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・ Ernest Granger
・ Ernest Grant
・ Ernest Graves
・ Ernest Graves (actor)
・ Ernest Graves, Jr.
・ Ernest Graves, Sr.
・ Ernest Gray
・ Ernest Gray (New Zealand politician)
・ Ernest Green
・ Ernest Greenfield
・ Ernest Greenhill, 1st Baron Greenhill
・ Ernest Greenwood
・ Ernest Greswell
・ Ernest Griffith Price
・ Ernest Grimstone
Ernest Groth
・ Ernest Gruening
・ Ernest Gruening Cabin
・ Ernest Grunwald
・ Ernest Grvala
・ Ernest Guenther Award
・ Ernest Guglielminetti
・ Ernest Guiraud
・ Ernest Gustave Girardot
・ Ernest Gutierrez
・ Ernest Gébler
・ Ernest Günther, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg
・ Ernest H. Bjorkman
・ Ernest H. Buehl, Sr.
・ Ernest H. Dervishian


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Ernest Groth : ウィキペディア英語版
Ernest Groth

Ernest William Groth (May 3, 1922 – December 27, 2004) was an American Major League Baseball right-handed pitcher who played for three seasons. He played for the Cleveland Indians during the 1947 and 1948 seasons and the Chicago White Sox during the 1949 season. In four career games, Groth pitched 7⅓ innings and had a 4.91 earned run average (ERA).
Born and raised in Pennsylvania, Groth began his professional career in the Wisconsin State League in 1942. After his rookie season, he spent the next three years serving in the military during World War II. After he returned, he spent more time in the minor leagues, then spent parts of the 1947 and 1948 seasons with the Cleveland Indians. After the end of the 1948 season, he was traded to the Chicago White Sox, and played with them in 1949. He spent the next seven seasons pitching in the minor leagues, retiring at the end of the 1956 season. After his retirement, he ran Groth's Nursery and worked for Standard Steel, and died in 2004.
==Early life and minor leagues==
Groth was born in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania to William T. and Clara Court Groth. He played American Legion Baseball in East Palestine, Ohio in his teens,〔 and attended Beaver Falls High School. He grew up pitching in the county league, and was both a right fielder and pitcher for the Chippewa Indians. After pitching for Chippewa in 1941, he was offered a contract for the 1942 season by the Pittsburgh Pirates. Groth turned down the offer instead signing with the Cleveland Indians, spending the 1942 season with the Indians' D-Class (rookie league) affiliate, the Appleton Papermakers of the Wisconsin State League, where he played alongside future teammate Mike Garcia. In 26 games, he pitched in 203 innings, had a 16–10 win–loss record and a 3.59 ERA.
After the 1942 season, Groth spent the following three years serving with the United States Army in the Pacific Theater of Operations during World War II.〔 After the war, he returned to baseball, spending the 1946 season with the Wilkes-Barre Barons, a Cleveland Indians minor league team that played in the Eastern League. His performances that season included a one-hitter against the Elmira Pioneers in the second game of a doubleheader on August 19. In 29 games, Groth finished with a 13–7 ecord and a 2.98 ERA.〔 Shortly afterward, he became engaged to Blanche Klein, a fellow graduate of Beaver Falls High.〔 The two were married shortly after.

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