Helser
showed flashes of brilliance in baseball: McMinnville man was a star player and
later coached Linfield to a national title
(Sources: Salem, Ore., Statesman
Journal, newspaper, Oct. 27, 1994, with additional information from
Wildcatville blog in 2020.)
Roy
Helser, a baseball pitcher and later coach, made his mark in Salem and two
other Willamette Valley communities.
Helser
died Tuesday at his home in McMinnville of causes related to age. He was 83.
The
left-hander played professional baseball for the Salem Senators of the
Northwest League in 1940 and 1941.
Al
Lightner, a longtime sports figure in Salem as a player, official and
journalist, played with Helser on the Salem teams.
"He
won 15 games for us on Salem's first professional team," Lightner said.
"He was out to win. He wasn't a quitter."
Lightner
said Helser played semipro with the Silverton Red Sox before joining the
Senators. "I remember when he hit a ball at McGinnis Field (Silverton)
that went the way up the tele phone pole and landed over on the railroad
yards," Lightner said. "Not a lot of people knew it, but he could
hit."
Lightner
said the Senators sent a telegram trying to sell Helser to the Portland Beavers
in 1942. "But they said he wasn't good enough," Lightner said.
Helser
finally joined Portland in late 1942 after playing with the San Francisco Seals
earlier that year. He stayed with Portland until 1952 and was a member of
Portland's 1945 Pacific Coast League pennant winning team.
Helser
was part of the team during the days when crowds packed the old Vaughn Street
ballpark. He had consecutive 20-win seasons in 1944, '45 and '46.
Helser
played semipro ball for the Drain Black Sox from 1951-53, and his catcher was
Bill Beard, also a former Salem Senator. (Helser also was a Black Sox manager.)
Beard, a three-sport star at Willamette from 1935-37, managed the Senators in
1949. Lightner said: "Almost every weekend, it would be Helser and Beard.
That combination was hard to beat."
Helser
taught and coached at Oregon high schools for two academic years. During the
1941-1942 academic year at Lebanon, Ore., High School he was head football,
head boys’ basketball and head baseball coach. In Portland during the 1944-1945
academic year he was head boys’ basketball coach at Central Catholic High
School.
Helser
became a legend in McMinnville, where he was an athlete and later coached
baseball at Linfield College.
Helser
coached for 21 years, winning 14 Northwest Conference championships and the
NAIA national title in 1966. He also was head basketball coach and assistant
football coach at Linfield for several years. Helser was athletic director at
Linfield for four years before retiring in 1972.
"He
was one of the greatest competitors I have ever known," said Ad Rutschman,
former Linfield football coach who played baseball and basketball for Helser at
the school. Linfield's baseball field was named after Helser in a formal
dedication in 1973.
Helser
was named to the NAIA Hall of Fame and to the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame.
Helser's
family has asked that contributions be made to the Roy and Dorothy Helser
Baseball Scholarship Fund at Linfield.
#
ROY HERMAN HELSER
(Sources: By Wildcatville blog in December 2020 based on
information from various sources.)
Born August 27, 1911, in Portland,
Ore., Roy Herman Helser died at age
83 on Oct. 25, 1994, in the McMinnville, Ore., home he shared with his wife, Dorothy
Evelyn Wall Helser.
Roy grew up in Portland, Ore. A
variety of sports were an important part of his life from youth to old age. Out
of the sports he played, baseball was his favorite. A left-handed fireball
throwing pitcher, his nickname was “Lefty.” He was also called “The Bear” and
“Bear.” As able as he was pitching, he also had a powerful bat producing many
home runs and other hits.
Mr. Helser graduated from Benson
High School in Portland in 1929 and was a member of Linfield College (McMinnville,
Ore.,) Class of 1936.
After graduating from Benson he
didn't immediately start classes, in 1929, as a freshman at Linfield. Instead,
he began classes as a freshman at Linfield in 1932. It was the Depression when
he graduated from Benson. It’s assumed he worked to earn money to attend
college before enrolling at Linfield.
He left Linfield in 1936 to play
professional baseball. He returned to Linfield in 1941 and earned his diploma
in that year from Linfield.
At Benson, Roy played football and
basketball. It's assumed he played baseball for Benson, too, but information
confirming that hard to find. At Linfield as a student, Roy Helser played football,
basketball and baseball, earning 11 Linfield cardinal athletic letters.
It was at Linfield that he met
Dorothy, a student from Bremerton, Wash. They married Aug.11, 1935, in Kitsap
County, Wash. Dorothy died at age 98 on Nov. 20, 2013, in McMinnville.
Roy and Dorothy were the first
married couple to attend Linfield together which required approval from Elam
Anderson, Linfield College president. The Helsers were members of Linfield
Class of 1936 but, she graduated in 1936 and he in 1941.
Roy played professional baseball for
the Portland Beavers and other teams for more than 10 years while Dorothy and
Roy raised three children. Following Roy's baseball retirement, the family
moved from Portland to McMinnville where Roy coached at Linfield.
As head baseball coach he led he
Linfield Wildcats in 1966 to the NAIA national baseball title. It was the
college’s first national title. In 21 seasons, 1950-1970, his baseball teams
won 14 Northwest Conference championships, six second-places and one
third-place finish. He also coached the 1941 Linfield baseball team.
He also was co-head coach with Paul
Durham (1949-1952) and later head coach (1952-1961) of Linfield men’s
basketball. Those teams won four Northwest Conference titles. He also was an
assistant football coach on Wildcat teams coached by Durham.
Roy Helser “also made a mark as a
semi-pro player and manager in a time when that carried considerable weight,
first with the Silverton Red Sox, then with the Drain Black Sox (in
Oregon)," said a 1994 Oregonian story reflecting on his life.
After retiring as baseball coach
after the 1970 season, he served as Linfield director of athletics (1968-1973).
He’s a member of the Linfield
Athletics Hall of Fame. Helser Field, home of Linfield baseball on the
McMinnville campus, is named for him. In addition he is enshrined in the NAIA
(National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics) National Hall of Fame and
the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame.
Roy and Dorothy retired to their
beach house on the Oregon coast at Devil’s Lake in 1973. While loved living there,
they moved back to McMinnville in 1987.
Survivors
include his wife; sons, J. Dennis of Salem and Roy Jr. of Portland; daughter,
Susan Petersen of Tualatin; brother, Morris of Tigard; nine grandchildren; and
one great-grandchild.
Read more about Roy Helser at …
…the Volga Germans of Portland: https://www.volgagermansportland.info/roy-helser.html
…the Linfield College Athletics Hall
of Fame: https://golinfieldwildcats.com/honors/linfield-athletics-hall-of-fame/roy-helser/4
… the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame: http://oregonsportshall.org/timeline/roy-helser-baseball
…
About
a photo posted here … BOTH PACKARDS, BOTH HELSERS: Morrie (left) and Roy
Helser, brothers, lend scoring power to Portland’s Pacific Packards independent
basketball team, which will honor their sponsor, Joe Sherman, Monday night when
they play Hop Gold in the American league. (Oregon Journal, Portland, Ore., Dec
13, 1936).
#
Obituary:
Roy H. Helser
Aug.
27, 1911-Oct 25, 1994
(Sources: Salem, Ore., Statesman
Journal, newspaper, Oct. 26, 1994, with additional information from
Wildcatville blog in 2020.)
McMINNVILLE
- Roy H. Helser, 83, died Tuesday.
He
was born in Portland and graduated from Linfield College in 1941. He was a
three-sport letter winner in football, basketball and baseball. He played
professional baseball with the Salem Senators in 1940 and 1941.
Helser
taught and coached at Oregon high schools for two academic years. During the
1941-1942 academic year at Lebanon, Ore., High School he was head football,
head boys’ basketball and head baseball coach. In Portland during the 1944-1945
academic year he was head boys’ basketball coach at Central Catholic High
School.
In
1943 he signed with the Portland Beavers and played for nine years, during
which he had three seasons of 20 or more wins as a pitcher.
Helser
taught at Linfield beginning in 1949 and coached basketball; baseball and
assisted in football. His baseball teams (1950-1970) had 14 Northwest
Conference wins, six second-place wins, and one third-place finish.
His
baseball teams had 14 Northwest Conference wins, six second-place wins, and one
third-place finish. The 1966 team won the NAIA national championship, the first
ever Linfield sports team to do so.
He
was Linfield athletic director, 1968-1973, leaving the post upon retirement.
Helser
is a member of the Linfield Athletic Hall of Fame, the NAIA National Hall of
Fame and to the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame. Linfield's baseball field is named
after him.
He
was a member of Kiwanis and the Active in the Old Timers Baseball Association.
Married
to Dorothy (Wall) Helser in 1935 in Bremerton, Wash., they lived in Lincoln
City from 1973 to 1987 when they returned to McMinnville.
Survivors
include his wife; sons, J. Dennis of Salem and Roy Jr. of Portland; daughter,
Susan Petersen of Tualatin; brother, Morris of Tigard; nine grandchildren; and
one great-grandchild.
Memorial
services will begin at 10:30 a.m. Friday in the First Baptist Church. Private
family interment will be in Evergreen Memorial Park Mausoleum. Arrangements are
by Macy & Son mortuary.
Contributions
may be made to the Roy and Dorothy Helser Baseball Scholarship at Linfield
College in care of the mortuary.
#
Roy Helser, a Portland Beavers professional baseball team pitcher.
Roy Helser, a member of the Portland Beavers pro baseball team.
Dorothy and Roy Helser.
Dorothy (Wall) and Roy Helser on their wedding day.
Plaque at Linfield baseball's Helser Field
BOTH PACKARDS, BOTH HELSERS: Morrie (left) and Roy Helser, brothers, lend scoring power to Portland's Pacific Packards independent basketball team which will honor their sponsor, Joe Sherman, Monday night when they play Hop Gold in the American league. (Oregon Journal, Portland, Ore., Dec 13, 1936)
Dorothy Helser, widow of the late Roy Helser, who served as Linfield athletic director, baseball and men's basketball coach and assistant football coach, poses in this Wildcatville photo taken 11/19/2012 with a collage which includes representation of his baseball playing and coaching career.