LENOIR COUNTY, NC - Obituary - Charlie Garthright, 1930.

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From "The Kinston Daily Free Press", Kinston, N.C. - Lenoir County, January 
27, 1930

THEY'LL BE MISSING CHARLIE GARTHRIGHT IN FANS' QUARTERS

Members of the hot stove league here are disconsolate over the pass of
Charlie Garthright. He will have no successor as Kinston's chief
baseball fan. He is dead, and there is nobody to fill his shoes. His
funeral was held here today.

He talked, dreamed, lived baseball. His interest in the pastime was
infectous. Between seasons he kept interest of the fans alive. In the
places where they congregated he harangued them. He knew the sport like
a book. He knew by heart the complete records of hundreds of players in
the big leagues and minors. He settled a thousand disputes, held the
stakes a thousand times when bets were made, was sought out for
information a thousand times.

Obese, 37, good-natured and fonder of a hearty laugh than a meal, he was
as popular with the fans as any diamond star. He was popular with
players and umpires, also, and probably knew more about the game than
the average small time arbiter. Major league stars and bushers knew him.
Many had advice from him, solicited or unsolicited, during the years
that he followed the game. Fans in other Virginia and North Carolina
cities knew him well.

Kinston has had numerous managers in organized baseball. Garthright was
the first to meet them all at the train, the staunchest friend of all in
their dilemmas, an optimist.

There were financial crises and attendance crises and crises of other
kinds, and above them all Charlie Garthright's deep voice boomed him
optimism.

There were times when he put business ahead of baseball, and then he
worked in a barber shop. While other barbers discussed the weather and
the community scandal with their patrons, he talked baseball - and
nothing else. He was a good barber, an excellent barber.

He thought the operation that preceded his death might prove fatal but
he did not fear it. He laughed with a surgeon as he was rolled into the
operating room. When it was over the doc. thought he would get well, but
there was a reaction and it was fatal.

Thousands will remember him as long as they live. Their tribute to his
memory will be, "He was a good sport.".