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The 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings: baseball’s first professional team. Salt print of the 1848–1850 New York Knickerbockers. Taken December 1862. We will discuss baseball’s origins and its journey from an amateur’s game to a professional business. Along the way we will meet key figures and discuss the events that led to this transformation. Ultimately, control over the game shifted from players to owners and by the early 1900s the owners had established a collusive monopoly which would last for the next 100 years. A 1744 publication in England by John Newbery called A Little Pretty Pocket-Book includes a woodcut of stoolball and a rhyme entitled "Base-ball." This is the first known instance of the word baseball in print. The book was very popular in England, and was later published in Colonial America in 1762. People have been pitching balls, hitting them with bats, and running for as long as there have been people. Early forms of baseball included the English folk games “stoolball” in the 11th century, forms of “cricket” in the 13th century, and perhaps “rounders” in the 18th century. The American game evolved from amateur urban clubs in the 1840s and 1850s to the modern professional major leagues that began in the 1870s The first published rules of baseball were written in 1845 for a New York (Manhattan) base ball club called the Knickerbockers. The author, Alexander Joy Cartwright, is often credited with inventing the modern game, though he likely wrote down rules that had been in existence for years. In 1857, sixteen clubs from New York City sought to gain control of the game. They standardized the rules and formed the National Association of Base Ball Players (NABBP). By 1862 some NABBP member clubs offered games to the general public in enclosed ballparks with admission fees. But players were never to be paid. It was an amateur’s game. During and after the American Civil War (1860-1865), the movements of soldiers and exchanges of prisoners helped spread the game. 1861–1865 There were many causes for the outbreak of the Civil War. Many people agree slavery was the main cause for the war. In addition, sectional differences led to conflicts. Northern and Southern states were developing different lifestyles and cultures. Differences in the economic life of the North and the South also contributed to the conflict. The North’s economy focused on finance and manufacturing, and the South specialized in crops and agricultural trade. Southern states also began to question the extent of the federal government’s power. The Abolitionist Movement was active in Northern and Western states before the Civil War. Abolitionists wanted slaves to be freed. Some abolitionists favored relocating them in Africa. Many, but not all, abolitionists believed African-American slaves should have the same freedoms as their owners. Southern states opposed the abolition of slavery; it was a financial necessity and part of their social structure. The South’s agricultural trade depended on crops produced with slave labor. The North’s population was three times that of the South. Most other countries recognized the Union as the government in America. However, Britain and France had friendly relations with the Confederacy and considered aiding the South. The North also was more affluent. The South had about nine million people, including about three million slaves. The average Southerner was not as wealthy as the average person living in the North. About 90 percent of American industry and railroads were in the North. Reliance on slave labor discouraged the creation of new jobs in the South. This discouraged immigration, and most immigrants settled in the North. Abraham Lincoln was the sixteenth President of the United States. He opposed the expansion of slavery. A Republican, Lincoln led the Union during the Civil War. John Wilkes Booth assassinated Lincoln in Washington, D.C., on April 14, 1865. Jefferson Davis was President of the Confederate States of America. During the Mexican War, he had been an officer in the United States Army. Davis also had served as the United States Secretary of War. When the South surrendered, he was charged with treason and prohibited from running for public office again. At the beginning of the Civil War, states provided uniforms to soldiers; and the uniforms were in a variety of colors. This led to massive confusion on the battlefield, and often soldiers fired on their own men. As the war continued, both sides chose a single color for their uniforms. The United States of America chose blue, and the Confederate States of America chose gray. President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation. It was part of a two-part plan that guaranteed freedom to slaves in the Union and some Confederate states. The Confederate government claimed Lincoln could not issue laws over states in which he had no political control. The first plan, enacted on September 22, 1862, freed slaves in Confederate states that had not yet rejoined the Union. The second part took effect on January 1, 1863, applying to specific states, but not to the border states such as Maryland and West Virginia. President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated at the end of the Civil War. He was killed on April 14, 1865, while attending a play at Ford’s Theatre in Washington, D.C., with his wife and two other people. Lincoln was watching Our American Cousin when John Wilkes Booth shot him in the back of the head. Booth was a loyal Confederate, and he thought the Confederacy could triumph if Lincoln were dead. Booth jumped off the balcony and broke his ankle, but managed to escape the theater. Lincoln died of his fatal wound the next morning. The Civil War was the bloodiest war in American history. It has been referred to as “The War Between the States,” “The Brother’s War,” and the “War of Northern Aggression.” More than 600,000 Americans lost their lives, and countless others were wounded severely. The Civil War led to passage of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth , and Fifteen Amendments to the United States Constitution. These amendments outlawed slavery, granted African Americans United States citizenship, and granted African-American males the right to vote. Although equal treatment under the law for African Americans would not be enforced until almost a hundred years later, the Civil War abolished slavery and established the supremacy of the federal government. In 1869, Harry Wright formed the first openly professional baseball team: The Cincinnati Red Stockings. Prior to this, players were amateurs and were not paid to play. But Cincinnati recruited nationally and effectively by offering salaries (highest paid player receiving $1,400—seven-times the average working man’s wage), toured the country, were undefeated until June 1870, and demonstrated that professional baseball was a viable business enterprise. The Chicago White Stockings (now the Cubs) joined the NABBP in 1870 and one year later broke away with several other clubs, including Harry Wright’s new Boston Red Stockings to found the first professional league, the National Association of Professional Base Ball Players (NA). But the NA was weak. Without an overall organization or structure, schedules and competition were chaotic. Players moved from team to team depending on the salary offered. In 1876, William Hulbert, a Chicago coal magnate and the owner of the White Stockings, initiated the establishment of the National League of Professional Base Ball Clubs (NL). The NA disappeared and the new National League has been in existence ever since. Indeed it is the world's oldest continuously existing professional team-sports league. The NL had strong central authority, exclusive territories in large cities only, a regular schedule of games, set uniform ticket prices at 50 cents, and banned gambling, drinking, and games on Sunday. But most importantly, the NL sought to reduce player salaries—a considerable expense—, increase fan interest by keeping players from switching from team to team, and impose discipline on unruly players. The solution: in 1879 the owners added a reserve clause to the contracts of the five best players on each team, later the best eleven, and by 1890 all players. It required that they play only for their present employer and “reserve” their services for the following year. At first, few complained. To be reserved was to be assured of a job for the next season. But some likened it to slavery. Those who complained were fired then blacklisted. For the first time in the history of the game the players would serve the interest of the owners. For the next 100 years the game was controlled by those who owned the field and supplied the ball. Players were merely employees. St. Louis Browns: AA Champions 1885-88. In 1882, a rival league, the American Association (AA) started play. The AA offered Sunday games, alcoholic beverages, and sold cheaper tickets everywhere (25 cents versus the NL's standard 50 cents). The new AA—commonly known as the “beer and whiskey” league—drew huge, lively crowds of mostly lower-class and immigrant fans. It co-existed with the more sedate, established, upper-class NL for ten years and the best team in each league often played an end-ofthe-season exhibition, a kind of precursor to the World Series. But the AA disappeared after the 1891 season and many of its teams were absorbed by the NL. A third league born out of the Brotherhood of Professional Base-Ball Players, the sport’s first union. Lasting only one year—1890—the Players League was organized by star player (and Columbia Law School graduate) John Montgomery Ward who was disenchanted with the heavy-handed tactics of the owners. The Players League included a profit sharing system for the players and their investors. Each club was governed by an 8-man board of both players and investors. The league was governed by a senate of 16-members split evenly between players and investors. Most importantly, player contracts had no reserve clause. 80% of NL players flocked to the new league Monte Ward But the NL owners undermined the Players League at every turn. The owners turned to coercion and bribery to thwart the new league. Outdrawn by the Players League, the NL distributed free passes to fans around town, used propaganda, threats, personal intimidation, and financial offers to induce the Players League’s relatively naïve and inexperienced financial backers to desert the players. While Ward failed in his bid against the owners, he continued playing; finishing his career as the only player in history to win over 100 games as a pitcher and collect over 2,000 hits. Where there had been three top-level leagues in 1890, by the start of the 1892 season there was only one. The NL operated as a monopoly for the rest of the decade setting maximum salaries at $2,400 . But when the NL contracted to 8 teams in 1900, there was an opening for new competition. He was the finest pitcher of the 1870s. Harry Wright paid him $1,500 per year to pitch for the Boston Red Stockings. But he stopped pitching entirely at age 27 finishing with a record of 253-65 for a winning percentage of .796 – the best in baseball history. He became a full-time promoter. He opened a sporting goods business and began manufacturing all the baseballs in the league as well as bats and uniforms. Spaulding crushed or bought out his competitors and Spaulding became the largest sporting good manufacturer in the country. After the death of William Hulbert in 1882, Spalding became the principle owner of the White Stockings. He built a private box in the stadium fitted out with a new invention: the telephone to keep track of all his enterprises while he watched the game. In 1888-89 he even took a team of players on a global tour to promote the game. Newspapers called him the baseball messiah. He led other NL owners in their war against the Players League and ultimately won the battle— thereby shutting the players out of team ownership forever. Following the NL’s contraction, a magnate called Ban Johnson created the American League,. In 1900, NL players created their second union: the Players Protective Association. While it was as ineffectual as Ward’s earlier union, it highlighted the players’ dissatisfaction with the owners. Ban Johnson seized on this disaffection by persuading players to join his new American League. Of the 182 players on AL rosters in 1901, 111 were former NL players. The 1901 and 1902 AL seasons were unqualified successes. In 1900 Johnson had started raiding NL rosters by paying higher salaries, enticing more than 100 NL players to join his league and fans packed AL ballparks to see the stars who had switched to the AL including Cy Young, and John McGraw. Ban Johnson Cy Young As the bidding war between the two leagues grew fiercer and player salaries continued to escalate, the AL grew in popularity. By 1902 the AL outdrew the NL, 2.2 million to 1.7 million attendees. By 1903, the two leagues realized it was in their economic interest to compromise. The leagues signed “The National Agreement”—the “constitution” of the sport. The leagues pledged “to perpetuate baseball as the national game of America, and to surround it with such safeguards as to warrant absolute public confidence in its integrity and methods.” The two league presidents and a third person selected by the two made up the National Commission which would govern the business of baseball. The owners gave the three-person Commission the power to control baseball “by its own decrees.” The National Agreement ushered in an era of hegemony for organized baseball. The two leagues settled into a peaceful and collusive co-existence with eight teams in each league, an end-of-the-season World Series between each league champion, and most importantly no more bidding wars for players. Salaries became artificially depressed. Baseball was initially a game played by amateurs for amusement. As it grew in popularity, private entrepreneurs built enclosed parks and charged admission to see games. To gain control of the game, rules were standardized and leagues were formed. In 1869, the Cincinnati Red Stockings began paying players to play baseball. Born from the ashes of the first professional league—the National Association—the National League was formed by the owners and the reserve clause was invented, binding players to their teams for life and shifting power from the players to the owners, a situation that lasted for the next 100 years. Although able to quash competition from the upstart “beer and whiskey” and Players leagues, the American League was able to become a successful competitor the NL. But they soon settled their differences and entered into a collusive agreement of peaceful coexistence that lasts to this day. Major League Baseball’s monopoly over the game was in place. African Americans were not permitted to play on professional white baseball teams. Therefore in the late 1800s, Professional African-American teams and "negro leagues" were established. Interracial games occurred when major league white teams played black teams in exhibition games. In 1942, Dodger’s manager and owner began plans to bring black players to the team. Jackie Robinson officially broke the color boundary in the major league when he put on a Dodgers uniform in April 1947. Babe Ruth Nickname: Great Bambino Dominant hitter and pitcher In 1919 hit 29 homeruns shattering records Hit homerun in every park in his league In the Hall of Fame Nolan Ryan Most dominating and intimidating pitcher of the game Enjoyed longest career of any player in major league history Won his 300th game in 1990 Achieved his 5,000th career strikeout in1989 Made it on the All Century Team in 1999 Hank Aaron Baseball’s home run king Received the Medal of Freedom George W. Bush to honor the achievements despite poverty and racism From 1954 to 1976, Aaron hit 20 or more HRs in 20 seasons and hit 30 or more in 15 seasons. Those two feats have never been equaled . Hall of Fame