Frank served as team president of the
Baltimore Orioles of the
American League in 1901, their
inaugural season.[2]John Mahon was elected to succeed Frank as chairman at the annual stockholders' meeting in February 1902.[3] Outside of baseball, Frank managed the brokerage firm of Arthur Lipper & Company, and his business obligations were cited as the reason that he did not continue as president of the Orioles.[3][4]
When Mahon sold his controlling interest in the Orioles to
John T. Brush and
Andrew Freedman of the
National League,
Ban Johnson, president of the
American League, joined with Frank and other minority owners of the Orioles to seize control of the team.[5] The Orioles franchise relocated to New York City for the 1903 season, becoming the New York Highlanders,[6] and since 1913 have been the
New York Yankees.[7]
Following Frank's sale of his interest in the Orioles, there would not be another Jewish owner in the American League for nearly a half-century, until former player
Hank Greenberg took an ownership position in the
Cleveland Indians in 1949.[8]
Personal life
Frank was born in Baltimore in 1872,[4] and had one sibling, a sister, Alice,[9] who died in August 1916.[10]
Frank married Florence Hortense Holzman in November 1906.[11][12] As of November 1910, Frank was living on
Madison Avenue in Baltimore, per a newspaper report of his house being robbed.[13] As of the
1920 Census, he was living on
Fifth Avenue in
New York City, apparently alone.[14] Later information about his personal life is unknown.
Notes
^Frank's first name sometimes appeared as "Sidney" in contemporary newspapers.