Pfeiffer honors legendary baseball coach during Joe Ferebee Day

Published 2:00 pm Wednesday, April 27, 2022

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Friends, former players and colleagues gathered Saturday afternoon at Pfeiffer University to honor the memory of legendary baseball coach Joe Ferebee.

Before Pfeiffer took to the field, named after the former Falcons head coach, the school hosted baseball alumni for a ceremony to honor Ferebee’s legacy. The pregame ceremonies came before the Falcons hosted Methodist for a USA South Conference matchup.

A member of eight Halls of Fame, including Pfeiffer, Stanly County and the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame, Ferebee won 697 for Pfeiffer from 1958 to 1987, winning 10 conference titles and five NAIA District championships. He also served many years as the school’s athletic director.

The coach won 694 American Legion baseball games coaching for several teams, including Stanly and Rowan counties. Ferebee also led Salisbury High School to the 1955 state baseball title.

Many of the alumni in attendance contributed to the book “His Field, Our Dreams,” a collection of stories about Ferebee collected by 1968 Pfeiffer graduate Bob Gulledge. Speaking in the pregame ceremony, Gulledge said Ferebee “was the finest teacher on how to play baseball.”

George Singleton, of the Pfeiffer Class of 1968, sings the National Anthem before the game against Methodist Saturday. He is joined by Tom Childress. (Photo courtesy Casey Habich/Pfeiffer University)

Former Pfeiffer athletic director Tom Childress said he met Ferebee when the coach offered him the head men’s basketball coaching job in 1969.

“I stayed 14 years as a basketball coach, and he became a good friend, even better as I was retiring from Pfeiffer and going up the road to Salisbury,” Childress said, referring to his time at Catawba College.

Childress said Ferebee always kept pictures and newspaper articles about his players after graduation so he could follow what they were doing.

The former Pfeiffer coach and AD spoke to the players on both teams, challenging them to thank a coach or other individuals not from their families who helped them with their baseball career.

Jack Ingram, a Pfeiffer professor who coached the softball team for many years and for whom the softball field is named, spoke about Ferebee after he retired.

Both attended church at Wesley Chapel United Methodist Church in Misenheimer, Ingram said, noting the two talked about basketball and life.

Ferebee and his wife started attending Pfeiffer basketball games, then after his wife passed, the coach started sitting in on basketball practices during the time Dave Davis coached the team.

Ingram also said Ferebee could ask someone where they were from and always knew prominent people who lived there, or the creeks and rivers which ran through them.

George Williams, Pfeiffer Class of 1968, sang the national anthem before the game.

About Charles Curcio

Charles Curcio has served as the sports editor of the Stanly News & Press for more than 16 years and has written numerous news and feature storeis as well. He was awarded the NCHSAA Tim Stevens Media Representative of the Year and named CNHI Sports Editor of the Year in 2014. He has also won an award from Boone Newspapers, and has won four North Carolina Press Association awards.

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