Difference between revisions of ""Steel Arm" Dickey"

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==Biography==
 
==Biography==
  
According to the 1900 US Census of Fannin County, Georgia, Claude Dickey was born in June of 1896 and enumerated in the house of his grandparents, Benjamin and Frona. It was a rural county, and Benjamin and the other men in the household were either farmers or farm laborers. Ten years later, the family moved to McMinn County, Tennessee, two counties removed from Fannin County. Frona's name would be listed as Franie in the 1910 US Census.
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In the summer of 1896, in the rugged hills of Fannin County, Georgia, a boy named Claude Dickey was born into a family of farmers. The 1900 U.S. Census recorded him living in the household of his grandparents, Benjamin and Frona Dickey — the men working the fields, the women tending the home. Life was rural, hard, and deeply rooted in the soil of north Georgia.
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By 1910, the family had moved north to Etowah, Tennessee, nestled in McMinn County. The census that year misrendered Frona’s name as “Franie,” and listed Claude at 13 years old, still living in his grandparents’ care.
In 1918 Claude Dickey registered for the Armed Forces Draft, as the United States was at war with Germany, listing his birth location as Blue Ridge, Georgia, in Fannin County. A resident of Etowah, his tall and stout stature is a valuable asset working as a day laborer in the aluminum business. His birthdate on the registration is listed as May 14, 1894.
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Claude’s first known brush with baseball came in 1917 — a team photo of the local Etowah Sluggers includes his name. But just as his athletic ambitions were taking shape, the world called him elsewhere.
The first connection to baseball is from a team photograph of the Etowah Sluggers of 1917, but in 1919 Knoxville newspapers report him as a pitcher on the 1919 Knoxville Giants. The next season, 1920, he is one of the stars of the Giants of the newly formed Negro Southern League, at one point having won 25 straight games during the season.
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In 1918, amid America’s entry into World War I, Dickey registered for the draft. A tall and stout laborer in the aluminum industry, he listed his birthplace as Blue Ridge, Georgia, and his birthdate as May 14, 1894. That April, he was inducted into military service by the Blount County draft board and sent to Fort Meade, Maryland. The Veterans Administration later listed his official enlistment date as April 28, 1918. He served as a Private in Company F of the 368th Infantry Regiment, a predominantly Black unit within the famed 92nd Division.
The Giants claimed the Negro Southern League championship and played Rube Foster's Chicago American Giants for the “colored championship of the United States.” The Chicago American Giants won the series handily, 5 games to none.
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Dickey’s military record reads like a footnote in a broader, heroic chapter of African American service in the Great War. Company F fought alongside French troops in the Lorraine and Meuse-Argonne campaigns — muddy, brutal theaters where Black soldiers faced bullets from abroad and prejudice at home. On February 5, 1919, Dickey boarded a transport ship at Brest, France, bound for New York. He was honorably discharged a month later, on March 7, 1919.
Before the 1921 season was underway, there were reports that the Boston club of the New Continental League had offered $5,000 to the Providence club for Dickey’s services. He started the season as a pitcher for the Birmingham Black Barons, although he's hitched his wagon to the Mobile Braves in early June. Before too long, he signs with the Montgomery Grey Sox.
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But war hadn’t dulled his throwing arm.
The 1922 season found him playing for several teams in the Negro Southern League, first with Knoxville, then Nashville and New Orleans, and finally being signed by the St. Louis Stars of the Negro National League.
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By June of that year, Dickey was back in Knoxville, Tennessee — this time appearing in newspaper stories as a pitcher for the Knoxville Giants. The 1920 U.S. Census again placed him in his grandfather Ben Dickey’s home, this time listed as 21 years old. That year he became one of the standout players of the newly formed Negro Southern League.
The next spring was a tragic one for Dickey. On March 11, 1923, an altercation happened in Etowah, Tennessee. It was reported that Dickey and four of his companions had attacked Waldo Keyes, who had refused to buy liquor from them. Twenty-seven years of age and white, Keyes slashed Dickey’s throat with a knife, and the ball player bled to death in a short time [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NSG6-XVR  (source)].
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Dickey’s fastball was said to be a force of nature. At one point during the 1920 season, he reportedly won 25 straight games, a staggering feat that earned him the nickname “Steel Arm.” That fall, the Knoxville Giants, champions of the Negro Southern League, traveled across the South to face Rube Foster’s Chicago American Giants in a high-profile matchup billed as the "Colored Championship of the United States." Chicago swept the series in five games, but Steel Arm Dickey’s reputation had been cemented.
Charged with murder, Keyes’ case was to be heard in the Circuit court in Athens, Tennessee just three weeks later. The charges appear to have been changed, as three of Dickey’s associates, Joe Johnson, Claude Hitchcock, and John Melton, were found guilty of assault with intent to kill and were imposed sentences of one-to-five years each in the penitentiary.
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That winter, news surfaced that the Boston club of the fledgling Continental League had offered $5,000 for Dickey’s services — a substantial figure for a Black pitcher at the time. The deal never materialized. Instead, Dickey stayed in the South. In 1921, he began the season with the Birmingham Black Barons, briefly pitched for the Mobile Braves in June, and within days was reported to have signed with the Montgomery Grey Sox.
Walter “Steel Arm” Dickey is buried at the New Zion Cemetery in Etowah, McMinn county, Tennessee. His [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/27517187/walter-dickey marker] reads:
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<center>“Steel Arm”</center>
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In 1922, Dickey continued his barnstorming path across the Southern baseball circuit, suiting up for Knoxville, Nashville, New Orleans, and finally, by late August, the St. Louis Stars of the Negro National League. It seemed he was always on the move — not from instability, but because his arm remained in high demand.
<center>Walter Dickey</center>
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<center>June 2, 1899</center>
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Then, suddenly, the journey ended.
<center>Mar. 11, 1923</center>
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<center>Negro Baseball League</center>
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On the night of March 11, 1923, in Etowah, Tennessee, Dickey became involved in a fatal altercation. Reports stated that he and four companions confronted a white man named Waldo Keyes, who had refused to buy liquor from them. During the dispute, Keyes drew a knife and slashed Dickey’s throat. The pitcher died within minutes, bleeding to death on a small-town street far from the battlefields of France or the ballparks of Birmingham.
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Keyes was initially charged with murder, and his trial was slated for the Athens Circuit Court three weeks later. But the charges shifted. Instead, three of Dickey’s companions — Joe Johnson, Claude Hitchcock, and John Melton were convicted of assault with intent to kill and sentenced to one-to-five years in the state penitentiary. Keyes' ultimate fate is unclear.
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Walter “Steel Arm” Dickey was laid to rest in New Zion Cemetery in Etowah. His headstone reads simply:
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<p style="text-indent: 25px;">“Steel Arm”</p>
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<p style="text-indent: 25px;">Walter Dickey</p>
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<p style="text-indent: 25px;">June 2, 1899 Mar. 11, 1923</p>
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<p style="text-indent: 25px;">Negro Baseball League</p>
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Like so many Black athletes of his generation, the record of his life is pieced together through fragments — censuses, enlistment forms, newspaper clippings, and tombstones. The documents don’t agree on when he was born — 1894, 1895, 1896, or 1899 — but they do agree on one thing: for a few shining years, Steel Arm Dickey was a pitcher to be reckoned with. A man of strength, resilience, and fire, who fought for his country, threw thunder from the mound, and died too soon.
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==

Revision as of 22:31, 29 April 2025

Biography

In the summer of 1896, in the rugged hills of Fannin County, Georgia, a boy named Claude Dickey was born into a family of farmers. The 1900 U.S. Census recorded him living in the household of his grandparents, Benjamin and Frona Dickey — the men working the fields, the women tending the home. Life was rural, hard, and deeply rooted in the soil of north Georgia. By 1910, the family had moved north to Etowah, Tennessee, nestled in McMinn County. The census that year misrendered Frona’s name as “Franie,” and listed Claude at 13 years old, still living in his grandparents’ care.

Claude’s first known brush with baseball came in 1917 — a team photo of the local Etowah Sluggers includes his name. But just as his athletic ambitions were taking shape, the world called him elsewhere.

In 1918, amid America’s entry into World War I, Dickey registered for the draft. A tall and stout laborer in the aluminum industry, he listed his birthplace as Blue Ridge, Georgia, and his birthdate as May 14, 1894. That April, he was inducted into military service by the Blount County draft board and sent to Fort Meade, Maryland. The Veterans Administration later listed his official enlistment date as April 28, 1918. He served as a Private in Company F of the 368th Infantry Regiment, a predominantly Black unit within the famed 92nd Division.

Dickey’s military record reads like a footnote in a broader, heroic chapter of African American service in the Great War. Company F fought alongside French troops in the Lorraine and Meuse-Argonne campaigns — muddy, brutal theaters where Black soldiers faced bullets from abroad and prejudice at home. On February 5, 1919, Dickey boarded a transport ship at Brest, France, bound for New York. He was honorably discharged a month later, on March 7, 1919.

But war hadn’t dulled his throwing arm.

By June of that year, Dickey was back in Knoxville, Tennessee — this time appearing in newspaper stories as a pitcher for the Knoxville Giants. The 1920 U.S. Census again placed him in his grandfather Ben Dickey’s home, this time listed as 21 years old. That year he became one of the standout players of the newly formed Negro Southern League.

Dickey’s fastball was said to be a force of nature. At one point during the 1920 season, he reportedly won 25 straight games, a staggering feat that earned him the nickname “Steel Arm.” That fall, the Knoxville Giants, champions of the Negro Southern League, traveled across the South to face Rube Foster’s Chicago American Giants in a high-profile matchup billed as the "Colored Championship of the United States." Chicago swept the series in five games, but Steel Arm Dickey’s reputation had been cemented.

That winter, news surfaced that the Boston club of the fledgling Continental League had offered $5,000 for Dickey’s services — a substantial figure for a Black pitcher at the time. The deal never materialized. Instead, Dickey stayed in the South. In 1921, he began the season with the Birmingham Black Barons, briefly pitched for the Mobile Braves in June, and within days was reported to have signed with the Montgomery Grey Sox.

In 1922, Dickey continued his barnstorming path across the Southern baseball circuit, suiting up for Knoxville, Nashville, New Orleans, and finally, by late August, the St. Louis Stars of the Negro National League. It seemed he was always on the move — not from instability, but because his arm remained in high demand.

Then, suddenly, the journey ended.

On the night of March 11, 1923, in Etowah, Tennessee, Dickey became involved in a fatal altercation. Reports stated that he and four companions confronted a white man named Waldo Keyes, who had refused to buy liquor from them. During the dispute, Keyes drew a knife and slashed Dickey’s throat. The pitcher died within minutes, bleeding to death on a small-town street far from the battlefields of France or the ballparks of Birmingham.

Keyes was initially charged with murder, and his trial was slated for the Athens Circuit Court three weeks later. But the charges shifted. Instead, three of Dickey’s companions — Joe Johnson, Claude Hitchcock, and John Melton — were convicted of assault with intent to kill and sentenced to one-to-five years in the state penitentiary. Keyes' ultimate fate is unclear. Walter “Steel Arm” Dickey was laid to rest in New Zion Cemetery in Etowah. His headstone reads simply:

“Steel Arm”

Walter Dickey

June 2, 1899 – Mar. 11, 1923

Negro Baseball League

Like so many Black athletes of his generation, the record of his life is pieced together through fragments — censuses, enlistment forms, newspaper clippings, and tombstones. The documents don’t agree on when he was born — 1894, 1895, 1896, or 1899 — but they do agree on one thing: for a few shining years, Steel Arm Dickey was a pitcher to be reckoned with. A man of strength, resilience, and fire, who fought for his country, threw thunder from the mound, and died too soon.

Sources

Other Research

Credit

This page was assembled and presented by Mark D. Aubrey. Thanks to Skip Nipper for some editing and guidance.

Please see Copyright info.