Editing Early baseball in Washington/Game 10

From SABR Encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be recorded in this page's edit history.
The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision Your text
Line 14: Line 14:
|Team2=Victoria
|Team2=Victoria
|Submitter=Mark Brunke
|Submitter=Mark Brunke
-
|First=No
+
|First=false
-
|Approved=Yes
+
|Approved=false
|Pagetext=Sources:
|Pagetext=Sources:
-
[Original Source] The Seattle Times, Sunday, September 7, 1947. “Seattle's First Baseball Games”. ; The Seattle Times, February 1, 1931. “First Busher Talks”.; The Seattle Times, February 24, 1922. “Do You Remember When-”.; The Seattle Times, Thursday, August 11, 1955. “The First Record”. Also, materials pulled from online historical information, including Ancestry.com, The Internet Archive, and various historical societies in the Pacific Northwest. These include WPA journals of early pioneers, interviews, and remembrances.
+
[Original Source] The Seattle Times, Sunday, September 7, 1947. “Seattle's First Baseball Games”. ; The Seattle Times, February 1, 1931. “First Busher Talks”.; The Seattle Times, February 24, 1922. “Do You Remember When-”.; The Seattle Times, Thursday, August 11, 1955. “The First Record”. Also, materials pulled from online historical information, including Ancestry.com, The Internet Archive, and various historical societies in the Pacific Northwest. These inclue WPA journals of early pioneers, interviews, and remembrances.
-
 
+
[Referenced Source] Initial source is The Seattle Times, Sunday, September 7, 1947. “Seattle's First Baseball Games.”
[Referenced Source] Initial source is The Seattle Times, Sunday, September 7, 1947. “Seattle's First Baseball Games.”
Submitted by Mark Brunke
Submitted by Mark Brunke
Line 45: Line 44:
When the Alkis returned from that first trip to Victoria, the entire town met them at thelanding andWilson was carried down the plank on someone's shoulders.
When the Alkis returned from that first trip to Victoria, the entire town met them at thelanding andWilson was carried down the plank on someone's shoulders.
"Then on July 4," Wilson writesw, "Victoria came to Seattle and we played on the fair grounds, up the Duwamish River a few miles from Seattle. A special train was run, and there was a big crowd.
"Then on July 4," Wilson writesw, "Victoria came to Seattle and we played on the fair grounds, up the Duwamish River a few miles from Seattle. A special train was run, and there was a big crowd.
-
"No record was kept of the number of spectators at the early games, but I'm sure most all Seattle was there, either sitting on the University steps or, if they couldn't find a convenient stump, sitting right on the ground. No admissions was asked-we played for the fun of it.
+
"No record was kept of the number of spectators at the early games, but I'm sure most all Seattle was there, either sitting on the University steps or, if they couldn't find a convenient stump, sitting right ontheground. No admissions was asked-we played for the fun of it.
"In 1878 we went to Victoria again and Victoria won. Chase had left the country and I had the thumb on my right hand cut off coupling cars, so could not pitch."
"In 1878 we went to Victoria again and Victoria won. Chase had left the country and I had the thumb on my right hand cut off coupling cars, so could not pitch."
Wilson left Seattle in the spring of 1879, going to Walla Walla and joining a cattle drive to Wyoming. He returned to New York, and it was not until 20 years later that hecame back to Seattle. For a number of years, he owned a harware store at Kettle Falls. Today, almost 90 years old, he follows Seattle baseball by reading the sports pages at his more at Colville.
Wilson left Seattle in the spring of 1879, going to Walla Walla and joining a cattle drive to Wyoming. He returned to New York, and it was not until 20 years later that hecame back to Seattle. For a number of years, he owned a harware store at Kettle Falls. Today, almost 90 years old, he follows Seattle baseball by reading the sports pages at his more at Colville.
-
In the Daily Pacific Tribune of July 1, 1878, appeared a paragraph headed "Ball Ground," which said, "The county prisoners having no other work on hand, were sent out to D. T. Denny's place, in the northern part of town, last week, and put to work fixing up a baseball ground for the benefit of the boys."
+
In the Daily Pacific Tribune of July 1, 1878, appeared a paragraph headed "Ball Ground," which said, "The county prisoners having no other work on hand, were sent out to D. T. Denny's place, in the northern part of town, last week, and put to work fixing up a baseball ground for thebenefit of the boys."
The following day the announcement appeared of a game to be played between the University and the Alki Junior clubs on the Fourth of July. The game was played and the Alkis won by the score of 47 to 35.
The following day the announcement appeared of a game to be played between the University and the Alki Junior clubs on the Fourth of July. The game was played and the Alkis won by the score of 47 to 35.
-
If Seattleites couldn't get their baseball at home, they could do so by taking an excursion on Puget Sound, for a newspaper of August9, 1882, had this item wedged in among other notes of local interest: "On Sunday the Steamer Nellie took the Snohomish baseball nine over to Seabeck to contest the Port Gamble club." Port Gamble won-28 to 8. A return game was promised for the following Sunday and it was said "The winners will carry off the uniforms of the vanquished as a trophy of success.
+
If Seattleites couldn't get thier baseball at home, they could do so by taking an excursion on Puget Sound, for a newspaper of August9, 1882, had this item wedged in among other notes of local interest: "On Sunday the Steamer Nellie took the Snohomish baseball nine over to Seabeck to contest the Port Gamble club." Port Gamble won-28 to 8. A return game was promised for the following Sunday and it was said "The winners will carry off the uniforms of the vanquished as a trophy of success.
Another newspaper, for August 3, 1886, said, "Shoshone Baseball Club arrived from Portland last evening and are quartered at the Arlington Hotel. They are a fine, athletic set of young men. They meet the Seattle Club on the diamond in two games, the first this afternoon and the second tomorrow, and on both of these occasions will present their strongest team, including Mr. Hill, the catcher, injured in Portland, but who has fully recovered, and will support their fine pitcher, Devine. . . .The first train will leave at 3 p. m. Sharp and the next at 3:30 and the game will be called at 4 o'clock."
Another newspaper, for August 3, 1886, said, "Shoshone Baseball Club arrived from Portland last evening and are quartered at the Arlington Hotel. They are a fine, athletic set of young men. They meet the Seattle Club on the diamond in two games, the first this afternoon and the second tomorrow, and on both of these occasions will present their strongest team, including Mr. Hill, the catcher, injured in Portland, but who has fully recovered, and will support their fine pitcher, Devine. . . .The first train will leave at 3 p. m. Sharp and the next at 3:30 and the game will be called at 4 o'clock."
Line 66: Line 65:
"Northwestern League attendance figures, which were shown for the first time at the meeting of the moguls at Seattle, show Spokane up in a very unfavorable light. Attendance all over the circuit has diminished appreciably, and a bare margin of $15 per game is all that separates Spokane from the lowest notch. Tacoma holds that honor. The worst feature of the whole proceedings, from a Spokane standpoint, is that Vancouver has averaged exactly $115 more per game than that city. Seattle is considerably ahead of Vancouver. This is disagreeable news to the Spokane boosters, who have been touting that city as being next to Seattle as a baseball center."
"Northwestern League attendance figures, which were shown for the first time at the meeting of the moguls at Seattle, show Spokane up in a very unfavorable light. Attendance all over the circuit has diminished appreciably, and a bare margin of $15 per game is all that separates Spokane from the lowest notch. Tacoma holds that honor. The worst feature of the whole proceedings, from a Spokane standpoint, is that Vancouver has averaged exactly $115 more per game than that city. Seattle is considerably ahead of Vancouver. This is disagreeable news to the Spokane boosters, who have been touting that city as being next to Seattle as a baseball center."
The arrival of D. E. Dugdale in Seattle in 1898 put this city on the baseball map. He organized the old Northwest League and built Dugdale Park, in Rainier Valley. Recent history of baseball is known to most fans. Dugdale sold the Indians to William Klepper in 1920 and Emil Sick and associates took over in January, 1938. Dugdale Park burned to the ground in 1931.
The arrival of D. E. Dugdale in Seattle in 1898 put this city on the baseball map. He organized the old Northwest League and built Dugdale Park, in Rainier Valley. Recent history of baseball is known to most fans. Dugdale sold the Indians to William Klepper in 1920 and Emil Sick and associates took over in January, 1938. Dugdale Park burned to the ground in 1931.
-
 
-
Seattle's pop. in 1880 was about 3,500.
 
|Sources=Sources:
|Sources=Sources:
[Original Source] The Seattle Times, Sunday, September 7, 1947. “Seattle's First Baseball Games”. ; The Seattle Times, February 1, 1931. “First Busher Talks”.; The Seattle Times, February 24, 1922. “Do You Remember When-”.; The Seattle Times, Thursday, August 11, 1955. “The First Record”. Also, materials pulled from online historical information, including Ancestry.com, The Internet Archive, and various historical societies in the Pacific Northwest. These inclue WPA journals of early pioneers, interviews, and remembrances.
[Original Source] The Seattle Times, Sunday, September 7, 1947. “Seattle's First Baseball Games”. ; The Seattle Times, February 1, 1931. “First Busher Talks”.; The Seattle Times, February 24, 1922. “Do You Remember When-”.; The Seattle Times, Thursday, August 11, 1955. “The First Record”. Also, materials pulled from online historical information, including Ancestry.com, The Internet Archive, and various historical societies in the Pacific Northwest. These inclue WPA journals of early pioneers, interviews, and remembrances.
}}
}}

Encyclopedic content must be verifiable, and should be properly sourced. You irrevocably agree to release your contributions under the CC-BY-SA License. You agree to be credited, at minimum through a hyperlink or URL, when your contributions are reused in any form.


Cancel | Editing help (opens in new window)
Personal tools