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Baseball 1856 - Henry David Thoreau


mikelink45

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I lecture on many historic topics in my job with American Cruise Lines, so I am constantly perusing different historic documents.  In the past I have told you how both Wild Bill Hickok and Tom Custer played baseball. 

This note is from Thoreau's journal - he did not play, but he observed this game that was in Sleepy Hollow where Washington Irving based his stories of Rip Van Winkle and the Headless Horseman.  

"Fast-Day.—Some fields are dried sufficiently for the games of ball with which this season is commonly ushered in. I associate this day, when I can remember it, with games of baseball played over behind the hills of Sleepy Hollow, where the snow was just melted and dried up, also with the uncertainty I always experienced whether the shops would be shut, whether we should have an ordinary dinner, and extraordinary one, or none at all, and whether there would be more than one service at the meeting-house. This last uncertainty old folks share with me. This is a windy day, drying up the fields; the first we have had for a long time."
-From Thoreau's Journal; April 10, 1856
 
Interestingly, Baseball Reference says this is the year that Major League Baseball began.  You can see the teams started this year in this wiki posting.  If you are interesting in more about this year try  THE NEW YORK GAME.   0*3dM65aZLH4w020kx.
May be an image of 11 people, people standing and outdoors
 
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Ironic that a sport criticized today as slow and pedantic was played in Sleepy Hollow, home of Rip Van Winkle. Oh, and the Headless Horseman? Perhaps a reference to the baseball commissioner?

One cannot help ponder these things...

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3 hours ago, mikelink45 said:

I think this b-r.com page shows the list of players born in a given year.  The earliest year of birth I can find is 1832.

https://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/majors/1832-births.shtml

Nate Berkenstock.  Now there's a trivia answer to keep in the back of your mind for your next SABR convention. :)

The 1871 National Association is generally accepted as the first season of major league baseball.  The sport itself, of course, has no exact beginning date, and the taint of "professionalism" drifted in as soon as grown men started playing seriously.

As for the New York Game article you referenced, you will never go wrong by reading what John Thorn writes.

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