As the Civil War ended, the thoughts of many Northern soldiers turned to a game that some had learned about for the first time during the war--baseball. Their newfound interest in the sport, combined with the postwar economic boom and the resultant growth of many cities, took the game from one practiced by a few amateur clubs in New York City before the war to a professional sport covering almost the entire northeastern United States. Researched from primary sources, the game of the late 1860s is described season-by-season: the fields, the crowds, the strategy, the rules, the style of play, and the confusing struggles to crown a national champion, with all the chicanery and machinations of the contenders. Such landmark events as the Washington Nationals' pioneering 1867 tour and the Cincinnati Red Stockings' undefeated 1869 season are covered.
The present volume covers all the action--both on and off the field--of the NA's five years, providing the definitive history of the first professional sports league in the U.S.
Lewis Meacham, Spalding's Base Ball Guide and Official League Book, 1886 (New York: Spalding's Athletic Library, 1886), 7, 29. Chapter 10. the sabbath Battles 1. Riess, Touching Base, 121. 2. Hulbert's 1870s crackdown included banning ...
... Foster , McMillan , Starkey , Phillips , one of the Robinsons , and newcomers named Scovel , Grieve , Moore , and McLogan.20 After the two games , the club enjoyed a “ generous repast ” at the home of Theodore Robinson .
Other Irish-born players of note included Fergy Malone and Charles “Curry” Foley. Fergus Malone was born in Tyrone in 1844 and grew up in Philadelphia. He was one of the early professionals whose career had been spent mainly in the ...
This book completes the series of histories of the clubs and players responsible for making baseball the national pastime that began with Base Ball Pioneers, 1850-1870 (McFarland 2011).
... and at length ascertained, after great difficulty (Chicago people taking but little interest in such games, especially with inferior clubs from abroad), that nine stripling base-ball players from Hamilton county, Ohio, ...
Henry Chadwick, using “Old Chalk” as his Brooklyn Morning Programme pen name, for example, used baseball to describe Andrew Johnson's impeachment trial and the partisanship surrounding Washington dc. Impeachment was a ball game between ...
The Murphys' story recreates a forgotten way of life and gives us a sense of why an entire generation of American men found so much meaning in the game of baseball.
27 no fewer than three headquarters in Manhattan: Duncan Curry, quoted in A. H. Spink, The National Game, 54; Charles Peverelly, The Book of American Pastimes; in John Freyer and Mark Rucker, ed., Peverelly's N ational Game, 10*11; ...
Connors [Connor] reached first on a baser, second on Burns' fumble of Ferguson's hit, and home on Gillespie's safe drive to right field. Connors expired at the plate in attempting to score on Gillespie's hit.