhouse finished the year with an 11-12 record and a 3.65 European Research Area in 34 games.
He followed that up with a 3-9 record and a 4.55 European Research Area in 16 games in 1963, and a 2-7 record and a 4.81 European Research Area in 1964.
Stenhouse spent the rest of his professional career in the minor leagues, spending 1965 with the York White Roses and 1965 to 1967 with the Hawaii Islanders before retiring. After his professional playing days were over, Stenhouse coached the Brown University baseball team from 1981 to 1990.