Louis North, a pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals, holds a baseball in his right hand as he stares forward towards a wall located in the outfield at an unidentified stadium.
North is demonstrating the position that a pitcher stands in when they are waiting for a signal from the catcher about what type of pitch to throw. From here, once North and the catcher communicate on a pitch to be thrown, North would step on the pitcher's mound and throw the ball to home plate.
There is very little information about the life of Lou North. North was born on June 15, 1891 in Elgin, Illinois. North played for the Detroit Tigers, St. Louis Cardinals, and the Boston Braves throughout his career. However, North played a very sporadic career, as he played in 1913 for the Tigers, didn't play in 1914-1916, played for the Cardinals in 1917, and then didn't play again until 1920. He then played from 1920-1924 as a member of the Cardinals, making his total career span 7 years. North served in World War I, which would explain why he didn't play for a couple years between 1917 and 1920, though there is no information as to why North played for one year with the Tigers and then took three years off. North was mainly a relief pitcher, as he only started in 25 games in his career, while he pitched in 80.
I used facial recognition to identify the player in Slide 152 as Louis North.
Good condition;
This digital image is made from two separate digital scans; one scan of the lantern slide (reflective); one scan of the image (transparency); the two image were then combined in Photoshop to create the final image.
Lantern slide from the Leslie Mann baseball instruction course, "The Fundamentals of Baseball"
"Lou North Stats." Baseball Almanac, [ www.baseball-almanac.com/players/player.php?p=northlo01 ]. Accessed 31 Oct. 2017. ___Internet Archive___. [ http://web.archive.org/web/20171031172848/http://www.baseball-almanac.com/players/player.php?p=northlo01 ].