"Highly entertaining with useful appendices." --<i>Spitball Magazine</i> "Provides a wealth of detail about the origins of the Illinois game and the teams who played it from Chicago down south to Cairo and nearly every town in between." --<i>St. Louis Post-Dispatch</i> "A delightful collection of history and baseball anecdotes for both casual and serious baseball fans." --<i>Illinois Times</i> "<i>Ballists, Dead Beats, and Muffins</i> makes clear that there was a simplicity, innocence, and freshness to baseball in Illinois in these years, even as Sampson details the movement-probably inevitable-toward a more competitive and more professional level of play." --<i>Third Coast Review</i> "Effectively blends history and nostalgia, sparking an appreciation of the National pastime. . . . This 250-page gem by Robert D. Sampson is an exhaustive focus on baseball's early style and sweep when gentlemanly players, civic leaders, and hosts of spectators stressed the bliss more than the score." --<i>Community Word</i> “Detailed studies of baseball during these crucial years are rare, with ones that focus on a single state even more so. Bob Sampson’s <i>Ballists, Dead Beats, and Muffins</i> is thus both timely and valuable, confirming some long-accepted assumptions and forcing reexamination of others. Highly recommended!”--Peter Morris, author of <i>Baseball Fever: Early Baseball in Michigan</i>

Winner of the Russell P. Strange Book of the Year Award from the Illinois State Historical Society

Baseball’s spread across Illinois paralleled the sport’s explosive growth in other parts of the country.Robert D. Sampson taps a wealth of archival research to transport readers to an era when an epidemic of “base ball on the brain” raged from Alton to Woodstock. Focusing on the years 1865 to 1869, Sampson offers a vivid portrait of a game where local teams and civic ambition went hand in hand and teams of paid professionals displaced gentlemen’s clubs devoted to sporting fair play. This preoccupation with competition sparked rules disputes and controversies over imported players while the game itself mirrored society by excluding Black Americans and women. The new era nonetheless brought out paying crowds to watch the Rock Island Lively Turtles, Fairfield Snails, and other teams take the field up and down the state.

A first-ever history of early baseball in Illinois, Ballists, Dead Beats, and Muffins adds the Prairie State game’s unique shadings and colorful stories to the history of the national pastime.

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Acknowledgments

Prologue  A Dying Ember

First Inning  Baseball Fever and Pioneers

Second Inning  Organizing Clubs, Funding, Travel, and the Game’s Rituals

Third Inning  Playing Fields, Gambling, and Injuries

Fourth Inning  The Game and Its Players

Fifth Inning  Sharing the Fun

Sixth Inning  Barriers of Race and Gender

Seventh Inning  Trouble in Baseball’s Eden

Eighth Inning  Representative Teams

Ninth Inning   The Thrill Departs

Epilogue  Ghosts

Appendix A  Illinois Baseball Teams, 1865-70

Appendix B  Bloomington’s Fifth Ward School-Grounds Neighborhood

Appendix C  Illinois Baseball Players, 1865-70

Notes

Bibliography

Index

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780252045059
Publisert
2023-05-02
Utgiver
University of Illinois Press
Vekt
454 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
01, G, P, 01, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
264

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Robert D. Sampson is the editor of the Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society and the author of John L. O’Sullivan and His Times.