Edward J. McKeever (March 19, 1859 in Brooklyn, New York – April 29, 1925 in New York, New York) was a construction contractor in Brooklyn in the early 20th-century. McKeever and his brother Stephen bought half of the Brooklyn Dodgers baseball team from Henry Medicus on January 2, 1912. Together with co-owner Charles Ebbets, they built what became Ebbets Field. McKeever served as vice-president of the Dodgers until Charles Ebbets died of a heart attack on April 18, 1925. McKeever became team president, but despite previously being in good health, he caught a cold at Ebbets' funeral and died of influenza a little more than a week later. He was buried in Holy Cross Cemetery in Brooklyn.

External links

  • Dodgers ownership history
  • Bio of the McKeevers
  • Dodgers history
  • NY Times article on the McKeevers purchasing shares of the team
  • Ed McKeever at Find a Grave

References



Ed McKeever grabs Olympic gold after powering to sprint canoeing 200m

Ed McKeever Alchetron, The Free Social Encyclopedia

Great Britain's Ed McKeever celebrates winning gold in the final of the

Baseball owners extend Rob Manfred's contract ESPN

Kenny Burns Leeds United & Scotland