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C. E. "Pat" Olsen

Carl Edwin "Pat" Olsen
Born August 3, 1902
Clifton, Texas
Died May 11, 2000(2000-05-11) (aged 97)
Kingwood, Texas
Alma mater Texas A&M University
Occupation Engineer
Philanthropist
Known for Olsen Field at Blue Bell Park

Carl Edwin "Pat" Olsen (August 3, 1902 – May 11, 2000) was an American engineer, entrepreneur and philanthropist. He played college baseball at Texas A&M University and was briefly with the New York Yankees organization. He founded a manufacturing and oil exploration company after leaving baseball. Olsen financially supported Texas A&M, his hometown of Clifton, Texas and Major League Baseball. He is the namesake for the baseball field at Texas A&M.

Olsen was named a Distinguished Alumnus of Texas A&M and was inducted into the Texas Baseball Hall of Fame, the Texas A&M Athletic Hall of Fame and the Texas High School Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Fame. After Olsen died, a legal battle ensued between his family and Texas A&M over the rights to his multimillion dollar estate.

C. E. "Pat" Olsen was born to Norwegian immigrants in Clifton, Texas on August 3, 1902. He had nine siblings; an older brother attended Texas A&M and was a baseball letterman between 1914 and 1916. Olsen was a member of the Ross Volunteers and lettered as a baseball pitcher between 1921 and 1923. Upon his graduation in 1923, Olsen entered professional baseball. He was signed to the New York Yankees organization and was a spring training roommate of Lou Gehrig, but he never made the Yankees major league roster. In October 1923, he married Elsie Duncan, the daughter of the Texas A&M food services director.

Olsen founded Gearench Manufacturing Company in Houston in 1927. The company's earliest product, the Gearench, was a tool for working with small-diameter pipe. Olsen sold the company, which included facilities in Houston and Clifton, in 1978. Pat Olsen donated the first Gearench building in Clifton, the former Clifton Lutheran College, to house the Bosque County Conservatory of Fine Arts.

Olsen remained attached to baseball throughout his life and made significant financial contributions to various aspects of the game. In 1978, Olsen Field was dedicated as Texas A&M's baseball field. He was also a member of the New York Yankees Alumni Club and he donated to the Major League Baseball pension plan. By the 1980s, Olsen had attended more than fifty All-Star Games and more than half of the World Series in baseball history. He was asked to throw out the ceremonial first pitch in game one of the 1984 World Series; former Texas A&M pitcher Mark Thurmond was one of the starting pitchers in the game.


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