Journal Opinion , June 22, 2022
Thrown Out On Second. Published in Harper's Weekly in Sept 1887, this Gilbert Gaul's illustration captured the nation's fascination with baseball. |
“Tuesday the quiet of our [Newbury] village was broken by the shouts and mirth attending a game of baseball. The Orford Base Ball Club dispatched a challenge to the Newbury Club. The playing on the part of both clubs was excellent, the Newburys excelling at the bat, and the Orfords in the fielding.” Bradford Opinion, August 8, 1874
Baseball has been dubbed the nation’s past
time. There are mounds of articles and books on the subject. So much material is available, that the history of baseball locally and throughout New Hampshire and Vermont will bel presented in two columns. This column explores the game’s roots and its development into an obsession in the period before 1900. A second column will cover the period from 1900 to 1970.
Americans played team games with bats and balls before the
inception of baseball. One game that had its heyday was the English game of
cricket. In 1709, it was being played in Virginia and the first public match
was held in New York City in 1751. Interest in matches grew, and, by 1849, an estimated
100,000 Americans played cricket.
In the late 18th
century, a game called wicket became popular in New England as a variation of
cricket. At first, it was just an informal game with varying rules. Later,
wicket clubs became more popular, and rules were needed to govern matches
A more lively game, however, began to catch the nation’s attention. It was baseball, at first spelled as two
separate words. It was sometimes referred to as “bat and ball.” The story that
it was invented in 1839 by Abner Doubleday of Cooperstown, NY has been widely refuted.
In 1845, a game on
the grounds of the Brooklyn Cricket Club was played with eight players on each
side and may have been one of the first organized games. This newer game was
considered more exciting than previous ones, “so much more full of life.” One of the first organized teams was the
Knickerbockers of New York.
At first, there were variations of the game’s rules. One set
of rules was written in 1845 by Alexander Cartwright of the Knickerbockers. In 1839,
Dr. Daniel Lucas Adams, a native of Mont Vernon, NH, moved to New York City and
joined the Knickerbockers. In 1857, he
wrote a booklet entitled “The Laws of Base Ball.”
These rules, which
became widely used, described the game with nine players on each side, nine
innings, and a 90-foot distance between bases. This, so-called New York game
won over the competing Massachusetts set of rules.
By that time, baseball was receiving editorial support and
was played on the fairgrounds and playing fields across the country. One editor wrote, “The good effect produced by
the health and strength and morals of the young men engaged….has taken them
from the unhealthy haunts of disputation indoors and given them a taste for
manly sports.”
During the election of 1860, a political cartoon depicted
Abraham Lincoln winning a game of baseball against his rivals.
In August 1860, a contest between the Brattleboro Base Ball
Club and the Green Mt Base Ball Club of Jamaica drew “quite a crowd to witness”
one of the first “Prized Ball” games played in the state. That same year “a number of actively disposed
citizens of Burlington, mostly young men,” established the Burlington Base Ball
Club. The Star Base Ball Club was formed in Rutland in 1862.
During the Civil War, baseball was “the most popular sport
of all competitive sports in the camps of both armies and even in prison
camps.” Soldiers in the both Vermont and
New Hampshire regiments played baseball during the lulls between military actions.
Veterans brought home their enthusiasm for the sport. By 1867, it was reported there were 44
baseball clubs in Vermont. What had started as a “gentlemanly sport” grew more
inclusive. Leagues were formed, with series and amateur tournaments were held.
Church groups opposed the playing of baseball on Sundays,
calling it “a desecration of the Lord’s Day.”
In 1880, Vermont reaffirmed its ban on Sunday activities. According to an
1887 Burlington newspaper article, the legislatures in some states were passed
laws against “the evils of Sunday base ball games.”
In 1869, the Cincinnati Red Stockings was established as the
first professional club with openly paid players. As other cities established
teams, the National League was formed in 1876. American Association, later
renamed the American League, was created in 1882. These newly-formed
professional teams held Sunday games to attract more spectators. Amateur teams
followed suit.
Over the years, some New Hampshire and Vermont baseball
players made it to these big leagues. The only local one before 1900 was Lee
Viau, who was born in Corinth in 1866 and grew up in Hanover. He began playing for the Cincinnati Red
Stockings in 1888 and continued with other professional teams until 1892. In 1889, he was described as “one of the
greatest pitchers in the country today.”
He was also described as “the handsomest man ever in the professional
ranks” and was a favorite on Ladies Days. However, he didn’t take the trouble
to keep in condition, and late nights and drinking took their toll, ending his
professional career. In 1894, he was the manager of the Littleton team when it
played the nine from Bradford.
Another professional player with a two-state connection was John
“Bud” Fowler. He was born in New York in
1858. He is considered one of baseball’s
racial pioneers, the first black professional and the first to manage an integrated
team. He was described as “one of the best general players in the country.” But racial factors led him to move from team
to team.
In 1887, Fowler joined the Montpelier team of the
Northeastern League as captain, a first for an integrated team. Vermont
newspapers described him as “a phenomenal second-baser,” “a spectators’ favorite,” and “a first-class
ball-tosser in every respect.” His career in Vermont was short-lived as the
team folded. Fowler went on to play successfully for the Laconia, NH team, but
also for just a short time.
As professional leagues moved to exclude Africa-Americans
from the formerly integrated team, Fowler helped organize opportunities for
Black players, including helping to organize the Cuban Giants, the first great
Black club. Fowler was inducted into the
Baseball Hall of Fame in 2021.
The Cuban Giants, which incidentally included no Cubans,
made a number of tours of Vermont between 1887 and 1900. The first year they toured the state playing
teams from Bennington to St. Albans. Special trains brought fans to the games. In 1892, a match at Brattleboro drew 800
spectators. The team challenged both league and college teams.
As teams multiplied, the equipment needs changed. In 1858,
the first factory-made balls were manufactured. At that time, balls were
furnished by the challenging club and presented to the winning team as a
trophy.
In 1878, Albert
Spalding established a company to manufacture standardized baseballs. In 1887,
George Rawling established a company to manufacture baseball equipment.
There was also a move
to standardize baseball bats. Previously, there was a wide range of styles,
with bats often handmade by the players. Manufacturers began to mass-produce
bats. 1888, Bradford’s United Opinion reported that nation-wide each year a
million feet of lumber was turned into 500,000 bats.
Bats and balls were not the only equipment that have become
synonymous with the game.
At first, the idea of
players wearing a glove for protection was dismissed. Gradually, mitt were
introduced as players recognized the importance of reducing injury and
enhancing performance. About 1883,
professional player Arthur Irwin designed a padded glove and brought it to
Plymouth, NH to find a manufacturer. The established firm of Draper &
Maynard accepted and became one of the major suppliers of both baseball gloves
and balls.
In 1887, Warden’s store on Bradford’s Main Street was
advertising baseball bats, balls, gloves, scorebooks, and guides for sale. Guides were necessary as “radical changes”
had been made in the long accepted rules of the game. Those changes included
“what constituted a fair ball, bunting, batman being struck and the behavior of
the pitcher.”
Uniforms changed as the sport developed. Straw hats were replaced with caps. By 1882,
inspired by the Cincinnati Red Stockings, teams wore knee-breeches with colored
stockings. Spiked shoes were replaced by
cleats by 1880.
How many local teams had uniforms is unknown. In May 1877, the United Opinion included a
call for financial assistance to purchase uniforms for Bradford’s team. Encouraging civic pride, it suggested “a good
base ball club is no disgrace to any town.”
In 1885, St Johnbury team uniforms were made of white cotton
flannel, corded with red, and included knee-breeches and red stockings.
As the game became more formalized for adults, a carefree
spirit continued to persist among children.
Pickup, scratch or sandlot games were a favorite among the youth. Often played with informal rules, with
procedures for dividing up the talent, these games were simply played for the
fun of it. No adult coaches or umpires were available or required.
One editor mentioned a mystery, “Why a boy’s hands will
blister so much sooner on a hoe handle than they will on a base-ball bat.”
There was great interest in fielding village or town teams. In the period between 1865 and
1900, there were teams in virtually every town in the area and sometimes more
than one.
Haverhill had teams
in North Haverhill, Haverhill Corner, and Woodsville, although not necessarily
at the same time. Team titles included the Boomer Club of East Corinth, the
Eagle Club of Bradford, the Star Club of Thetford, and the Athletic Club of
West Fairlee.
In 1896, the East Corinth team adopted the self-deprecating
title of the Muffers while the Corinth team played under the title of the
Hayseeds.
Sometimes a team would fold only to be subsequently
reestablished. In 1894, the Bradford
team was reorganized. In 1896, the Orford and Fairlee teams were reorganized as
one.
Local newspapers gave
good coverage, with analysis of contests. The United Opinion analysis of the
newly reorganized Bradford team included,
“the boys are bound to make
things hustle this season.”
Hundreds of spectators were common. In1874, a match between
Orford and Newbury “drew nearly all the village people to view the play.”
Spectators were sometimes asked to contribute to the costs. At the Bradford-Wells River match in 1897,
admission was “gents 10 cents, ladies and children free.”
Major contests were often scheduled for holidays such as
Memorial Day, Independence Day, and Labor Day. Ballfields existed in most
communities, with fairgrounds used. Double headers were sometimes held.
Competition between town teams sometimes involved conflicts
and trash talk. Some matches were
apparently rowdy and “notoriously brutal.” In 1897, the Bradford team crossed
bats “in deadly strife” with North Haverhill.
“Look out for bruises and black eyes,” the local correspondent
wrote. Given youthful vigor, rivalry,
and, perhaps alcohol, fights would not be unexpected.
There were references to opposing teams as “hayseed nine.”
One Fairlee team suggested to the Bradford team that “the boys had better let
the married team at Bradford give them a few lessons.”
There were also charges that teams brought in ringers to
boost their game. One 1894 match between
Newbury and Bradford was cancelled because of “imported batteries.” Later, games between Orford, Bradford and
Newbury were advertised as being played exclusively with resident players.
A review of newspaper coverage indicates that generally, “everything
passed off with the best of feelings on all sides.” However, when an 1894 game
between Woodsville and Bradford resulted in a 24-5 drubbing of Woodsville, the
United Opinion felt the need to mention the game’s coverage by the competing
Woodsville News. “The Woodsville News gracefully acknowledge the corn, and the
baseball boys took their medicine like little men.”
Teams travelled by train or wagon to the games. When Bradford playing Woodsville, the Vermonters
took the train to Wells River, walking
over to Woodsville and returning by the same method.
Colleges such as Dartmouth, Middlebury, UVM and UNH had
baseball teams. High schools also had teams.
In the 1890’s, interscholastic games were held between Haverhill Academy,
Newbury Seminary, Bradford Academy, and St. Johnsbury Academy.
This widespread enthusiasm for the game of baseball that had
evolved since the 1840’s was carried over into the 20th
century. Local residents continued to
create town teams, and school teams continued to seek championships. Some local men sought professional careers.
Some of these details will be covered in a later column this
summer. If any readers have memories of
the town games before 1970, please feel free to share them with me soon at larrylcoffin@gmail.com. I am willing
to follow up with a personal conversation.
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