manager
Charlie Root, actress
Jane Wyatt and
Los Angeles Angels manager Bill Sweeney sit atop a pile of baseball equipment donated to members of the
United States Armed Forces at military installations in Southern California in 1943 Sweeney moved back to the Pacific Coast League in 1949 for his second term as manager of the Portland Beavers. In four seasons (1949–52), the Beavers posted two winning records but no championships. After a successful, second-place finish with the 1953
Seattle Rainiers, Sweeney resumed the helm of the Angels for a second term there, but a losing record in 1954 was compounded by a poor start to 1955, and Sweeney was replaced by
Bob Scheffing in midyear. But Sweeney came back to the field, and
Portland, in the midseason of 1956 for a third and final stint as skipper of the Beavers. He succeeded
Tommy Holmes as manager and led the Beavers to a third-place finish and was invited to return for 1957. However, on April 18, only six games into the 1957 campaign, Sweeney was stricken with a
perforated ulcer in
San Diego, where his club was playing. He survived emergency surgery but then died from a
heart attack at the age of 52. He was interred in Resurrection Cemetery,
San Gabriel, California. Bill Sweeney's career record as a manager in the PCL was 1,471 victories and 1,452 defeats (.503) with one championship over all or parts of 18 seasons. He was selected to the
Pacific Coast League Hall of Fame in 2004. ==References==