With
local boosters licking their chops
and a somewhat embarrassed Major League
Baseball trying desperately to hold on to a ridiculous origin legend for the game saddled on them by the Mills Commission of 1908, the National Baseball Hall of Fame opened
its doors in beautiful but un-bustling Cooperstown,
New York on June 12, 1939.
The
pedigree of the National Pastime was
somewhat murky. Everyone knew that it
grew out of ball, bat, and tag games like Rounders
and Townball which had been played
on village greens since at least the
turn of the 19th Century. It was assumed to be related in some way to Cricket, the English national game which began taking hold in big American cities with the establishment
of clubs of well-heeled sportsmen. The
connection to Cricket, and even to Rounders, another game of English origins,
offended the sense of cocky jingoism
that accompanied the coincidental rise of baseball and America as a muscular
new world power in the later half of
the century.
If
the paths of evolution were befogged in the mists of time, the actual beginning
of modern baseball was not, and plenty of people knew it. The game as we know it came into being with
the formation of the New York Knickerbockers
founded on September 23, 1845. It
was one of several amateur sporting clubs made up mostly of young clerks playing bat and ball games to a
variety of rules. Alexander Cartwright and other members hammered out the Knickerbocker Rules, the first ever published. The adoption of these rules by other clubs
made games between squads of rival clubs possible without long negotiations
over field or day rules.
The known first baseball game at Hoboken's Elysian Fields on September 23, 1835. |
The
first inter-club game under these
rules was played at Elysian Fields
in Hoboken, New Jersey on June 19, 1846.
The Knickerbockers, by the way, lost to a club called the New York Nine. But it was pretty clearly THE first game.
By
the onset of the Civil War baseball
was being played by clubs adopting the rules throughout the Northeast, Mid-West, and Upper South, although various other
versions were still played locally in small towns and villages.
Many
a lad packed his bat and ball with his kit when reporting for duty in the Union Army. Baseball games enlivened
the deadly boredom of camp life between episodes of unimaginable horror in the
big battles of the war.
Young
Abraham Mills—no known relation to
my mother’s family—of the 5th New York
Volunteers—DuryĆ©e’s Zouaves—participated
in one notable game on Christmas
Eve of 1862 against members of other regiments before 40,000 troops camped
at Hilton Head Island, South Carolina.
Mills
returned from the war as a second lieutenant, completed law school and set off
on a distinguished career. But he kept
his hand in baseball as the player
manager of the amateur Olympic Base
Ball Club in Washington, D.C. Eventually his legal and business
connections and baseball experience secured him the Presidency of the National
League.
In
1908 the former executive was put in charge of a special commission charged
with investigating the origins of the game.
Privately it was understood that he was to discover a uniquely American
pedigree un-besmirched by close association to British games. The Mills Commission did not work very
hard or very diligently.
On
the strength of a claim in one letter from a Colorado mining engineer, Abner
Graves who claimed to have witnessed the first game played by Abner Doubleday, a future Union Army
general, and students of the Otsego
Academy and Green’s Select School
in Cooperstown in 1839. Despite numerous
inconsistencies in the story, the Commission declared to the world that
Doubleday was the founder and Cooperstown the cradle of baseball.
That
was their official story, and they were sticking with it, even as mounting
evidence year by year undercut the claim.
Cooperstown
was a once thriving town off the beaten track in central New York State. Near-by Lake
Otsego is the source of the Susquehanna
River. Its other claim to fame was
that it had been platted from a claim by the father of writer James Fenimore Cooper. Once the center of a hops growing region, it had been hit hard first by Prohibition and then by the Depression which had cut deeply into a summer resort business.
Stephen Carlton Clark, whose family
had made a fortune as co-founders of the Singer
Sewing Machine Company and who had extensive holding in the town, including
half-empty resort hotels began scheming to find some way to boost tourism. He realized that the Doubleday connection was
just what he needed.
He
began promoting the idea of a Hall of Fame in his home town in the mid-Thirties. Finally securing the blessing of Major League
Baseball, he launched a well-publicized national campaign to elect the first
members of the Hall while preparing his building in Cooperstown.
On
January 29, 1936 the first “class” was elected
And quite a line-up it was—Ty
Cobb, Babe Ruth, Honus Wagner, Christy Mathewson, and Walter
Johnson. With the standards for on field performance—not personal behavior—set so high, no
subsequent class would be admitted without controversy
and argument.
On
the strength of those names, particularly Ruth, who had only recently retired
and was still the Sultan of Swat to
well-heeled Yankee fans for whom the
tedious trip to Cooperstown was not quite so inconvenient, Clark finished his
shrine and launched it to great hoopla.
It
was an even greater goldmine than Clark ever imagined.
Currently
there are 310 elected members of the Hall including 215 former major league
players, 35 from the Negro leagues,
22 managers, 10 umpires, and 28 pioneers,
executives, and organizers. In addition sportswriters
and broadcasters are also honored as
are collectively the members of the All-American
Girls Professional Baseball League.
This
year Second Baseman Craig Biggio and
the pitchers—Randy Johnson, Pedro Martinez, and John Smoltz will join the immortals in a July induction ceremony. Broadcaster Dick Enberg and sportswriter Tom
Gage will receive the special honors in their fields. In an ironic note the
Detroit
News axed Gage as Tigers beat writer
after 33 years of never missing a deadline shortly after his recognition
was announced. Business in as usual now
in American newspaper journalism and a transparent attempt to cut payroll by demoting him to general assignment sports reporting to force his retirement. So far Gage has refused to gracefully retire
and Tiger fans are still up in arms.
The 2015 Class--John Smoltz, Randy Johnson, Craig Biggio, Pedro Martinez. |
About
315,000 fans make the still inconvenient pilgrimage to what is now considered a
reverential shrine annually. Decedents
of the Clark family still sit on the board and own just about all of the
available accommodations in
town. They are very good at counting money.
Every
devoted baseball fan is expected to make the pilgrimage at least once in his or
her life time. I haven’t met that holy obligation yet. Contributions to the cause will be gratefully
accepted.
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