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<p>"The question will naturally be asked, how came the Unions to score so well against Creighton's pitching? and the reply is, that they waited until they got a ball to suit them, Creighton delivering, on an average, 20 or 30 balls to each striker in four of the six innings played."</p>  +
<p>“The 13<sup>th</sup> Massachusetts played amongst themselves daily during April and May of 1862.”</p> <p>Patricia Millen, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">From Pastime to Passion: Baseball and the Civil War</span> (Heritage Books, 2001), page 19. Millen cites S. Crockett, “Sports and Recreational Practices of Union and Confederate Soldiers, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Research Quarterly</span> October 1961, pp?. Crockett article is unprocured as of May 2009, and primary source is unknown.<strong> Note:</strong> It would be useful to know what game the regiment played, and how they named it. The regiment was reportedly at Ship Island, MS, in these months.</p>  +
<p>“’Every volunteer who has been in service, has realized the tedium of camp life . . . there is waste time, which might be used advantageously at such manly exercises as cricket, base ball, foot ball, quoit pitching, etc.’ That paper lamented the shortage of sporting goods available for the men and called for hardware dealers to supply quoits and also cricket and base ball bats. ‘For want of such things,’ it concluded, ‘the time of the soldier is mainly spent playing cars.’”</p> <p>Source: <em>Charleston</em><em> Mercury, </em>April 3, 1862, page. 2, column. 1. Mentioned without citation in Kirsch, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball in Blue and Gray</span> (Princeton U, 2003), page 40. It seems interesting that cricket and base ball receive comparable emphasis in this article.</p>  +
<p>A Wisconsin newspaper sent a writer to the nearby Camp Randall, where 881 prisoners of war were just arriving. “Some of the men and boys, of the 55<sup>th</sup> Tennessee regiment were amusing themselves with playing ball.” The reporter notes that many prisoners had only light clothing that would provide little protection against northern winds. Many of the prisoners had been among 7000 men captured in the CSA’s surrender of Island Ten, a strategic position in the Mississippi River near New Madrid, Missouri. The nature of the Tenneseeans’ ballplaying was not recorded.</p> <p>“Camp Randall,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Weekly Wisconsin Patriot </span>(Madison), April 26, 1862. Accessed at Genealogybank on 5/21/2009. Camp Randall was the former fairground for Madison WI.</p> <p>See also Madison Journal, April 22, 1862, Milwaukee Daily News, April 24, 1862, Manitowac Weekly Tribune, May 14, 1862.</p> <p>The Boston Recorder, June 12, 1862, reports that Union Col. Whipple [Charles Whipple, Col. 19th Wisconsin Infantry] plays baseball with the POWs at Camp Randall. [ba]</p>  +
<p>“Sometimes the war disrupted these pastimes . . . . In the spring of 1862 a game between the Fifty-Seventh and Sixty-Ninth Regiments of New York Jacob Cole was lying on the ground watching the match when he heard a ‘rumbling noise.’ When Cole and his friend stood up they heard nothing, but when they put their ears to the ground Cole told his friend that ‘our boys are fighting.’ He remembered: ‘Hardly had I spoken before orders came to report to our regiments at once. So the ball game came to a sudden stop never to resume.’”</p> <p>Source: Kirsch, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball in Blue and Gray</span> (Princeton U, 2003), pages 41-42. Kirsch does not supply a primary source. It appears that Cole was in the 57<sup>th</sup> NY, and that the story of the interrupted ball game was carried in Jacob H. Cole, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Under Five Commanders: or, A Boy’s Experience with the Army of the Potomac </span>(News Printing Company, 1909), p. [?]. Accessed as snippet-view text May 31, 2009. <strong>Note:</strong> Can we confirm the source, determine where this game took place, and assess the credibility of Cole’s account?</p> <p>Per p. 30 of the Cole book, this took place May 31, 1862, near the battle of Seven Pines, VA, a few miles east of Richmond. [ba]</p>  +
<p>“The evening parade was an uncommonly nice one . . . . The new colors were all brought out and the effect was very pretty, as they were escorted out and back and saluted by all the officers and me. After parade came a game of base-ball for the captains and other officers, and in the sweet evening air and early moonlight we heard cheerful sounds all about us at the men sang patriotic songs, laughed and chatted, or danced jig to the sound of a violin.”</p> <p>Eliza Howland, “Diary of Eliza Newton Woolsey Howland, April 1862, in <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Letters of a Family During the War for the Union 1861-1865</span> [Pubr? Date?] Volume 1, page 360. Eliza Howland’s husband Joseph was an officer with the 16<sup>th</sup> New York Volunteers. The couple lived in Mattawan NY before the War. Provided by Jeff Kittell, 5/12/09. Available online at The American Civil War: Letters and Diaries Database, at <a href="http://solomon.cwld.alexanderstreet.com/">http://solomon.cwld.alexanderstreet.com/</a>. <strong>Note:</strong> can we determine the location of the event?</p> <p>Per p. 284 of the Howland book, this took place April 3, 1862, in the camp of Slocum's division, near Fairfax, VA. [ba]</p>  +
<p>The regimental history has four references to ballplaying. In July 1862, the unit arrived at Camp Lincoln at Newport News VA, where “the amusements at this camp were fishing for crabs, bathing, foraging and base-ball playing” [page 187]. Back at Newport News in March 1863, “the officers and men enjoyed themselves much in the innocent games of cricket and base-ball.” [page 290]. In May 1863, at a temporary camp near Somerset KY, “both officers and men enjoyed themselves hugely by playing at base ball in daytime between drill hours and at night by the performance of genuine negro minstrels, who were the field hands belonging to the neighboring plantations” [page 301]. Waiting in Annapolis for expected deployment to North Carolina in April 1864, “[b]ase ball is enjoyed by a large number of officers and men every afternoon, when the weather permits, and, I assure you, some very creditable playing is done – some that would do honor to any base ball club extant. [page 539].</p> <p>Thomas H. Parker, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of the 51<sup>st</sup> Regiment of PV [Pennsylvania Volunteers]</span> (King and Baird, Philadelphia, 1869). Accessed 6/2/09 on Google books via “’51<sup>st</sup> regiment’ parker” search. The regiment formed in Harrisburg in late 1861.</p>  +
<p>May: “One of the boys in a letter home vividly describes a hailstorm . . . ‘one day we had a regular hailstorm . . . The boys were out playing ball when it commenced sprinkling, and they thought it wasn’t going to be much of a shower, they kept right on playing, when all of a sudden came the [hail] stones, and the boys put for their tents . . . Queer weather here!’”</p> <p>July 4: “Some of the officers played baseball and drill was neglected.”</p> <p>Alfred S. Roe, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Twenty-Fourth Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers, 1861-1866</span> (Twenty-Fourth Veteran Association, Worcester, 1907), pages 112 and 135. Accessed on Google books 6/2/09 via “twenty-fourth regiment” search. The regiment’s officers were mostly from Boston. The regiment, organized at Readville, 10 miles SW of Boston, and was at Seabrook Island SC on these dates.</p>  +
<p>Notes upon visiting a camp near Alexandria VA: “Here were in progress all the occupations, and all the idleness, of the soldier in the tented field. Some were cooking the company-rations in pots hung over fires in the open air; some played at ball, or developed their muscular power by gymnastic exercise; some read newspapers, some smoked cigars or pipes.”</p> <p>Nathaniel Hawthorne, “Fortress Monroe,” in I. Finseth, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The American Civil War</span> (CRC Press, 2006), page 398. Accessed in restricted view on Google Books 6/16/09.</p>  +
<p>“THE BIRTH OF BASE-BALL. Some of the men who went home on furlough in 1862 returned to their regiments with tales of a marvelous new game which was spreading though the Northern States. In camp at White Oak Church near Falmouth, Va., Kearny’s brigade played this ‘baseball,’ as it was known. Bartlett’s boys won this historic game.”</p> <p>F. Miller and R. Lanier, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Photographic History of the Civil War,</span> Volume Eight, Soldier Life, (Review of Reviews Co., New York, 1911), plate following page 243. This text sits next to a photograph of men playing football in 1864. <strong>Note: </strong> can we locate the cited photo?</p>  +
<p>On a lay day during a long October 1862 march from Harper’s Ferry WV toward Fredericksburg VA, the 21<sup>st</sup> CT “indulged the natural propensity of the soldier for foraging.” To thwart that, the Captain “ordered the roll to be called every hour, so that it was difficult to get far from camp. The boys enjoyed a game of baseball, notwithstanding the march of the day before, and the prospect of a longer march the next day.” This is the only reference to ballplaying in the history.</p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Story of the Twenty-First Regiment, Connecticut Volunteer Infantry, During the Civil War. 1861-1865</span> (Stewart Printing Co., Middletown, 1900). Accessed on Google books 6/2/09, via “story of the twenty-first” search. The regiment was recruited in Eastern CT in late summer 1862, with the most men enlisting from Groton and Hartford.</p>  +
<p>A soldier in the 18<sup>th</sup> CT, Charles Lynch spent Thanksgiving at a camp near Baltimore. “November. The most important event was our first Thanksgiving in camp. Passed very pleasantly. A good dinner, with games of foot and base-ball.”</p> <p>After Appomattox, Lynch wrote: June 5<sup>th</sup>: . . . Thank God the cruel war is over. Playing ball, pitching quoits, helping the farmers, is the way we pass the time while waiting for orders to be mustered out. We have many friends in this town and vicinity.” These are the only references in the diary to ballplaying. In June Lynch was stationed in Martinsburg WV, about 30 miles west of Frederick MD and 75 miles northwest of Washington.</p> <p>Charles H. Lynch, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Civil War Diary 1862-1865</span> (private printing, 1915), page 11, page 154. Accessed on Google books 6/2/09 via “charles h. lynch” search. Lynch, and presumably much of the regiment, was from the Norwich CT area. Lead provided by Jeff Kittel, 5/12/09.</p>  +
<p>Thanksgiving in Fairfax County in northernmost VA: “At 2 o’clock, the regiment turned out on the parade ground. The colonel had procured a foot ball. Sides were arranged by the lieutenant colonel and two or three royal games of foot ball – most manly of sports, and closest in its mimicry of actual warfare – were played. . . . Many joined in games of base ball; others formed rings and watched friendly contests of the champion wrestlers of the different companies . . . . It was a “tall time” all around.”</p> <p>George G. Benedict, “Letter from George Grenville Benedict, December 6, 1862,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Army Life in Virginia: Letters from the Twelfth Regiment</span> (Free Press, Burlington, 1895), pp 80-81. Accessed 6/3/09 on Google Books via “army life in Virginia” search. Benedict, from Burlington, had been an editor and postmaster before the Civil War, and later became a state senator. The regiment appears to have been raised in the Burlington area. Submitted by Jeff Kittel, 5/12/09.</p>  +
<p>“We had plenty of pork and hard tack to go with the beans. We amused ourselves when the weather would permit by having a game of baseball.”</p> <p>William A. Waugh, Reminiscences of the rebellion or what I saw as a private soldier on the 5<sup>th</sup> Mass. Light Battery from 1861-1863. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15 2009. Waugh is here describing life in winter quarters near Falmouth on the Virginia coast and east of Fredericksburg.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>“On Christmas Day 1862 the officers of Manigault’s brigade had a footrace, and afterward the colonels ‘chose sides from among the officers and men to play base[ball].’”</p> <p>Larry J. Daniel, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Soldiering in the Army of Tennessee: A Portrait of Life in a Confederate Army</span> (U of North Carolina Press, 1991), page 90. Daniel evidently attributes this quotation of a letter from James Hall to his father, December 25, 1862. His treatment of the name of the game, “base[ball], implies that the original letter read “base.” Manigault’s Brigade formed in Corinth, MS, in April 1862, comprising two South Carolina regiments and three from Alabama. We do not know the location of the brigade in December 1862, when Manigault was apparently elevated from colonel of the 10<sup>th</sup> SC to lead the brigade.</p> <p>The James Hall letter is cited more fully in Kevin Roberts, "We Were Marching on Christmas Day" p. 62:</p> <p>"We have tried to make a Christmas of it here. We have had foot races, wrestling and base[ball] playing ... {The colonels] chose sides from among their officers and met to play base[ball]."</p>  +
<p>“The report of musketry is heard but a very little distance from us . . . yet on the other side of the road is most of our company, playing Bat Ball and perhaps in less than half an hour, they may be called to play a Ball game of a more serious nature.”</p> <p>Attributed to “an Ohio private” who wrote home from Virginia in 1862, in Ward and Burns, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball: An Illustrated History</span> (Knopf, 1994), page 13. No source is given. <strong>Note:</strong> can we find the original source and fill in some detail? <strong>Note:</strong> the private’s use of the term “bat ball” is unusual. “Bat ball” is found in much earlier times [it was banned in both Pittsfield and Northampton MA in 1791]. In this case, since the private is an observer, not a player, it may be that he is using an incorrect label for the game he observes in 1862. Still, it may possibly imply that the term “bat ball” was current in Ohio in the pre-war years (in the private’s youth?), if not later.</p>  +
<p>[A] "[In April 1863] the Third Corps and the Sixth Corps baseball teams met near White Oak Church, Virginia, to play for the championship of the Army of the Potomac."</p> <p>[B] "Ballplaying in the Civil War Camps increased rapidly during the War, reaching a peak of 82 known games in April 1863 -- while the troops still remained in their winter camps.  Base ball was by a large margin the game of choice among soldiers, but wicket, cricket, and the Massachusetts game were occasionally played.  Play was much more common in the winter camps than near the battle fronts."</p> <p>[C] <strong>Note: </strong>In August 2013 Civil War scholar Bruce Allardice added this context to the recollected Army-wide "championship game":</p> <p>"The pitcher for the winning team was Lt. James Alexander Linen (1840-1918) of the 26th NJ, formerly of the Newark Eureka BBC. Linen later headed the bank, hence the mention in the book. In 1865 Linen organized the Wyoming BBC of Scranton, which changed its name to the Scranton BBC the next year. The 26th NJ was a Newark outfit, and a contemporary Newark newspaper says that many members of the prewar Eurekas and Adriatics of that town had joined the 26th. The 26th was in the Sixth Army Corps, Army of the Potomac, stationed at/near White Oak Church near Fredericksburg, VA. April 1863, the army was in camp.  The book says Linen played against Charlie Walker a former catcher of the Newark Adriatics who was now catcher for the "Third Corps" club.</p> <p>"With all that being said, in my opinion the clubs that played this game weren't 'corps' clubs, but rather regimental and/or brigade clubs that by their play against other regiments/brigades claimed the Third and Sixth Corps championships.</p> <p>"Steinke's "Scranton", page 44, has a line drawing and long article on Linen which mentions this game. See also the "New York Clipper" website, which has a photo of Linen."</p>  +
<p>Apparently not liking either the New York Rules or Massachusetts Game Rules, the two formal sets available to them, the boys of the South Berkshire Institute, a prep school in New Marlborough, MA, drew up a hybrid game. Their version is rare in that its documentation has survived.</p>  +
<p>“Not even regular guard and fatigue duty, drill and digging in the trenches could exhaust all of the energies of thee Massachusetts boys, so they must needs organize a baseball club, a thing they had never done in the month of January, and company rivalry ran high. The nine from Company I beat that of Company C to the tune of fifty to twenty-nine. It goes without saying that this was in the days of old-fashioned ball, when large scores were not unusual, and a phenomenally small one by no means argued a superior game.”</p> <p>Alfred S. Roe, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Fifth Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry</span> (Fifth Regiment Veteran Association, Boston, 1911) page 196 The book has no other reference to ballplaying. This passage appears in an account of late January 1863, and the camp was evidently near Newbern VA [a railroad terminus], about 45 miles SW of Roanoke in Southwest Virginia. Accessed at Google Books 6/609 via “fifth Massachusetts roe” search. The regiment comprised men from towns NW of Boston.</p> <p>The unit was at New Bern, NC in January 1863. [ba]</p>  +
<p>The regimental history, writing of winter camp on the Rappahannock River in late January,: “The duties of a soldier’s life in camp were resumed. Drill, dress parade, inspection, picket and guard duty, policing, building roads, were the usual occupations. Amusements were encouraged and chess, checkers, baseball and athletic exercises helped to while away tedious hours.”</p> <p>Camille Baquet, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of the First Brigade, New Jersey Volunteers </span>(State of New Jersey, 1910), page 71. This is the only reference to ballplaying in the book, which covers 1861 to 1865. Accessed 6/6/09 on Google Books via “baquet ‘first brigade’’’ search.</p>  +
<p>The 1863 diary of George Brockway includes 10 entries on ballplaying from February 27 to April 17 1863. Most are terse, along the lines of the March 11 entry: “played ball.” On March 2 Brockway elaborated a little: “In the afternoon the Company played base ball. O yes made a batter club also.” Two entries cite extramural play. April 11: “The boys play a game of ball with the 77<sup>th</sup> N. Y. V and beat them 12 members.” April 14: “The boys play a match game of ball with the Jersey boys and got bet by 40.” There are no references to ballplaying after April 17, and Brockway’s diaries for his other 3.5 years as a soldier are not referenced.</p> <p>George F. Brockway, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Diary of 1863. Unpublished. </span>Provided by Michael Aubrecht May 15 2009. The diary does specify Brockway’s location in spring 1863.</p> <p>George F. Brockway of Auburn, NY was a saddler in Cowan's NY battery of artillery, attached to the VI corps. In early 1863 it was stationed near Fredericksburg, VA. Brockway moved to MI postwar. [ba]</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>In February 1863 the 48<sup>th</sup> PA took a steamboat to Newport News VA, where it camped for a month. From the regimental history: “Many amusements were indulged in during the stay at Newport News – horse racing, cricket matches, base-ball and the like. Leaves of absence became frequent.” This is the only reference to ballplaying. In late March the unit headed off to Lexington KY.</p> <p>Oliver C. Bosbyshell, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The 48<sup>th</sup> in the War</span> (Avil Printing, Philadelphia, 1895), pp 102-103. Accessed 6/7/09 on Google Books via “bosbyshell 48<sup>th</sup>” search. The regiment formed in Schuylkill County of PA in late 1861, an area about 40 miles west of Allentown and 85 miles NW of Philadelphia.</p>  +
<p>“March 2 [1863]. Jas Mitchell falls. Died while playing wicket.”</p> <p>Diary entry, presumably by Captain Milo E. Palmer, 12<sup>th</sup> Regiment, in Deborah B. Martin, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of Brown County Wisconsin</span> (S. J. Clarke Publishing, Chicago, 1913), page 216. The 12<sup>th</sup> Wisconsin was near “Coliersville” [Collierville?] TN in early March, according to the diary entries. Collierville is about 15 miles SW of Memphis. The 12<sup>th</sup> WI seems to have been raised in the Madison WI area. The book was accessed 6/7/09 on Google Books via “of brown county” search. No other cited diary entries refer to ballplaying. <strong>Caution:</strong> It is unconfirmed that “playing wicket” in this case referred to ballplaying. It seems plausible that wicket was played in the 1850s-1860s in WI, but it hardly seems a mortally risky game, and it seems possible that “playing wicket” has a military meaning here. Input from readers on this issue is most welcome.</p>  +
<p>“The ‘first team’ of the Ninth New York Regiment beat the Fifty-first New Yorkers 31-34 [sic] at Yorktown Virginia, in 1863. But a few days later the ‘second nine’ of the two units played, with the Ninth Regiment triumphing by the fantastic score of 58-19!”</p> <p>Bell Irvin Wiley, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Common Soldier in the Civil War</span>, Book One, “The Life of Billy Yank,” page 170. Unavailable online in full text June 2009. Wiley’s footnotes are complicated, but it seems most likely the this account comes from “diary of Charles F. Johnson, March 4, 8, 1863, manuscript Minn. Historical Society.” It is unclear that the 9<sup>th</sup> was near Yorktown in early March. <strong>Note</strong>: can we confirm or disconfirm this Wiley reference?</p> <p>[ba]--the book "The Long Roll" is the wartime journal of Charles F. Johnson, 9th NY, and undoubtedly is Wiley's source (or the same as Wiley's source). Pages 215-217 note these games, which were played in camp near Newport News, VA. "Frank Hughson, President of the Hawkins Zouaves Baseball club" accepted a challenge from the 51st NY. Wagers were made, and the games played March 4 and 8, 1863. Graham, "The Ninth Regiment, New York Volunteers" p. 405 and the published Letters of Edward King Wightman, p. 121, also mention these games.</p>  +
<p>The US had captured the Sea Island area of SC in 1861, and a group of anti-slavery advocates from Massachusetts ventured south to help educate former slaves in the region. In a letter home from “H.W.,” described as the sister of a Harvard man just out of college, wrote about seeing, on March 3, 1863, what she called “real war camps.” She listed daily work duties, and added, “in almost every camp we saw some men playing ball.” It appears the trip’s objective was “the 24<sup>th</sup>,” which seems to have been the 24<sup>th</sup> MA, where a cousin James was to be found.</p>  +
<p>The history of the Fifth MA Battery has four brief references to base ball from March 1863 to February 1864. Two soldiers’ diaries note games on March 11, March 29, and April 11 1863 in Falmouth VA. A Captain Phillips wrote from Rappahannock Station on February 23, 1864: “I am sitting at my desk with my door wide open, and the men are playing ball out of doors.”</p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of the Fifth Massachusetts Battery</span> [1861-1865] (Luther E. Cowles, Boston, 1902), pages 559, 564, 572, 774. Accessed . . .</p>  +
<p>“Mar 13 [1863] Wrote a letter to George and one to father. In the afternoon played a game of ball. Mar 14 Played a game of ball in the afternoon. Bill rode my horse on the forage guard.”</p> <p>James H. Cowan, “Cowan’s Civil War Diary,” transcribed by Juanita Lewis, accessed 6/7/098 at <a href="http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/regiment/cavalry/01st/cowan.html">http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/regiment/cavalry/01st/cowan.html</a>. The diary, noted as volume 2, covers from September 1862 through April of 1863. The website notes that Cowan was from northernmost Iowa. His location in early March is inferred, perhaps incorrectly, from towns named Springfield, Rollo (Rolla?), Salem in the Feb/March entries.</p> <p>Cowan was in the 1st Iowa Cavalry. [ba]</p>  +
<p>“What think you, man of pen and scissors, of our hardships and sufferings, including the rigors of a winter campaign and other poetical ideas, when I tell you that the line officers of our Regiment played a match game of base ball last Saturday. The contest was between the right and left wings for the purpose of ascertaining which party should pay the expenses of an oyster supper.” The Left Wing won, 24-21, in a game evidently played by NY rules – nine players played nine innings and with 27 outs.</p> <p>“From the 17<sup>th</sup> Maine Regiment,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Lewiston</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> [Me] Daily Evening Journal</span>, March 23, 1863, page 1. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. The printed missive, signed “Right Wing,” is headed “Camp Pitcher near Falmouth, VA, March 15<sup>th</sup> 1863.” The full text of the Regiment’s history, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Red Diamond Regiment,</span> by William Jordan, is not accessible online as of June 2009. Lewiston ME is about 35 miles N of Portland.</p>  +
<p>Lewis C. Paxson left Pennsylvania in 1862 to teach school in Lake City MN, joining the 8<sup>th</sup> MN in August of that year.</p> <p>He very briefly refers to “playing ball four times: on March 16<sup>th</sup> 1863, September 16, 1863, September 22, 1863, and March 2, 1864. His most expansive entries were his first, “There was ball playing upon the west camp” [p. 113], and that for September 22, “Played leap frog. Played ball.” He called the game “baseball” in the 1864 entry.</p> <p>Paxson also referred to wicket: On April 30 he wrote “We were mustered. Cronin hurt in playing wicket by being run against.” His entry for the next day was “The mail did not come. Cronin dies.” <strong>Caution:</strong> It is unconfirmed that “playing wicket” in this case referred to ballplaying. It seems plausible that wicket was played in the 1850s-1860s in MN, but it hardly seems a mortally risky game, and it seems possible that “playing wicket” has a military meaning here. Input from readers on this issue is most welcome.</p> <p>Source: <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Collections of the State Historical Society of North Dakota</span>, Part II – Volume II (Tribune, Bismarck ND, 1908), pages 113, 115, 123, 132. It appears that Paxson’s service time from 1862 to 1865 was spent at Fort Abercrombie, ND, about 30 miles S of Fargo. The Fort, evidently meant to protect Minnesota territory, had been attacked by the Sioux in the Dakota War of 1862.</p>  +
<p>At Falmouth VA, excerpts from the diary of Sgt Earle of the 15<sup>th</sup> MA notes games of ball with the 34<sup>th</sup> NY on March 18 and again on April 16, 1863 in the regimental history.</p> <p>The historian, Andrew Ford, writes 35 years later that “during March and April ball playing is frequently mentioned in the diary. The game played in those days was the old-fashioned round ball. Practice games inside the regiment occurred almost daily, and there were several great games with the New York Thirty-Fourth. Our boys were so successful that the captain of the New York team gave up the contest with the admission that if they ‘had been playing for nuts his men wouldn’t even have the shucks.’ The interest taken in these games in the army as a whole almost rivaled that taken in the races, sparring matches, and cock-fights of Meagher’s troops.” Ford does not elaborate on how he concludes that round ball was played, or that the army as a whole was taking to base ball.</p> <p>Andrew E. Ford, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Story of the Fifteenth Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry</span> [1961-1864] (W. J. Coulter, Clinton [MA?], 1898), pages 242 and 244. Accessed 6/8/09 on Google Books via “’fifteenth Massachusetts’” search. The 15<sup>th</sup> MA drew significantly from Worcester County MA. The 34<sup>th</sup> NY regiment was known as the “Herkimer Regiment,” with roots in Herkimer County in Upstate New York; the town of Herkimer is about 15 miles east of Utica on the Mohawk River. The game in this area that preceded the NY game may have been round ball.</p>  +
<p>E. L. Tabler’s Civil War diary runs from January 1863 through May 1864. In March 1863 he was camped near Murfreesboro TN. On March 25 1863 he wrote: “the boys enjoy themselves very well playing at Ball & pitching Horseshoes.” Tabler notes that his regiment has been taken over by John C. McWilliams; a John C. McWilliams is listed at a Captain in the 51<sup>st</sup> Illinois, which was in the Murfreesboro area in March 1863.</p> <p>“1998 Transcription by William E. Henry of a Civil War Diary,”</p> <p><a href="http://www.51illinois.org/TablerDiaryRaw1863.pdf">http://www.51illinois.org/TablerDiaryRaw1863.pdf</a>, accessed 6/8/09.</p>  +
<p>“On the 25<sup>th</sup> [of March 1863] all cartridges were taken up, and fresh ammunition issued. From this time till after the fist of April, ‘base ball’ was the popular amusement in camp, and a select nine from our regiment played many games and return games with the 32<sup>nd</sup> New York Regiment, the 27<sup>th</sup> winning a good share of the games. The sharp exercise put the men in good condition after the winter of idleness in their tents and cabins.”</p> <p>C. Fairchild, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of the 27<sup>th</sup> Regiment N. Y. Vols</span> (Carl and Matthews, Binghamton NY, 1888), page 153. The regiment was camped near Falmouth VA.</p>  +
<p>The diary of Benjamin Franklin Hackett, of Rochester VT, describes ballplaying twice in the 7 months of his diary as a member of the 12<sup>th</sup> VT. On March 30, 1863, “near Wolf Run Shoals Va,” he wrote “very pleasant in afternoon. Boys played ball all the afternoon. In the same camp on April 14, he wrote “the boys are playing ball and are as cheerful as could be expected.”</p> <p>Diary of Benjamin Franklin Hackett, provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. An article based on the diary appears as Elna Rae Zeilinger and Larry Schweikart, ““’They Also Serve . . .’: The Diary of Benjamin Franklin Hackett, 12<sup>th</sup> Vermont Volunteers, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Vermont History</span>, Volume 51, Number 2 (Spring 1983), pp.89 ff. The article accessed on Google Books via “’benjamin franklin Hackett’” search.</p>  +
<p>John G. B. Adams of the Nineteenth Massachusetts Regiment: “While in camp at Falmouth [VA] the base ball fever broke out. It was the old-fashioned game, where a man running the bases must be hit by the ball to be declared out. It started with the men, then the officers began to play, and finally the 19<sup>th</sup> challenged the 7<sup>th</sup> Michigan to play for sixty dollars a side. . . . The game was played and witnessed by nearly all of our division, and the 19<sup>th</sup> won. The one hundred and twenty dollars was spent for a supper . . . . It was a grand time, and all agreed that it was nicer to play <em>base </em>than <em>minié</em> [bullet] ball.”</p> <p>Capt. John G. B. Adams, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Reminiscences of the Nineteenth Massachusetts Regiment</span> (Wright and Potter, Boston, 1899), pp 60-61. Accessed 6/8/09 on Google Books via “reminiscences nineteenth” search. The regiment arose in northern MA, near the NH border.</p>  +
<p>From April 1863 to May 1864, seven mentions of ballplaying – one of them a game of wicket – appear in the account of the 10<sup>th</sup> Massachusetts. In early April, “in the intervals between [snow] storms the boys found time and place for playing ball” [p. 173]. Later that month, “[i]n the midst of so much warlike preparation it was a relief to find the boys of the Tenth and those of the 36<sup>th</sup> New York playing a game of baseball and all must have quit good natured, since the game itself was a draw” [p. 177]. At camp at Brandy Station on April 18 1864 the 10<sup>th</sup> won a “hotly contested” game against the 2<sup>nd</sup> RI, and again on April 26 the two regiments competed, “but it was lose again for Rhody’s boys” [p.252]. On April 28<sup>th</sup> the officers of the 10<sup>th</sup> lost a “game of our favorite baseball” with the 37<sup>th</sup> [MA?] – p.252. The next day the 10<sup>th</sup> beat the Jersey Brigade, 15-13. [p253].</p> <p>“Considering the momentous interests at stake and the dread record that was to be written for May, 1864, it seems not a little strange that the beautiful month was ushered in just as April went out, with baseball. While a game of ball and shell of terrible import was pending, these men of war, after all only boys of a larger growth, happily ignorant of the future, were hilariously applauding the lucky hits and the swift running of bases clear up to the day before the movement across the Rapidan. It was on [May] 3<sup>rd</sup> that Company I played Company G and won the game by twelve tallies, and with that day came orders to march in the morning at 4.00 a.m.” [p. 253].</p> <p>The wicket games also occurred at Brandy Station in April 1864;“With the advance of the season came all the indications of quickening life, and athletics became exceedingly prevalent, and one item among many was a game of wicket on [April] 13<sup>th</sup>, between a picked team in the 37<sup>th</sup> [MA] and one drawn from the Tenth, resulting in a victory of two tallies for our boys” [p.251]. In a rematch 10 days later, the 10<sup>th</sup> won again [p.252].</p> <p>Alfred S. Roe, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Tenth Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry 1861-1864</span> (Tenth Regiment Veteran Association, Springfield MA, 1909). Accessed 6/9/09 on Google Books via “’tenth regiment’ roe” search. The regiment was drawn from Springfield and Western Massachusetts, where wicket was evidently a not uncommon prewar pastime. Cf [[CW-57]], which also reflects the 10<sup>th</sup> MA.</p>  
<p>“[W]hile I played barn ball, one old cat and two old cat in early boyhood days, Cricket was my favorite game, and up to the time I enlisted in the army I never played a regular game of base ball or the New York game as it was then called. In my regiment we had eleven cricketers that had all played together at home and I was the leading spirit in getting up matches. We played a number of good matches but we were too strong for any combination that we could get to play against us, and we finally had to abandon cricket and + take up this so called New York game. I remember well the first game that I played. It was against the 27<sup>th</sup> NY Inf. at White Oak Church near Fredericksburg Va. In the Spring of 1863. I played occasionally during the remainder of the war, but after my discharge in 1865 I came to Washington and joined the American Cricket Club of this city. But I soon turned my attention to base ball + played with the Olympic Club of this city from 1866 to 1870.”</p> <p>Nicholas Young was born in Amsterdam NY in 1840, and thus was playing the named games in the 1850s. He was a member of the 32<sup>nd</sup> NY Infantry, which was at Falmouth VA in spring 1863. He led the NL from 1881 to 1903.</p> <p> </p> <p> </p> <p> </p>  +
<p>In letters home written on April 6, and April 10, 1863 from Acquia Creek, VA, officer Mason Tyler wrote: “When I arrived this afternoon [from Washington] I found all the officers with Colonel Edwards at their head out playing ball. Games are all the rage now in the Army of the Potomac. [page 78]” A few later he wrote: “[T]he wind is fast drying up the mud. Our camp is alive with ball-players, almost every street having its game. My boy Jimmie is so busy playing that he hardly knows how to stop to do my errands. He can play ball with the best of them, and pitching quoits he can beat anybody in my company, captain and all. [page 78]”</p> <p>“On November 20<sup>th</sup> [1863] there was a baseball game between the Tenth and Thirty-Seventh, and the Thirty-Seventh won. [page 125]”</p> <p>He wrote from Brandy Station VA in January 1864 to report on his recent reading, he added, “Sometimes we get up a game of ball, and now we have some apparatus for gymnastics, that occupies some of my time.” [page 131]”</p> <p>Mason W. Tyler, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Memoir of Mason Whiting Tyler, in Recollections of the Civil War</span> (Putnams, New York, 1912) page 78. Provided by Jeff Kittel, May 12, 2009. Accessed 6/6/09 at Google Books via “mason whiting tyler” search. Tyler was a new Amherst College graduate when he enlisted, and was shortly elected a 1st Lieutenant.. PBall file: CW-XX.</p> <p>Tyler was in the 37th MA. [ba]</p>  +
<p>In a diary extending from 1862 to 1864, Sgt. Franklin Horner referred to ballplaying only on April 11, April 13, and April 18, 1863. The entries are brief: the most informative is: “April 11 Saturday – Warm and pleasant . . . . no news from our armies all quiet in front the boys are enjoying themselves by playing ball the health of the men is good I am well.”</p> <p>Diaries of Franklin Horner, Company H, 12<sup>th</sup> PA reserves regiment volunteers. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. The file states, “The diaries, in their original form, are part of the Curatorial Collection at the Gettysburg National Military Park. Their catalog numbers are as follows: 1862 Diary (GETT-6848), 1863 Diary (GETT-6850), 1864 Diary (GETT-6849).” It appears that in April 1863 the regiment camped in the Falls Church VA vicinity, a day’s march from Washington DC. The march to Gettysburg was ahead.</p>  +
<p>Chaplain Frank Hall of the 16<sup>th</sup> New York Infantry mentioned games of ball 10 times in his journal and letters home. [<strong>Note: </strong>we need to ascertain the range of actual dates; all seem to be for Feb. –April 1863.] All are passing references, like “Saturday, they had another splendid game of ball.” The men played on February 11, 1863, and Hall notes that “Gen. Bartlett came out . . . and played too & men from nearly the whole Brigade entered into the game. Col. Adams, shortly after Gen. Bartlett was called away & as he past on horseback someone threw the ball and it happened to pass right to his saddle bow. He caught it very gracefully & threw it back.”</p> <p>In an April 11 1863 letter to his wife he describes the scene at camp. “I thought I would just write out the sheet to try & give you a picture of things a bit. I am sitting in the tent by the table on one of the three legged stools which I fixed with straps the other day. The day is delightful. The wind is pleasantly flapping the tent. The Jersey band back of it has just finished a delightful air. On the hill in front, to the left of the camp, the boys are playing a game of ball & a few men are to be seen in camp who are excused from picket.”</p> <p>Frank Hall file, #BV-419-01, provided by Michael Aubrecht May 15, 2009. The 16<sup>th</sup> NY was drawn from northern counties, and included men from Plattsburg and Ogdensburg. The 16<sup>th</sup> was in northern VA in early 1863.</p>  +
<p>Sgt. Sewell G. Gray, 23, wrote in his diary entry for April 10, 1863: “. . . inspected at 1 o’clock p.m. by Captain Totten. This ended the duties of the day. I participated in a huge game of ball in the afternoon that proved disastrous to my powers of locomotion as it so lamed me that I can hardly stand on my pegs. Weather fine.” No other references to ballplaying are found.</p> <p>“Diary of Captain Sewell Gray 1862 to 1863,” page 12. The 6<sup>th</sup> Maine was at Falmouth VA at this time. Gray died at the second battle of Fredericksburg in May 1863. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009.</p>  +
<p>Private Berea M. Willsey kept a diary in 1862, 1863, and 1864, and noted ballplaying succinctly 8 times, all in the month of April. In April 1863 there are entries for April 9<sup>th</sup>, 14<sup>th</sup>, 18<sup>th</sup>, 20<sup>th</sup>, and 22<sup>nd</sup>. On the 14<sup>th</sup>, when hostilities seemed near, he wrote “Eight days rations were given out to the different Regts & all surplus baggage sent away. Prepared myself as well as I could for the coming struggle & then had a good game of ball.” Willsey mentions a match against the 35<sup>th</sup> NY on April 20<sup>th</sup> and one against the 36<sup>th</sup> NY on April 22<sup>nd</sup>. The 10<sup>th</sup> was in a Virginia winter camp in this period.</p> <p>In 1864 Willsey reports on a match game with the 2<sup>nd</sup> RI on April 26 and another against the 1<sup>st</sup> NJ on April 30. “We have never been beat, he says. On April 23, he records a “game of ball” that was wicket. “The dust has been flying in clouds all day, yet it did not prevent the game of Ball from being played. Our boys were opposed by the 37th Mass at a game of wicket making 337 tallies, while the 37<sup>th</sup> only made 200.” In 1864 the Regiment was in the vicinity of Brandy Station VA.</p> <p>Jessica H. DeMay, ed., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Civil War Diary of Berea M. Willsey</span> (Heritage Books, 1995), pp 84-86, 142-143. Full text unavailable online 6/10/09. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. The 10<sup>th</sup> MA was from Western Massachusetts, and Willsey may have been from the North Adams area. Cf. [[CW-51]], which also depicts the 10<sup>th</sup> MA.</p>  +
<p>“Dear Wife . . . . The boys have had fine Sport this Spring, playing Ball pitching quarters and other Sports, it has been fine weather for some time and the ground dry and hard. Last Evening after Dress Parade I could not resist the temptation of joining with the men in there sports. After playing ball for some time I changed the sport by running a foot race with Lt. Murphy, which created a considerable fun after which the whole Redg. joined with the 127<sup>th</sup> Redg. in the same Sport, officers as well as men.”</p> <p>Letter from Ambrose F Cole to his wife, Jane Utley Cole, April 14, 1863. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. <strong>Note:</strong> can we determine where the 59<sup>th</sup> was formed, and where it was in April 1863?</p> <p>59th mostly from NYC. Was in Army of the Potomac, in VA in April 1863. [ba]</p>  +
<p>“Falmouth April 27<sup>th</sup>, 63. Dear sister . . . we expect to move very soon perhaps to night other troops have been on the move all day the 19<sup>th</sup> Mass regt and the 7<sup>th</sup> Michigan have had a great game of ball to day the stakes were one hundred & ten dollars a side the Mass boys beat & won the money . . . write often.”</p> <p>Letter from James Decker to Francis Decker, April 1863. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. Other Decker letters suggest that Decker may have been from the Syracuse NY area. <strong>Note: </strong>identify Decker and his military unit?</p>  +
<p>“April 26<sup>th</sup> 1863. “Another day has passed and I have made a full day in the pay rolls. I heartily wish they were finished for I am tired of them. After parade played ball for half an hour . . . I think we will certainly march in a day or two:</p> <p>George French, Diaries for 1862 and 1863. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. French was a sergeant in the 105<sup>th</sup> NY. <strong>Note:</strong> we need to re-examine the context for this reference; where was the 105<sup>th</sup> in April, where was French from. The regiment had some soldiers from Rochester NY, including many Irish immigrants.</p> <p>The 105th was near Falmouth, VA that April. [ba]</p>  +
<p>Near Falmouth VA in April 1863, two companies of the 11<sup>th</sup> New Jersey Regiment played a ball game for which a box score was preserved. Each team was captained by, well, a Captain, and each Captain captain inserted himself as leadoff hitter. The box shows a nine-player, nine-inning game [or maybe eight] with a three-out side-out rule. [There seem to have been no outs recorded in one nine-run half-inning, but let’s not be picky.] Captain Martin’s D Company rushed out to an 18-2 lead and coasted to a 40-15 win over Captain Logan’s H Company.</p> <p>A handsome account of the game’s context, with the box score, is found in John W. Kuhl, “The Game,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Military Images</span>, Volume 25, Number 3 (November/December 2003), pp. 19-22. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. The article’s author reports that the box score appeared in the regimental history but does not give a further source. Sadly, both captains were to be killed at Gettysburg in a matter of weeks. The regiment’s history is Thomas D. Marbaker, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The History of the Eleventh New Jersey Volunteers from its Organization to Appomattox</span> (MacCrellish and Quigley, Trenton, 1898). It appears to be available online via the subscription site ancestry.com as of June 2009.</p>  +
While the 11th New Jersey base ball match took place prior to Gettysburg, the third reference involved a game played several months after the battle, not long before Abraham Lincoln gave his historic speech at the new Gettysburg National Cemetery.  Playing in the match were members of Battery B of the 1st New Jersey artillery, more popularly known as Clark's battery which served with distinction on both the second and third days at Gettysburg.  The base ball connection came to my attention when my friend, Joe Bilby sent me a picture of a print of Clark's battery in camp at Brandy Wine Station, Virginia in November of 1863.  The print shows members of the battery engaged in various camp activities including a group in the lower right hand corner playing base ball.  Joe cautioned me that the picture was not in the public domain so I set out try to locate the original.  My search took me to the Baseball Hall of Fame library which only has a copy and so couldn't give permission to use it.  The library also passed on a link to an recent sale of a copy on eBay for about $425. (John Zinn)<br>  +
<p>The <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Herald</span> headline for an April 1863 article about Hooker’s Army of the Potomac promised “Fun and Sports in the Army: Base Ball Match – New Jersey vs. New York.” Unfortunately, no corresponding text is in the article as retrieved online. The dispatch from Virginia is dated April 28.</p> <p>“Interesting from Hooker’s Army,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">New York</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> Herald</span>, April 29, 1863. Accessed May 21, 2009 via subscription to Genealogybank. <strong>Note:</strong> can we locate the full text?</p>  +
<p>“A match game at Base Ball occurred between selected nines of the Fifth and Eighth New Jersey Regiments on Tuesday last, resulted in favor of the Eighth by a score of 50 to 15. . . . On the second innings the Eighth Regiment made 14 runs.”</p> <p>“Base Ball in the Army,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Trenton</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> State</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> Gazette</span>, April 30, 1863. Accessed May 20, 2009 via Genealogybank subscription. According to a fellow named Abner Doubleday, the 5<sup>th</sup> NJ was part of a “brilliant Counter-charge at the Battle of Chancellorsville on May 3: thus, the regiment and the match must have been in Virginia. [See A. Doubleday, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Chancellorsville and Gettysburg</span> (Scribners, New York, 1882), page 47.] An identical article appeared in the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Newark Daily Advertiser</span> on April 28, 1863 [provided by John Zinn on 3/10/09], and in the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Daily State Gazette and Republican</span> [City?] on 4/30/1864 [provided by John Maurath on 1/18/2009].</p>  +
<p>“A match game of base ball was played near the banks of the Rappahannock on the 2<sup>nd</sup> inst., between selected nines of the 2d and 26<sup>th</sup> Regiments, and of the 2d New Jersey Brigade, resulting in favor of the former, 29 to 15. Among the players of the former were Lieuts. Linen [see file CW-65] and Neidisch [sic?] of the Eureka and Newark Clubs.”</p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Newark</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> Daily Advertiser</span>, June 6, 1863. Provided by John Zinn, March 10, 2009.</p>  +
<p>“On Saturday the 11<sup>th</sup> inst., a match game of ‘base ball’ came off upon the drill ground of the 1<sup>st</sup> N. J. Brigade, in Virginia, between the players of the 2<sup>nd</sup> Regt., and the 26<sup>th</sup>, the former being the challengers. It was witnessed with much interest by most of the Brigade . . . . “A challenge from the 26<sup>th</sup> is expected soon, when the 2<sup>nd</sup> hope to carry off the palm.”</p> <p>“Local Matters. Base Ball in the Army,” Newark Daily Advertiser, April 15, 1863. Provided by John Zinn 3/10/09.<strong> Note:</strong> this game is also mentioned in passing in B. Gottfried, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Kearney’s Own: the History of the First Jersey Brigade in the Civil War</span> (Rutgers U Press, 2005), page 107.</p>  +