© 2026 Dummy Hoy Hall of Fame Campaign
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The Man Who
Played In
Silence.

William Ellsworth Hoy was born in 1862, when baseball was still becoming baseball. The rules were unfinished. The stadiums were louder than ever. And most people believed a deaf man had no place in the major leagues. They were wrong. For fourteen seasons, Hoy out ran doubt, silence, and an entire system that was never built for him. Before microphones. Before accessibility. Before baseball learned how to speak with its hands.

Dummy Hoy
Career Timeline

Fourteen Seasons. One Legacy.

1862
Born in Houcktown, Ohio
Loses hearing at age 3 due to meningitis. Graduates from the Ohio School for the Deaf in 1879.
1886
Professional Career Begins
Signs with Oshkosh of the Northwestern League. His reputation travels faster than the news.
1888
Major League Debut
Debuts with the Washington Nationals. Hits .274 with 82 walks in his first season. The era of hand signals begins.
1891
St. Louis Browns
Joins the Browns. Establishes himself as one of the game's elite leadoff men.
1894
Cincinnati Reds
Joins the Reds. Becomes a fan favorite in the National League.
1901
Chicago White Sox
Joins the White Sox in the American League's inaugural season. Hits .294 with 86 walks at age 39.
1902
Retirement
Final major league season. Retires with 2,048 hits, 1,429 runs, and 1,004 walks.
1961
First Pitch at the World Series
At age 99, throws out the ceremonial first pitch at the World Series in Cincinnati. Dies later that year — still waiting for the Hall of Fame call.
October 1961 — Age 99
At ninety-nine years old, he walked to the mound in Cincinnati and threw out the first pitch of the World Series. He never heard the crowd roar. He felt it.
— Campaign Research, 2024
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December 2027.
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