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rising salaries 6

Date Wednesday, August 7, 1889
Text

As a sample of the expenses of a ball team it may be stated that Cleveland's 1883, in which were McCormick, Dunlap, Glasscock, Bushong, Daily, and other stars, cost for salaries less than $16,000, and the present team, in which there are no stars, costs $31,000. With the same men under contract this season as played in Cleveland during 1883, the salary list would be $50,000. And yet the tendency is to increase still more, because the pace for $50,000 towns is set by $150,000 towns., quoting the Boston Globe

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

rising salaries 7

Date Wednesday, December 18, 1889
Text

[from R. M. Larner's column] Almost every League player, whose contract has been promulgated by the genial N. E. Young, is to receive a substantial increase in salary for next season's work. Some of the amounts paid to second and third-rate players for the season of 1890 are enormous. Wilmot's contract calls for $2,500, but I am informed upon unquestionable authority that he is to receive something in excess of that amount.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Rogers on the legal case against the Brotherhood

Date Wednesday, December 18, 1889
Text

[quoting John Rogers] We hope to win the case, and in my mind it is quite probable that we shall. Everything, however, hinges on the interpretation of the word “reserve.” If the court takes our definitions one of intent, we have the case. Should it take that the word is only binding on the different clubs of the League and not on outside clubs, then the Brotherhood will win.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

roster makeup

Date Thursday, March 21, 1889
Text

The Baltimore base ball club will open the season with a roster of 15 men. The pitchers are Matthew Kilroy, Edward Cunningham, Frank Foreman and William Whittaker. The catchers are Chris. Fulmer, Edward Tate, Joseph Quinn and Bart Cantz. The first baseman is Thomas Tucker; second baseman, Joseph Mack; third baseman, William Shindle; short stop, Jack Farrell, left fielder, Joseph Hornung; centre fielder, Michael Griffin; right fielders, Joseph Sommer. The captain of the club has not yet been determined upon. It will probably be Mack or Farrell. St.

Source St. Louis Republic
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

rule against discoloring the ball

Date Wednesday, November 13, 1889
Text

[discussing the meeting of the rules committee 11/12] Rules 12, section 2...was changed to “The moment the umpire delivers a new or alternate ball to the pitcher it comes into play, and shall not at any time be intentionally discolored with the soil or otherwise.” This change was made to prevent the prevailing habit of throwing a new ball around the field so as to make it have the appearance of an old ball.

Source New York Sun
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

rule changes increase batting

Date Sunday, October 6, 1889
Text

The changes in the playing rules have operated so as to increase the batting, and heavy batting and brilliant fielding have been the rule in a very large majority of the games. With the abolition of the foul tip, and the reduction of the number of balls allowable, the pitcher has not had the batsman so completely at his mercy, and the hitting, which is, after all, the most enjoyable feature of the game, has been by far the best seen in any season since the curve ball came into use.

Source Indianapolis Journal
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

rumor of Louisville preparing to sell out

Date Tuesday, June 11, 1889
Text

A special meeting of the American Association of Ball Clubs has been called for Friday in New York to consider the status of the Louisville Club, which is reported to be in a bad way. The charge is being made that President Davidson is trying to dispose of his best players and then let the club shift for itself. To prevent the team from going to pieces and thereby losing the eighth club in the Association it is proposed to put a stop to the sale and President Wickoff has been requested not to ratify the sales of any players until after the meeting of the Association.

Von der Ahe, the president of the St. Louis Club, was the first to have his suspicions aroused and after consultation with Manager Barnie and some wiring to Eastern managers it was decided to settle the business in a special meeting. President Stern is now said to be negotiating for the release of Hecker, Stratton and Shannon. It is claimed that with these players out the Louisville will be only an amateur club, certainly not better. Davidson has lost heavily right along, and it is thought he wants to get out of the hole as best he can.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

rumored transfer of the Indianapolis team to New York

Date Wednesday, December 4, 1889
Text

The News had another base-ball rumor yesterday afternoon. It was to the effect that the Indianapolis League club was to be transferred to New York. Mr. J. T. Brush was asked what, if any, foundation there was for such a fairy tale. “None whatever,” was his answer. “No one here ever dreamed of such a thing, and I cannot be responsible nor answer for every insane rumor set afloat.” Indianapolis Journal December 4, 1889

There has been a good deal of talk hereabouts of late about a possible transfer of the players of the Indianapolis Base-ball Club to New York to fill up the gaps in the local league team. It is all bosh—that is, if the positive statements of the gentlemen most interested in any such transfer are to be accepted as true. President Brush, of the Indianapolis club, says without qualification that he is in the League to stay, and that means that he proposes to hold on to each and every one of his players. President Day, of the New York club, says that he does not contemplate securing the Hoosier hard-hitters and all-round performers on the green diamond, and that ought to settle it. Indianapolis Journal February 16, 1890, quoting the New York Herald

Source Indianapolis Journal
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

salary payments on the road

Date Wednesday, July 17, 1889
Text

Some one telegraphed from Boston last night that there was a great row among the members of the Indianapolis ball team because they had not been paid off in that city on the 15th. President Brush was seen by a reporter and asked regarding the matter. He said there was no trouble whatever, and if any member of the club wanted money all he had to do was to ask Manager Bancroft for it. “It has been our custom this season,” he continued, “to pay our men on the 1 st and 15th of each month, no matter whether they are at home or abroad. There is probably not another club in the League that does this, as it is not required, and we only did it to accommodate the players. The contracts of the men specify that they are to be paid on the dates named when they are at home, but not while they are away on their trips. We intended to pay off in Boston on the 15th, as usual, but as the club is to be at home on the 25th we concluded to wait until that time. We telegraphed this to Manager Bancroft with instructions to advance the men any amounts they might want. I think no one can complain of this and it is probable that the report is simply the work of some sensational idiot who wants to get into the papers.” Indianapolis Journal July 17, 1889

a ground rule for a puddle

[Indianapolis vs. New York 7/20/1889] The final ball game of the New York-Indianapolis series was played under very discouraging circumstances at the Polo grounds this afternoon. There was a heavy rain-fall last night, and the ball field was in a very bad condition in consequence. There was a small lake in left field, and on that account a ground rule was made, under which a hit to that territory, no matter how long, could only yield two bases. Boys, with trousers rolled up, were engaged to fish the ball out when it went into the miniature lake. In trying to get a fly ball, Sullivan went into the water once nearly up to his knees. Indianapolis Journal July 21, 1889

Source Indianapolis Journal
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Saturday half day for baseball; labor history

Date Saturday, July 6, 1889
Text

Secretary Douglass, of the Young Men's Christian Association, thinks the solution of the Sunday base-ball question can be found in the athletic park it is proposed to open within a few weeks. But to make the enterprise a success in that respect, he says a half-holiday will be necessary. If all the time of young men is used in business during the week days they cannot get the full benefit of the park, and, therefore, he urges a half holiday for the summer months. He has already a list of 600 young men who will make use of the grounds, provided their employers give them the time for recreation desired. More than one thousand, he says, can be induced to go to the park, and forgo Sunday ball-playing if the half holiday is obtained. Beginning to-day Saturday afternoon, recreation is to be given to the employees of W. B. Burford.

Source Indianapolis Journal
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scientific batting 4

Date Sunday, July 7, 1889
Text

[New York vs. Pittsburgh 7/5/1889] Dunlap's hitting was of the scientific kind, because every time he went to bat there were men on bases, and Fred just placed hits in nice comfortable localities.

Source Pittsburgh Dispatch
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

score card content

Date Wednesday, February 13, 1889
Text

Eddie Von der Ahe's score card was composed of sixteen pages last season—reading material and “ads.” combined. He now contemplates enlarging it to twenty-four pages and increasing the reading matter. An interesting score card is a good thing to glance over “between the innings, “ and young Von der Ahe says that his score card will be “one of the finest.

Source The Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoreboard on a string?

Date Thursday, May 9, 1889
Text

[New York vs. Boston 5/8/1889] For nine innings the champions swung their bats and strained their eyes trying to see the home plate around the remaining three corners of the diamond, but they were doomed to disappointment, and saw the scorer hang up goose eggs until he had nine of them on the string.

Source New York Sun
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scorer, reporter in Columbus

Date Wednesday, April 24, 1889
Text

The Sporting Life's Columbus correspondent, Frank W. Arnold, has resigned the official scoreship of the Columbus Club and the sporting editorship of the Columbus Dispatch. President Wikoff's brother, Charles, is his success on the paper.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring RBIs, ERA

Date Wednesday, November 13, 1889
Text

[from Chadwick's column] There are two amendments required in the scoring rules to the national code to make the averages what they are not now, viz., reliable data on which to base an opinion of a player's ability as a batsman; and one of these is to introduce a special record, giving the figures of the runs each player bats in from base hits. Another is the elimination of fielding and base-running figures from the data on which earned runs are based. The record of earned runs is useless except as giving figures on which a criterion of a pitcher's skill can be arrived at, and the only reliable data for this is the record of safe hits made off the pitching. As it is now a pitcher is charged with runs earned off the fielding and by base-running as well as from base hits, and in nearly every instance the estimate is unjust to the pitcher, as it brings into the calculation the plays of the fielders as well as the work of the pitchers. The only proper data for earned runs is the record of base hits made off the pitching, a pitcher's battery errors—called balls and wild pitches—not being included.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring RBIs, OBA

Date Wednesday, June 12, 1889
Text

[from Ren Mulford's column] That idea of the Wilkes-barre official scorer in summarizing the hits that net runs is a good one. I have accepted Manager Hart's “reached base” column for the Times-Star's individual score... Tebeau has not been making many hits, but he reaches first base pretty often on balls and errors, and is the best waiter in the club.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring a stolen base on a base on balls

Date Wednesday, May 29, 1889
Text

[from Chadwick's column] I notice that President Young decides that a base-runner should be credited with a stolen base under the following circumstances:--For instance, Quinn was on first base and Ganzel at bat with two strikes and three balls called. As the next ball is pitched, Quinn makes a dive for second without knowing whether the umpire would call a ball or a strike. It turned out that the umpire called four balls, but Quinn gets credit for a stolen base. This is a correct decision. In estimating stolen bases, there cannot well be any arbitrary rule to govern every case, as circumstances so frequently alter cases. The effort to steal must go into the calculation largely. For intsance, the moment the runner at first sees the pitcher's arm move to pitch, and he starts for second, he has attempted a steal without regard to the action of the catcher or the batsman; and if he reaches the base safely, he is entitled to the credit of the steal, irrespective of a wide throw, a muffed ball, a passed ball, a called ball or a wild pitch; as the very effort to steal may help to cause either the wild throw or the passed ball, as also the muff at second. There are ordinary steals and clean steals, and the latter comprise the minority. But no base can be justly credited as stolen, where the runner at first is induced to start for second after seeing the error made by the pitcher or catcher. To limit the credit of a stolen base to clean steals, would be discouraging to base stealing. A runner will not take the risks under such circumstances that he will when he is given credit for his effort to steal irrespective of the fielding errors the effort may have led to. In order to encourage base-running, I think, a latitude should be allowed, which may justly be reduced hereafter.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring a walk-off hit

Date Saturday, March 30, 1889
Text

[from an article on the new rules by Chadwick] In the case of a fair ball to the outer field when a runner is on third base and only one run is required to win the game the new rules now forbid the umpire from calling “game” until the play following the long hit is completed. Last year in such a case the moment the runner reached home and the winning run was scored the game ended then and there, thereby cutting off the credit of the three-bagger or home-run hit which brought in the winning run. Now the game cannot end until the fair hit ball has been fielded in to the pitcher, thereby giving the batsman full credit on the score for his hit.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring a wild pitch on the third strike-out

Date Wednesday, June 12, 1889
Text

[from Questions Answered] According to rules, yes, but in this respect we do not go by the rules in scoring. If the third strike is a wild pitch it would be manifestly unjust to give the catcher a missed third strike on it. In all such cases we give the error to the pitcher and not credit him with a strike-out.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring assists 2

Date Monday, May 20, 1889
Text

The score of Saturday’s game sent from St. Louis was made out in violation of the new scoring rules, which throw out all assistances for strikes from the assistance column, which can now only contain the record of fielding assistances. Terry is credited with ten assistances, eight of which were on strikes, and Chamberlain with seven, of which five were from strikes.

Source Brooklyn Eagle
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring errors

Date Saturday, April 27, 1889
Text

[Cleveland vs. Indianapolis 4/26/1889] Glasscock's error was excusable, as the ball made a very ugly bound just in front of him.

Source Indianapolis Journal
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring errors on foul balls

Date Wednesday, June 12, 1889
Text

[from Chadwick's column] Ren Mulford...says: “Don't give a fielder an error for a muffed foul fly unless the batsman reaches first base after such misplay has been made. Under the strict interpretation of the rules an error 'is a misplay which allows the striker or base-runner to make one or more bases when perfect play would have insured his being put out.'” This is a mistake. A fielder who drops a foul fly commits an error just as much as when he drops a fair fly ball, inasmuch as he thereby gives the batsman a life.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring errors on foul balls 2

Date Wednesday, July 17, 1889
Text

[from Frank Brunell's column] There is a clear necessity for some agreement among League scorers as to the scoring of a foul fly error. I have always set it down as an error if the man subsequently reached first, but taken no notice of it if he is subsequently retired. Other scorers oppose this plan and some of the reasons for the opposition are good. But if the error is scored why not score an error against a man who misses a ball subsequently handled by another fielder before the runner reaches first? This isn't done. Let us agree on a plan at once. I am not wedded to my plan. But I am stuck on the idea of uniformity.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring hits and errors in 1859

Date Wednesday, January 23, 1889
Text

[from Chadwick's column] I...append...the score of a game, the figures of which were taken from my old score book of 1859—thirty years ago—from which it will be seen that I then kept score according to nearly the same data as now. Here is the score in question: [a box score follows, Star v. Excelsior, scoring R., B. O. A. E.] I could not get any of the clubs to recognize base hits until nearly a dozen years afterwards. Indeed, all the reforms I introduced were brought into operation only after years of efforts to get the players out of old ruts.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring mental errors

Date Friday, June 21, 1889
Text

[Philadelphia vs. Chicago 6/20/1889] Under the present system of scoring Van has no errors charged to his account on the score. If errors of judgment could be scored, however, Van's name would be supplemented with two black marks in the fifth column.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring sacrifice hits 7

Date Wednesday, May 8, 1889
Text

[editorial matter] Scorers everywhere are neglecting to record sacrifice hits. The rules call for the scoring of such hits and the rules should be followed, despite individual opinion as to their value. Only self-opinionated or incompetent scorers will furnish incomplete scores, as without sacrifice hits, which go to make up official records, no score is complete. Eliminate the particularization of the errors and such other nonsense and score the sacrifice hits, and the scores will be just as compact and far more valuable for analysis and reference.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring sacrifices

Date Friday, August 23, 1889
Text

Here is a proposition that ought to receive some attention:--A rule should be adopted before the season's averages are officially compiled that a sacrifice hit should count something in compiling the batting averages. A man who makes a sacrifice deliberately throws away his chance of making a hit, and it at least should not be credited against him as a time at bat.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

scoring stolen base on a base on balls

Date Wednesday, May 22, 1889
Text

President Young decides that a base-runner should be credited with a stolen base under the following circumstances: For instance, Quinn was on first base and Ganzel at bat with two strikes and three balls called. As the next ball is pitched Quinn makes a dive for second, without knowing whether the umpire would call a ball or a strike. He took the chances and should be rewarded accordingly. As it turned out, the umpire called four balls, but Quinn gets a stolen base all the same.

Source Indianapolis Journal
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

season tickets in Columbus

Date Wednesday, January 16, 1889
Text

[from F. W. Arnold's column] [reporting on the meeting of the Columbus Club] It was also agreed by the stockholders that one hundred additional season tickets should be offered to the public at $25 each.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

season tickets in Indianapolis 2

Date Sunday, February 10, 1889
Text

The local base-ball people hope to sell a large number of season tickets for 1889, and the work of canvassing the city will be commenced as soon as other matters of importance are arranged. The cou0pon books for gentlemen will be sold, as they were last season, at $25, and an effort to dispose of 500 will be made. A ladies' book will also be put on sale, but what the price of that will be is not yet known, though it will probably be placed at $16. The attendance of ladies is to be encouraged as much as possible, and hopes are entertained that this class of patronage can be greatly increased over what it was last season.

Source Indianapolis Journal
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

season tickets in Kansas City

Date Wednesday, February 20, 1889
Text

President Speas has decided not to issue more than 100 season tickets to be sold for $25. these were put on the market last week and are being rapidly taken.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

season tickets in Washington; gate receipt split

Date Sunday, January 20, 1889
Text

The Washington management has concluded to issue season tickets at $25 each, with transferable coupons, which in substance means a return to the old system of two years ago, selling three tickets for one dollar. The League has no right to interfere in this matter so long as the home club continues to pay the visitors at the rate of 12 ½ cents for each single admission to the grounds of $150 guarantee. The season-ticket proposition meets with general favor, and as the number is to be limited to 500, the competition for them promises to be lively.

Source New York Sun
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

seeking financial incentives to play off postponed games

Date Friday, September 13, 1889
Text

In explanation of his failure to play off a postpone game in Boston Captain Hanlon says he at first declined to play because his men were in poor shape, but he was afterward willing to accept a proposition providing extra financial inducements were offered. He informed that they they were looking for the championship, while the Pittsburgs looked at the matter from a purely business standpoint. Manager Hart declined to offer anything beyond the usual rates so the game was not played. Captain Hanlon is not stuck on the double game business, especially while traveling.

Source Pittsburgh Dispatch
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

semi-professional ball

Date Sunday, May 12, 1889
Text

In your issue of to-day [5/11] I notice an article that intimates that the McKeesport club is composed of players who are salaried men, and as this is not the case I would like if you would make a contradiction of the article, as there is only one man in our club who gets anything for his playing, and he gets $3 per game; all the rest play for nothing, except that they are to share half the profits (if there is any) at the end of the season, which sis something the other clubs also do, if there is any balance. There has been about $1,300 spent on our grounds, and as that amount will hardly be made this season, you will see that the players are really playing for nothing. Four of our players have played in minor leagues, but three of them graduated from out club, and there is no reason that some people should be jealous of our club because it has been a success so far this season. Hoping you will place us before the public in our true light, I remain, Yours very truly, Frank W. Torreyson, Mgr.

Source Pittsburgh Dispatch
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

shin guards; humor?

Date Sunday, March 24, 1889
Text

...one umpire at least will take more effective measures against the balls and bats of outrageous fortune encountered on the ball field. Sandy McDermott of the Western League is the umpire who will introduce the innovation. Sandy has an excusable regard for Sandy's physiological entirety, and to the end that it shall be safe from the enemy's onslaught has had built for use during the coming season a helmet and cuirass of stout bull's hide, steel-bound and brass-riveted, which shield his head and body. … For his legs Sandy has devised covering somewhat resembling cricketers' foils, but much thicker and stronger, constructed of heavy bull's hide, backed up by hickory broomsticks.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

side contracts and the Brush plan

Date Wednesday, June 5, 1889
Text

[from Questions Answered] The classification rule did not affect certain players who had side contracts with League clubs for a certain number of years. Keefe is said to have had a special contract with New York for a number of years and no subsequent legislation could invalidate it.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

sign stealing; pitcher signs the catcher

Date Sunday, September 15, 1889
Text

[Pittsburgh vs. Washington 9/14/1889] Owing to the absence of his brother, John Irwin was captain for the day, and he claimed to have discovered Staley's signs to his catcher and he was not slow to give his men the benefit of his acquisition. Brother John, however, could not master the puzzle himself, and out of his five times at bat did not a hit mark his stick work.

Source Pittsburgh Dispatch
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

skepticism about the Players League; money men playing coy

Date Sunday, October 13, 1889
Text

The corpse of the League Brotherhood scheme continues to kick spasmodically but nearly all the life is now out of it. It wouldn’t stand investigation. The plan looked nice on paper and the names of capitalists in the different cities that were to open their purses loomed up largely; but, unfortunately for the scheme, when these men were interviewed, they were astonished that they had in any way been mentioned in connection with the scheme. The schemers in this city were particularly unfortunate in naming these men, as ll of these gentlemen–Messrs. Snellenberg, Disston and Forepaugh–have denied in a most emphatic manner any intention of becoming backers of the Brotherhood club, and as far as this city is concerned it is safe to say the Brotherhood will meet with no encouragement.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

sliding to evade the tag

Date Sunday, September 1, 1889
Text

[Chicago vs. Pittsburgh 8/31/1889] Duffy gave the crowd an exhibition of baserunning and sliding in the third. He was on first when Anson hit a hard one to center. Hanlon got it and threw to Kuehne to stop Duffy at second, but to the surprise of the Pittsburgh fielders Duffy did not stop there. He kept right on running, and when he got within ten feet of the bag launched himself into the air, throwing out his right hand as he did so, and using it as a means to check his head and body, while the impetus of his dive carried his legs and hips ahead, and the result was that he made a complete circle around the legs of the “good deacon,” who, although he received the ball from Kuehne in ample time, was too bewildered by Duffy's gymnastic effort to put the ball on him. Lovers of the game at home have seen him so the same thing upon the Chicago grounds.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Soden pleads poverty

Date Wednesday, May 29, 1889
Text

[from an interview of Soden] I do no think there are three League teams who will make a cent this season. New York certainly will not, and I don't think Chicago will make a great deal of money. The whole amount of it will be that the ball players will keep agitating until there will not be four cities in the country which can pay the salaries and retain a team in the League.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Spalding against the foul fly out

Date Wednesday, September 4, 1889
Text

A. G. Spalding favors doing away altogether with the foul catch, and he is on the right tack.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Spalding buys out Reach's sporting goods retail business

Date Wednesday, September 4, 1889
Text

The biggest sporting deal of the season, and, in its way, the biggest on record, was quietly consummated in Philadelphia during the week. On that day Messrs. A. G. Spalding and Brown, of the Chicago branch of the great sporting goods house of Spalding Bros., and Manager J. W. Curtis, of the New York branch, arrived in Philadelphia simultaneously, and before the shades of evening fell their mission was accomplished, and with one bold stroke Spalding Bros. had absorbed their great rival, the A. J. Reach Company, lock, stock and barrel, and made themselves supreme in American, and, in fact, the chief sporting goods house in the world.

The deal goes into effect November 1, when the Reach Company goes out of existence and Spalding Bros. Enter into possession of the great store at 10-22 Market St. By the terms of the deal they secure that store, all its stock and fixtures, the good will of the company, which gives to Spalding Bros. Exclusive control of a great, valuable, and widely extended business, all the patents, patterns and tools for the manufacture of the elaborate and unequaled gymnasium apparatus, of which the Reach Company had a monopoly, and which cannot be duplicated anywhere in the world, and a number of other patents and other rights in various sporting lines. The price paid for this great plant and business is something over $100,000. The members of the Reach Company retire permanently from the retail and general sporting goods business, leaving Spalding Bros. in undisputed control for all time, and retain only their wholesale base ball supply business, confining themselves solely to the manufacture of base ball supplies and of the famous Reach balls, at the big Frankford factory, so the American Association is in no danger of losing its splendid ball.

For Spalding Bros. this great deal means practical control of the world in their line, as, with houses located in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Melbourne and London,and with minor branches in nearly every important city in the United States and Canada, and with vast capital at its command, the firm is now in position to easily maintain its supremacy indefinitely.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Spalding ha a new mascot

Date Saturday, March 9, 1889
Text

Walter Pereina, A. G. Spalding's mascot, arrived in this city from Ceylon yesterday. Mr. Spalding met him there, and, as he seemed very bright, shipped him to New York. He is about 19 years old, and speaks four languages. He is a Tintolese.

Source New York Sun
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Spalding on the Brotherhood negotiations

Date Sunday, November 17, 1889
Text

“The League, said Mr. Spalding, “by the abolishment of the ‘sales system’ and classification rule and by the payment of $250 to Sutcliffe, although technically there was no legal obligation to do this, as Sutcliffe did not sign a Brotherhood contract with the Detroit Club in 1887 containing the salary-reservation clause, has given the players more than they asked for, all of which carries out my promise to Ward that the matters referred to in our June conference could safely be intrusted to the League for a fair consideration and settlement at its annual meeting.

“The League has up to the present time given the Brotherhood everything they have asked for, and if after this action the players are determined to make an effort to break the League and join a rival organization, they must prepare themselves to take the consequences.

Source The Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Spalding puts off the Brotherhood

Date Wednesday, July 3, 1889
Text

While the New Yorks were in Chicago last week President Ward, of the Brotherhood of Ball Players, as chairman of the committee representing his organization, called upon President Spalding and laid before him the questions for the consideration of which President Young has appointed Messrs. Spalding, Day and Rogers a League committee. The details of the conference are not know, as it was conducted privately. It lasted for fully two hours, however, and the questions at issue—the existing classification rule and the proposed abolition of the sales system—were, it is understood, freely discussed.

This much has been learned definitely. President Ward is desirous of arranging a meeting between the two committees at once and President Spalding has not fully made up his mind that the questions at issue are of sufficiently urgent nature to warrant such action. Mr. Spalding, as chairman of the League committee, has taken the matter under advisement, however, and will confer further with the Brotherhood committee. The Sporting Life July 3, 1889

[Spalding’s reply to Ward] “Since my conversation with you on the 24 th ult. I have been in communication with Messrs. Rogers and Day, the other members of the committee appointed by the League to consider all grievances of League players not especially provided for by the League constitution. It is the unanimous opinion of this committee that it is inadvisable to hold a meeting with the Brotherhood Committee at present for the reason that no material interests will suffer by postponing this meeting and for the principal reason that all this committee could do would be to report the result of the conference with recommendation to the League at a special or at the annual meeting. It is contrary to the past policy of the League to call a special meeting in mid-season except for some extraordinary emergency, and we fail to discovery any necessity for immediate action in the points you raise. If it shall appear upon investigation that any wrong has been done any player, whether a member of the Brotherhood or not, it can and will be righted at the annual meeting of the League. Therefore, as chairman of the League Committee, I would suggest that the meeting of the committee be deferred until after the close of the championship season, or until the annual meeting of the League, the exact time and place of such meeting to be decided upon as the time approaches.” The Philadelphia Item July 5, 1889

There will not be any meeting of the League and Brotherhood committees in the near future if the League has its way, as Chairman Spalding, after his long interview with Chairman Ward and due consideration with his fellow committeemen, has concluded that there is no urgent necessity for a mid-summer meeting. The Sporting Life July 10, 1889

[editorial matter] From a League standpoint, in dealing with an organization like the Brotherhood one of two courses must inevitably be pursued. It must be crushed or conciliated. As the League cannot afford, and also has not the nerve, to attempt the crushing-out task, it is surely poor policy to widen the breach and make conciliation more difficult and submission by the players less probable by assuming an attitude of indifference. It would be far better for the League to quit temporizing; meet the issue squarely and at one; to reason with the players; to convince them by irrefutable arguments of the supreme necessity for the classification rule or some similar preservative measure, and having thus made clear its position to leave the alternative or future peace or war to the Brotherhood. A conference at this time would give the latter ample time between now and next fall to consider the situation and to come to a realizing sense of the exigencies and necessities of professional base ball, which so often compel seemingly harsh legislation; and a mutual exchange of views right now may lead to some measure far better than could be evolved in the hurry of an annual meeting. The Sporting Life July10, 1889

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Spalding's plan to classify minor leagues; draft

Date Sunday, July 21, 1889
Text

Clubs are not to be classified arbitrarily. There will be four classes of minor leagues and each minor league can apply for admission to that class in which they can pay the salaries and live. If a league is once classified and afterwards finds it cannot support itself in its classification it can be reclassified in a lower class, or if it finds that it can well afford to do so it can be admitted to a higher classification. There are to be four classifications.

Class A will be permitted to pay salaries not to exceed $200 a month for a player or over $2,000 per month for a team. For the purpose of illustration, suppose we classify the present organization. Class A would include the International Association, Western Association, and California League.

Class B, to pay not over $150 per man and $1,500 per team, would include the Atlantic Association and Tri-State League.

Class C, to pay not over $100 per man and $1,000 per team, would include the Central State League and the Texas League.

Class D would include the Middle States League, New York State League, Michigan State League, and Delaware State League. Leagues in this classification would not be permitted to pay their players more than $60 per month salary, or $600 per team.

The price per league for protection under the National agreement would be as follows: Class A, $2,000; Class B, $1,000; Class C, $500; Class D, $250. This tax, understand, would be not on each club, but on each organization. Thus, a Class D club would pay $31.25 in an eight club league and $41.67 in a six club league, and if a player was taken from one of these clubs by a club in a higher classification the club would receive $125 for him, the player would receive $62.50, and the league from which he was taken would get $62.40. These figures would increase pro rata in the higher organizations. The major leagues would pay $1,500 for players taken from Class A leagues, of which half would go to the club, one-quarter to the player, and one-quarter to the league from which he was taken. The price for Class B would be $1,000, and for Class C players it would be $500.

The major leagues would be permitted to take players from any of the minor leagues upon payment of the stipulated bonus. The Class A clubs would be permitted to take players from any league in a lower classification, and so on down the scale. It will thus be seen that the minor league clubs would be training schools for leagues of higher classification, and could not be robbed by each other, and when a player whom they had developed was taken by requisition to a higher class league they would receive a bonus for their trouble in developing him, and the player himself would receive a premium for his ability.

There is one point in Mr. Spalding's scheme which must be carefully arranged else it will lead to endless trouble, and possibly spoil the whole plan. This matter was particularly called to my attention in a long argument with Mr. James O'Rourke of the New York club. That gentleman very ably dissected the scheme, so far as he knew it, and undertook to show that it would be opposed by the minor league clubs. One of his strongest points was the right that clubs in higher classifications and in the major leagues would have to take players from lower grade clubs, and trouble would be occasioned thereby. The strength of Mr. O'Rourke's argument was mainly due to Mr. Spalding's proposition that players could be taken on a week's notice.

It is claimed that a minor league club might be winning the championship in its association by reason of the superiority of one or two of its players and some association of a higher class could swoop down upon them and take these players, and so knock the team out of its well-won honors. This objection could be met by a rule that would require at least a month's notice before a player can be taken from any club which holds the lead in any league, or, as has been suggested by The Tribune, it might be wise to prohibit the taking of any player until the season following that in which notice should be given that he was wanted. This matter will need to be given careful study in perfecting the details of the plan.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Spalding's response to the Brotherhood meeting

Date Wednesday, May 29, 1889
Text

President Spalding, of the Chicago Club, was nailed as soon as he reached home. When told that the Brotherhood had a secret meeting at New York Sunday, that every club in the League was represented, and that the object was to formulate a plan of action looking toward rebellion, the president of the Chicago Club professed ignorance of any such meeting. “I didn't hear anything about it. What does the Brotherhood want?” he asked, and when told that the ball players' organization felt aggrieved over the adoption of the classification rule, in that the League magnates had violated their agreement with the Brotherhood, and that the National Agreement had been used for purposed for which it was never designed, Mr. Spalding said:-- “Oh, pshaw! The players won't do anything. It's all talk. What will we do if the players rebel? Why, we'll go right along just as we have for the last thirteen years. But there is nothing in it. The players have too much sense to attempt anything of the kind.

Source The Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Spalding's version of the events leading the Players' League

Date Tuesday, November 12, 1889
Text

“Now, I will tell you the cause of this new scheme of the Brotherhood, and the sole reason,” said Mr. Spalding to a Dispatch reporter. “It was nothing more or less than $200. Early last summer in Chicago, Ward called on me, and as Chairman of the Brotherhood committee, demanded that the League should modify its sales system and the total abolishment of the classification rule. He also wanted the case of Sutcliffe, of Cleveland, considered. Sutcliffe was being paid $200 less by the Forest City folks than the Detroits had paid him. This was the only players' grievance the Brotherhood had, and I told Ward that as it was such a small amount I had not the slightest doubt that the matter could be satisfactorily arranged. I also said that it was not customary for the League to hold a meeting so early in the season, and furthermore, I thought the three demands did not deserve special consideration. I, however, promised to write to my colleagues of the League committee, Messrs. Day and Rogers, and I did so. Their answer was to the effect that I had given Ward the proper answer, and that a meeting should be held later in the season. I apprised Ward of the committee's decision, and his answer was that his committee had been discharged, and therefore all discussions were at an end, so far as the Brotherhood was concerned. Thus you see that the trifling sum of $200 was the cause of all this late agitation.

Source Pittsburgh Dispatch
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

spitballs?

Date Friday, March 8, 1889
Text

A gentleman of this city has patented an arrangement for holding a wet sponge to a ball player's belt. It will take more than a sponge to keep balls players from putting their fingers to their mouths.

Source New York Sun
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

spring training regimen; signs

Date Tuesday, March 26, 1889
Text

Manager Bancroft assumed control of the affairs of the ball club yesterday morning and at once decided upon a definite system of field practice which will go into effect to-day. His plan is to place the men in their regular positions, with a pitcher in the box, and a catcher behind the bat, while each man will take a turn with the stick, and in this way the players will put in four hours a day, an order to that effect having been posted up in the club-house. This was one of Captain Glasscock's ideas and it promises to result in training the men in the best possible manner. A system of signs or signals will also be arranged within a few days, and these will be worked upon until the players are perfectly familiar with them. This will be the first step in the direction of good team work, and will be followed with other measures of a similar character, with a view of securing the full strength of the team in championship games.

Source Indianapolis Journal
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

St. Louis Club ownership

Date Wednesday, December 25, 1889
Text

[from an interview of Comiskey] “There have been a great many reports afloat to the effect that you are a heavy stockholder in the Browns. Is there any truth in the reports?” “There is just his much truth in it: Of the 200 shares of stock Von der Ahe owns 150 and 49 are owned by other parties, and I own one solitary share.

Source The Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

St. Louis Club refused admission to the PL

Date Thursday, December 19, 1889
Text

[dateline New York] Of all the base ball men who have been in this city to attend or to watch the meeting of the new Players' League Chris Von der Ahe is the most angry and the most discouraged. He came here with the belief that he would be admitted to the new league and in fact many of the delegates acknowledged that the whole thing was cut and dried. Even up to the time that the matter of admitting the St. Louis club to the new league came before the meeting everybody was sure that the club would get in; but it did not and the “boss” president will go home and try to form a new league with the remnant of the old American Association.

When the question of the admission of St. Louis to the league came up the Pittsburg delegates exploded a bomb in the shape of a flat refusal to get out. They were int to stay, and stay they would. They showed any number of telegrams from men in Pitsburg who offered to take stock in the club. They showed that they were perfectly capable of supporting their club. That settled it, and the St. Louis president was notified that there was no chance for his club at present.

Chris, on his own behalf, said that he had been reasonably sure of getting in the league, but now that he had not been able to do so, he would either try to build up the old American Association or go into the Western League.

“It is hard to tell just what I will do just now,” said Chris, “but the playing season has not begun yet, and many things are likely to turn up by the time it does.” St. Louis Republic December 19, 1889

[from an interview of Von der Ahe] I went to New York as the representative of the American Association, with full power to act, not only in so far as St. Louis' joining the brotherhood was concerned, but as to consolidating the whole American Association with the brotherhood. I had a pleasant time with the players, talked the matter over with them and soon concluded that their ideas of doing business and mine were so widely different that we could not agree, and all thoughts of an amalgamation ended right there. As soon as I left New York I set to to work to reorganize the American Association.... St. Louis Republic December 22, 1889

Source St. Louis Republic
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

St. Louis hold-outs signed

Date Wednesday, April 17, 1889
Text

[from Joe Pritchard's column] The defeat of the Browns by the Pittsburgs, on Monday, by a score of 7 to 3, was the straw that broke the camel's back. The home team played a “don't-care-whether-we-in” kind of a game, and the crowd in attendance, as well as the players of the Browns, left the park after the game was finished with a look of disgust on their faces. Comiskey and his men were guyed unmercifully by the crowd from the time the first ball was pitched until the game was finished. “Comie” can stand guying if his team is ahead, but if the Brows are behind he don't relish it one little bit. After the game on Monday the Browns' manager told President Von der Ahe that he thought that it would be a good idea for some one to see Robinson, Chamberlain, King and McCarthy, and offer to compromise matters. The boss president was slow to give his consent to such an arrangement, but after studying over the matter carefully he told “Comie” to see the boys and compromise with them, if such a thing was possible. The Browns' captain-manager had a short talk with McCarthy, Robinson and Chamberlain on Monday evening, and they arrived at a conclusion in a very short time. The three men were told to report at the park at 10 o'clock Tuesday morning and sign a contract, which they did, and they played in the game against the Pittburgs the same afternoon. Several papers here and elsewhere have stated that the players threw up their hands and asked to be signed at the prices named by Mr. Von der Ahe, but this is not the case. There was a compromise, and it was brought about by Manager Comiskey, who was anxious to have his team in good shape for April 17, when it will go up against Gus Schmelz's Cincinnati team. I have watched the recent “lock-out” with considerable interest, and I will say right here without attempting to injure either the management of the Brown Stockings or the players who saw fit to hold out for what they claimed was just that neither side was very firm. Mr. Von der Ahe was aware of the fact that he would stand a poor show in the championship race without the help of the unsigned players, and the players wanted to get to work because it was a matter of bread and butter with them. Neither the players nor the management has any room or cause to flap their wings and crow, because the fight was ended by a compromise, and all the parties concerned seem to be well satisfied with the turn things took on Tuesday. The Sporting Life April 17, 1889

[from Joe Pritchard's column] [relating a conversation between Von der Ahe and Charley King's father] “Charley is bull-headed,” said Mr. King, “and I have told him that he had better sign with you at the amount you have offered him--$3,200. It seems like some of the other players entered into an agreement with my son not to sign unless their demands were acceded to. When I noticed that Chamberlain, McCarthy and Robinson had had signed, I told my son that he was in the 'nine hold,' and that is the reason I wanted to see you. He has been working at his trade—that of brick-layer—all spring, and he is in good shape to pitch good ball.” Mr. King's story of the combination shows that some kind of an agreement did exist between the players. The Sporting Life April 24, 1889

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

St. Louis tried to jump to the PL

Date Wednesday, December 25, 1889
Text

[reporting on the PL meeting 12/16-12/17/1889] Mr. Von der Ahe left for St. Louis last night very much disappointed and decidedly disgruntled over his failure to secure admission to the Players' League. He came here with the belief that he would be admitted to the new League, and, in fact, many of the delegates acknowledged that the whole thing was cut and dried. But they were mistaken.

When the question of the admission of St. Louis to the League came up the Pittsburg delegates exploded a bomb in the shape of a flat refusal to get out. They were in to stay, and stay they would. They showed any number of telegrams from men in Pittsburg who offered to take stock in the club. They showed that they were perfectly capable of supporting their club. That settled it, and the St. Louis president was notified that there was not chance for his club at present.

Von der Ahe, on his own behalf, said that he had been reasonably sure of getting in the Players' League, but now that he had not been able to do so he would either try to build up the American Association or go into the Western League. “It is hard to tell what I will do just now,” said Chris. “But the playing season has not begun yet, and many things are likely to turn up by the time it does.

Source The Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

St. Louis's side of the story of the jumps

Date Wednesday, November 20, 1889
Text

[from a statement by John J. O'Neill:] You have been aware of the statements that have been circulated through the corridors of this hotel the last few days. The members of the clubs are present and will bear me out when I state that every statement furnished the press of any 'combine' or organization having for its object any injury to either the Brooklyn or Cincinnati Club is absolutely without the slightest foundation. We became convinced some time since that it was the intention of the Brooklyn and Cincinnati clubs to go into the League. Mr. Von der Ahe has in his possession a dispatch to Cincinnati parties, sent several days ago, showing that such was the intention of the Cincinnati Club. We realized that we were dealing with a conspiracy and we proposed to only take for the head of this organization a man above suspicion and absolutely removed from pecuniary interest in the Association. Mr. Phelps has been a friend of the Association from its inception, and had at different times been identified with the Association, and was known as a lawyer of considerable ability and a man of unimpeachable character, and, not having a dollar's interest in the Louisville Club, we believe him a man who would not, even for the club in his own city, give the slightest favor inimical to any other club, and we determined that no matter what should happen we intended to preserve this organization from disintegration and from the attacks of some men whom we believed were conspirators. The Sporting Life November 20, 1889

replacement clubs for the AA

[reporting the AA meeting 11/16/1889] The American Association adjourned to-day until Dec. 9, to meet at Columbus. The only business done to-day was to admit Syracuse to membership. The finance committee leaves to-night for Rochester and Toledo. It has been decided to admit those clubs to complete the circuit if arrangements can be made. Rochester is sure as Pat. Powers received a dispatch to that effect after the Association had adjourned. Detroit will be ignored and Toledo taken if possible. Great secrecy is being maintained about Toledo so as not to scare off Detroit if Toledo will not come in. The Sporting Life November 20, 1889

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

stashing an extra ball under the bleachers

Date Wednesday, August 7, 1889
Text

[from Joe Pritchard's column] The New York papers are now boasting of the movement that Lawyer O'Rourke “gets on himself” whenever a ball is knocked under the bleachers of the New York grounds in O'Rourke's territory. It is said that Jim skins under the seats and gets the ball in time to hold the man on third base. This is good for O'Rourke, but when Hugh Nicol's fast feats are considered, Jim is laid in the shade. Probably Jim can't remember just where he placed the extra ball. In an “under-the-seats play” a good memory is essential. While Hugh Nicol was a member of the St. Louis team he threw out several batsmen on hits under the right field bleachers, but he could not work the trick successfully unless the ball in play had been in use long enough to become dirty. Hugh would report for duty every morning, and before he left the park for his dinner he would place a couple, and sometimes three balls under the right field seats, and he knew just where to find them, too, when necessity demanded it. When a batsman of an opposing nine knocked the ball under the right field seats Hugh would go over the inside fence in a twinkle, grasp the hidden ball, and before the runner could reach second, “Robbie” would be waiting on the line, ball in hand, to retire him. Of course Captain Comiskey was not on to the scheme, and he has often purchased Nicol a good cigar after the game on account of his quick movements in returning the ball to the diamond. When Nicol played here there was no ground rule allowing a home run for a ball hit under the seats. Nicol will probably deny having practiced this little trick on the boys, but it is true nevertheless, because Dave Foutz whispered the story into my ear the last time the Brooklyns visiting St. Louis. Fact!

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

status of the Indianapolis franchise; ownership; finances

Date Thursday, January 24, 1889
Text

Mr. Brush says that the club is out of the control of the old organization, and all applications for it must be made to the League. He stated positively to a reporter that the transfer of the franchise was “absolute and unconditioned” and that the only reason for transferring the lease of the grounds, and giving a bill of sale for the grand stand to McCutheon, was to secure him the money he had advanced, and that he would be perfectly willing to transfer all his rights thus obtained to any parties who might operate the club here. The attorney of the syndicate offered $16,000 to-day for the club. New York Sun January 24, 1889

Articles of incorporation of the new Indianapolis Base Ball Club have been filed for record. The capital stock is $30,000, divided into 300 shares of $100 each. The stockholders are: Fred L. Mayer, 20 shares; Ford Woods, 30; R. K. Dryfus, 30; W. S. Schmidt, 40; Henry Jameson, 30; George F. Branham, 30; Charles F. Meyer, 40; J. F. Brush, 40; A. B. Meyer, 30; Tom Taggart, 10. New York Sun January 26, 1889

A detailed statement has been prepared by our base ball club management and will be sent to all stockholders and creditors and all interested in the matter. The financial operations are all set out at length, and the balance on the wrong side amounts to $19,250. With the exception of a few details of minor importance this report closes the work of the Board of Directors of the Indianapolis Base Ball Association. That the :Board could have succeeded in bringing the club out from under the cloud of financial trouble, and eventually have created a value for the original stock if permitted to continue by a few of the creditors, there is no manner of doubt in the minds of six members of the Board, and they tried all means within their power to secure this permission, coupled with an offer to personally carry the bank debt and furnish sufficient additional funds preliminary to the opening of the coming season, which would amount to several thousand dollars more. New York Sun January 27, 1889

The true story, as told by a gentleman in this city who knows what he is talking about, is as follows: “The Indianapolis Club has some 200 stockholders, many of them holding not more than $100 worth of stock. All of these gentlemen were very willing to share the profits, but when it came to making up the losses, they were not there. It was to get rid of these stockholders that the franchise was turned over to the League. The big stockholders have already formed a new company, and when they get the thing in working order, they will get the franchise back from the League and the ground and the grand stand from the gentlemen to whom it was made over, and all will be well.” New York Sun January 28, 1889

Application was made before Judge Walker late this afternoon for the appointment of a receiver for the Indianapolis Base Ball Club. Paul H. Krauss and George Pfingst, guarantors each in the amount of $500, were the plaintiffs. They were assured of fifty cents on the dollar under the present disposition, but were not satisfied. Upon showing made, Judge Walker appointed Charles Dryer receiver, and fixed his bond at $20,000. Mr. Brush received $15,000 from President Young of the League for the base ball franchise, and that money is now being applied to the payment of the club's debts, so far as it will go. The bank debt and the amounts due the directors have already been paid, and the guarantors are being paid $270 each, which is 54 per cent. of their claims without interest. New York Sun February 2, 1889

Source New York Sun
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

stealing signs 2

Date Tuesday, September 3, 1889
Text

The Philadelphia club has suddenly discovered what several league clubs have known all season, that the sign batteries of the club's batteries are generally known. Buffinton's are with his mouth and Sanders' with his foot.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

stealing signs 3

Date Wednesday, September 4, 1889
Text

[from an interview of an unidentified Boston player] “Now, I'll tell you why the Phillies' pitchers are being hit so hard lately. The secret lies in the fact that about every club in the League is onto their signs. Take Buffinton for example, he signs with his mouth. If you see him press his lips close together you expect a fast straight ball and that is what we are laying back for. When he stands in the box with his mouth open it means that he will put one of his drop balls over the plate, and we simply leave that go as it is hard to hit, and besides generally drops so low as to be nothing but a 'ball' anyhow. Thus you see by not going after his drop balls we get him into a hole, and he must then put them over straight, and those are the ones we lace out. Sanders signs with his left foot. If he has it turned to the left it is a curve ball. Casey and Gleason are also doing their own signing, and we are dead onto them.” In using the above we are not betraying any confidence, as the Boston-Philadelphia series is now practically over, and the Bostons can no longer lose anything by the Philadelphia batters getting up new signs. “Indeed,” said one of the Boston men last Tuesday night, “I hope the Phillies will change their signs now before they meet New York again and thus down the latter, as that is the 0only club we have to fight for the pennant.” In this connection it may be added that it is poor policy for the pitcher to give the signs, as nine out of ten times the opposing team get onto them in a very short time and then it means almost certain defeat for that side. If the catcher asks for the sign so he can hide it that the coachers will scarcely get onto it, while the batsman must depend on the men in the coachers' box to give him the cue, as he dare not look around else he is not ready to bat, pitchers being always on the watch to catch batters napping. The combination sign, i.e., giving two or three at once, is the only safe one, as then the opposing side never knows which one is meant, though the battery understands it. Welch, Keefe and Ewing, Clarkson and Bennett, Seward and Robinson and several other batteries we know of use the combination sign with marked success, and they frequently change it in the middle of a game when the opposing side makes a number of safe hits in succession and they get suspicious that the other side is onto them.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Stern on the jump from the AA

Date Wednesday, December 11, 1889
Text

[from Ren Mulford's column] [from an interview of Aaron Stern] The Association with its disgraceful squabbles and wrangles—the charges and countercharges that this club and that was running affairs—grew very distasteful to me, and Brooklyn shared that feeling with Cincinnati. It was only a question of time when the Association would be disrupted. If it had not died this year it would have been crippled as badly in '90. Brooklyn and Cincinnati both wanted places in the League. We desired to make the transfer together and the opportunity was presented. Had the League not accepted both cities at this time Brooklyn would certainly have purchased Washington's franchise for it had released Mr. Byrne from the pledge we had made to act in unison. The treatment Cincinnati and Brooklyn received from the combine left no other way open. Cincinnati would have followed Brooklyn just as soon as we could have purchased Indianapolis' franchise. That was the plan of campaign after the combine had shown its hand. The Association with all its bitter animosities is better dead than a source of continued strife detrimental to honest, clean ball—such as the League always has and always will play.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

substitute player

Date Wednesday, March 20, 1889
Text

[from Chadwick's column] In any part of the game after the first inning and at the close of an inning, the captain of either nine can call for a and place him in the position of any player of the nine he chooses to retire from the field, irrespective of any player being disabled by illness or injury. But the retired player cannot again take part in the game.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

substitutes and two umpire system in the Players League

Date Wednesday, November 27, 1889
Text

[editorial matter] In permitting the introduction of any regular substitute at any period of a game, and in adopting the double umpire system, the New Players' National League has placed itself squarely in advance of the National League and in line with the public demand on at least one important particular. The double umpire system is the inevitable system of the future, and in first adopting it, the Brotherhood men scored a clever point. The Sporting Life November 27, 1889 [N.B. The PL in fact adopted the same substitute rule as the NL. See TSL 12/25/1889]

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Sunday baseball outlawed in Cincinnati

Date Wednesday, August 21, 1889
Text

[from Ren Mulford's column] The superintendent of police having notified theatrical and base ball managers that Sunday performances and base ball games will not hereafter be permitted, Manager Stern to-day called on Mayor Mosby to ask permission to play the remaining four games that are scheduled here for Sundays. The Mayor made a positive refusal, and told him that a real, bona fide arrest of managers and players would be made on the sport if games were attempted. The club has four more Sunday games to play, and has arranged to play Sunday's scheduled game with the Columbus team, on the grounds in Ludlow, In Kentucky, on the line of the Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway. The stands will not hold more than 1000 people, and the grounds can only be reached by train. Three specials will be run over the road that day. The grounds are a pretty poor apology for the present park. New stands may be built, but that is a question for adjustment later on. The Sporting Life August 21, 1889

[from Ren Mulford's column] The suppression of Sunday ball, while feared, was rather unexpected, and it was the result of a demand that the Owen law be enforced without favor. One of its provisions brings Sunday theatricals and base ball on the same ground with the Sunday saloon. Theatricals and the saloons were abated, but base ball continued to be played, and the only disagreeable feature was the regular Sunday night arrest of Manager Scnmelz and his Monday morning appearance in the police court. A double-leaded “defi” that Heuck's intended to ignore the Sunday law is generally charged as being responsible for the screws which the Mayor has put on both the theatres and base ball. It has been years since these sleeping laws have been enforced in this erstwhile “wide-open” city, and under the new regime Cincinnati joins New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Cleveland, Baltimore, and other cities—quite as prosperous—in reserving the first day of the week for rest, without accompanying fire works, beer and other etceteras of an amusement line. If Cincinnati—no one doubts its ability to shine in such society—is debarred from wearing a League crown, then it is absolutely certain that new grounds will be opened for Sunday games in Kentucky. Cincinnati, with League ball and advanced prices, can live without Sunday games and make just as much money as the Association team does now. The Sporting Life August 28, 1889

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Sunday games in Brooklyn

Date Wednesday, November 27, 1889
Text

[from J. F. Donnally's column] Some people have raised a cry that the loss of Sunday games will seriously affect the finances of the Brooklyn Club, but, as an even fate adjusts all things, it is more than probable that even had Brooklyn remained in the Association it would have been an impossibility to play at Ridgewood on Sundays next season. The panic raised by the notoriety-seeking cranks, who used bigotry as the vehicle to wheel themselves into public notice, has become epidemic and almost every church now has its Sunday observance society, which quite overlooks beer-selling, prostitution and things in that line, to harp on base ball. It's the thing, you know, and attract most attention. These people have practically joined forces on the question of Sunday ball games, and were going to have it all arranged to swoop down on the Brooklyn Club and give it a neck blow. Having joined the League now, all this rush will be unnecessary, and the cranks, taking the victory to themselves, will rather tend to increase the clubs' regular patronage, as many who would not go to see the club play on account of the Sunday games matter will, now that the ban has been lifted, flock to the club's standard.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Sunday games, liquor sales in the League

Date Wednesday, May 1, 1889
Text

The League baby of Cleveland has this spring violated the League constitution by playing a Sunday game, a violation which involved forfeiture of League membership. It is not, however, likely to be severely, if at all, disciplined in view of the fact that the new York Club did the same thing last season and has besides for years openly and brazenly defied the League law relative to selling liquor by running a bar in full blast under the grand stand at the Polo Grounds. If the League could afford to wink at and condone such a flagrant violation of an important League law it will hardly strain much at a mere Sunday exhibition game.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Syracuse backs out of the AA; International clubs rebuff the AA

Date Wednesday, December 4, 1889
Text

The week just closed has changed the base ball situation here [Syracuse] very materially, and after all the hullabaloo made about joining the ranks of the American Association the Syracuse directors have decided to tone down somewhat and remain in the International League. This decision is now thought to be the mos wise one, and it is generally admitted on all sides that the directors have shown good sense in the matter. As Vice President A. K. Dickinson said to your correspondent:-- “Which is the more sensible, to remain in a league that shows signs of having a good foothold and strong membership, or go into one that is evidently making its last dying kick. Syracuse as an International city is strong, and to throw up this position for one of unknown quality is foolishness. The American Association, or its remnant, is evidently in a bad way, and joining its ranks is going into a great uncertainty and taking serious chances. At Detroit last week the Syracuse delegates evidently held the key to the situation. They news that the City of the Straits has decided to maintain her franchise in the International, and that Toronto and Toledo will do likewise, keeps the old chain without a missing link.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

taking an extra base a 'steal'

Date Friday, May 3, 1889
Text

[Athletic vs. Brooklyn 5/2/1889] ...O’Brien hit a beautiful bounder to left field... The Collins forwarded O’Brien by a sacrifice, and on Burns’ telling bounder to right field, which sent O’Brien to third easily, the latter ran in, he seeing that Purcell did not handle the ball quick enough for a throw home. It was, in fact, a steal home, O’Brien being quick to take advantage of plays of this kind. Brooklyn Eagle May 3, 1889

a player delegated to call foul balls when umpire behind the pitcher

[Chicago vs. Cleveland 5/3/1889] In the first inning, with Duffy at the plate and Ryan on first [both Chicago players], Barnum, who was behind the pitcher, asked Anson to watch fouls. The Captain took a positition near the batsman and the crowd on the left bleaching boards began shouting: “Get out o'that.” “Sit down.” “See where he is.” The Captain turned round and said: “Gentlemen, I'm put here to watch fouls.” Then they cheered him. When he led off in the second inning he was cheered from every stand. Chicago Tribune May 4, 1889

Source Brooklyn Eagle
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

taking in Brooklyn and Cincinnati a blunder by the League

Date Wednesday, November 27, 1889
Text

[editorial matter] The assertion of The Sporting Life that the admission of Brooklyn and Cincinnati was a blunder, or worse, and that thereby the Brotherhood was lifted to a greater prominence and its chances of life vastly increased, still goes, and the events of the past week bear us out to a remarkable degree. The fact that Brooklyn and Cincinnati were willing to joint the League doesn't cut any figure. They could not have entered the League without the latter's invitation, and that the League, without the spur of necessity, took advantage of a family quarrel to strengthen itself, as it supposed, is patent, and quite as inexcusable in morals as would be the disruption of a man's family because of a quarrel or because some other man of greater income could offer inducements as to comforts and luxuries beyond the poorer man's means. By that act they ruthlessly slaughtered the American Association without the slightest regard for the enormous damage entailed upon the property of friendly clubs; wiped out a number of hitherto valuable franchises; practically ruined a number of men; imperiled the existence of still another friendly league, because if the Association is to live, the International :League must become disrupted; made of the National Agreement a hollow mockery; left the Association a prey to the Brotherhood League, and gave the latter a chance to strengthen itself such as it could never have anticipated. In short, the League by that act caused widespread disaster to many interests and has precipitated a condition in base ball bordering on the chaotic. Not in ten years has such a gloomy, uncertain situation presented itself, and there's not telling now what each day may bring forth; inf act, the progress of the game has been temporarily most effectually stayed, if not put back half a dozen years, as it will take time and much treasure to repair damages and reform the lines.

Instead ...we have the Brotherhood League now in place of the American Association, and dividing public attention with the National League. Since our last issue the Brotherhood has signed a great number of its own pledged players and quite a number of Association stars. Meantime the League has induced half a dozen of its old players to desert their Brotherhood and return to the League ranks, and yet has produced little or no impression on the Brotherhood rank and file. With the American Association intact to-day, these League captures would have produced a decided sensation and proved a serious blow to the Brotherhood, because it would not have been able to offset these desertions with the stars of the Association, and also could not use these same Association stars as a club to bring hesitating Brotherhood men into submission. As it stands the Brotherhood has all the best of the situation, as the Association is helpless and its best players, realizing its inevitable end and eager for the market where the highest salaries prevail, or one by one falling willingly into the Brotherhood net and nullifying the League's plan of dividing the enemy's forces; while the League, fettered by the National Agreement, is compelled to stand idly by until the final collapse comes, by which time the Brotherhood will have gleaned the wheat, leaving the League the husks. Is this picture overdrawn? Read the answer in the record of the past week. The Sporting Life November 27, 1889

[editorial matter] The crisis for the [Brotherhood] came when Glasscock and the other Indianapolis players deserted to the National League. Then the Brotherhood leaders for the first time showed symptoms of panic, and the backers for a moment began to weaken, because they feared that these men—who have posed so prominently as martyrs to League tyranny and for whom the Brotherhood had made such a fight—were but types of the entire body of professionals and that the bulk of them could not be relied upon even under oath or contract. But the League chose but poor instruments to lead the expected revolt; the rank and file of the Brotherhood remained steady, the confidence of the leaders was quickly regained, the financial men inspired with new courage and the net result of the League was only the handful of men with which the break was started. Right here the fatality of the move against the Association was made evident. With that organization intact, and with no resources open to the Brotherhood leaders, the Indianapolis break might have led to a stampede and the battle might have been over now. Instead of that the defection was quickly made good by a draft on Association talent, thus steadying the entire line, and to-day the new League is further advanced than it would have been under the old conditions, or than it hoped to be when it postponed its next meeting until January. So many men have signed inf act, so few desertions have taken place, that the backers have been stimulated to extraordinary energy and have so far perfected their arrangements that the date for permanent organization has been advanced fully a month. For all of which it must and does thank the League's cruel, needless and suicidal blow at the American Association. The Sporting Life December 4, 1889

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

talk of Brooklyn jumping to the League if it won the pennant

Date Thursday, October 10, 1889
Text

President Byrne said the other day that, in case the Brooklyns won the American Association championship, he thought that it would be to the advantage of the club to be in the League. He thought that the base ball enthusiasts were somewhat tired of seeing the same club play year after year and that a change to the League would be the proper thing. The Philadelphia Item October 10, 1889, quoting the New York Sun

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

talk of St. Louis and Louisville jumping to the Western Association

Date Friday, December 20, 1889
Text

It is expected a special meeting of the Western Association managers will be held immediately after the holidays to invite the St. Louis and Louisville clubs to join the Western Association. The St. Paul and Minneapolis managers are enthusiastically in favor of the project. President Thompson of St. Paul said this afternoon that such a move had been expected for some time and intimated that letters had already been passing. Mr. Thompson said he was certain that no attempt would be made to reorganize the American Association, and that if St. Louis played ball at all in 1890 it would be with the Western Association. MR. Von der Ahe's remarks in New York yesterday were a hint of what he intended to do. If Louisville asks to come in, the Kentucky club will be admitted without question. Mr. Thompson was in doubt as to what would be done about the number of clubs. The organization is now composed of eight clubs and the admission of two more would make a 10 club league. He was not in favor of dropping Sioux City and Des Moines because both had raised enough money to guarantee them through the season and all the others can support themselves. The votes of both St. Paul and Minneapolis will be cast in favor of a 10-club league. St.

Source St. Louis Republic
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Talk of a minor league combine; foreshadowing the American League; minors resisting the majors

Date Saturday, November 2, 1889
Text

Secretary Morton has notified the managers of clubs in minor leagues in every part of the country to send representatives to the Western Association's meeting. An alliance, offensive and defensive, will be formed, and then all will lay back on their oars to await the action of the league and brotherhood meetings. The brotherhood meeting will be held Monday, November 11, and the league the day following. If the league passes unreasonable rul3es relating to the minor associations, Morton's plan is to receive propositions from the brotherhood. Should these propositions not meet with favor, a general sessions of the minor leagues is pretty sure to result. Morton has a big scheme for the government of these associations, which has in view the Western Association becoming to the minor associations what the National League has been in the past. In a nutshell, Morton proposes that the Western Association shall become an open competitor to the National League. St. Louis Republic November 2, 1889

The Herald says President Riely V. Miller of the International Base Ball Association to-day appointed Mangars Leadly of Detroit, Dickinson of Syracuse, Fitzgerald of Buffalo and Dixon of Hamilton a committee to represent the International Association at the board of arbitration meeting, to be held in New York on November 18. This was done at the request of all International clubs. Should the board of arbitration attempt to rescind the guaranteed protection given to minor leagues, these gentlemen will carry the matter into the courts. They claim that they have $200,000 invested in players, which, should protection be rescinded, would be lost, and that under such circumstances an international franchise would be of little value. On the other hand, they are willing to come to any fair agreement; that minor leagues would not ask an excessive price for players wanted by the big leagues. In case the board of arbitration attempts to withdraw protection, the minor leagues will all band together, claiming that the articles of agreement are running contracts, which cannot be rescinded, as the minor leagues have fulfilled all requirements, and will begin legal action restraining the big leagues from taking their players. St. Louis Republic November 5, 1889

Source St. Louis Republic
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

talk of an Association brotherhood

Date Wednesday, July 3, 1889
Text

[from the Louisville correspondent] The St. Louis men being here to play their series, they and the Louisville men held several conferences Saturday evening and night, and the news got out that they had organized an Association Brotherhood of Base Ball Players, patterned after that of the League. All the players of each club joined it. They were very secret about the affair and refused absolutely to talk to any reporters concerning it. I asked several of them if such an association had been formed, but they politely refused to say yes or no and walked away. That such a society has been formed there is no doubt, but the exact nature of its regulations and aims cannot be defined. A paper was drawn up and all the men signed it. A copy of this paper was taken away by the St. Louis men when they left and the original was carried with the Louisvilles when they went to Kansas City, so I am informed. For some time it had been intended to take such a step as this by the Association players and the plan had been hurried up by the treatment of the Louisville players at Baltimore. They and St. Louis will carry the articles of agreements to all the other clubs to sign.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

talk of moving the pitcher back

Date Wednesday, August 21, 1889
Text

In common with many other players, John Morrill thinks the pitchers ought to be put back five feet. That is only a question of time. The pitcher's overshadowing importance must be reduced, and an increased pitching distance is the only thing that will do it without giving the batsman undue advantage.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

talk of the AA merging with the PL

Date Friday, December 13, 1889
Text

The stories form Columbus about amalgamation between the Players' League and American Association tell only the wishes of the latter and the many concessions which it will make for a chance at life under the former's wing. For such a chance the association remnant will drop Sunday games, abrogate the reserve rule, subscribe to the guarantee fund, and do anything asked of it. But there will be no amalgamation. The players in the Players' League are opposed, almost to a man, to it, and nearly all the capitalist agree with them. The Philadelphia Players' club would like to combine on liberal terms with the Athletics and take their name, but there is no chance for Columbus or St. Louis. The story that no association players have been touched since Ward's original visit to Columbus, at the urging of the clubs' attorney, is not true. O'Neil has come to Chicago, Weyhing has gone to Brooklyn, and Cunningham to Philadelphia within the last week. The Players' League will start with clubs only in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Brooklyn, Pittsburg, Cleveland, Buffalo, and Chicago.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

talk of the Giants returning to the Polo Grounds

Date Wednesday, June 5, 1889
Text

[from W. I. Harris's column] Will they get back to the Polo Grounds? It is a hard question to decide. The situation is simply this. The aldermen have not ordered the grading of the street through the grounds and show no disposition to do so. The fences being down the grounds are occupied by amateur ball clubs and loafers of both sexes all day, and at night the grand stand forms a cheap and luxurious lodging for all the tramps in Harlem, male and female. Such a state of affairs has called forth a protest and a petition from the abutting residents to Commissioner Gilroy to erect a fence across the street on both sides. The commissioner has ordered an inspection of the premises and seems inclined to put the fence up and probably will. The question arises as to the kind of fence. A four-foot palling fence would e ample protection to the public, but would not be of much service to the New York Club, but if the four-foot fence is put up the club will try and devise some means of shutting off the view of the grounds from the street that will not subject it to the charge of closing up a public highway. Some think this can be done with canvas or by drawing a few trucks up by the fence and building high canvas coverings to them. This is not very feasible, as there is a descent of sixteen feet from the sidewalk to the grounds. Mr. Day expresses his confidence that the Giants will return to the Polo Grounds and play the Bostons there June 10. Senator Jacob Canter is of the same opinion. We hope so at any rate. If the club stays at St. George, it will not make much of a profit for its stockholders. Think of 520 people to see a morning holiday game, and only 5970 to see the afternoon contest. The nineteen games to date have attracted about 43,000 people. At this rate I figure out that the New York Club would be in luck to close the season $10,000 ahead.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Ted Sullivan a League scout

Date Sunday, November 3, 1889
Text

Ted [Sullivan] is now employed as a special agent of the League in securing young blood recruits from the minor base ball organizations. He is probably the best judge of a ball player in the country...

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the AA threatens war if Brooklyn and Cincinnati jump to the NL

Date Wednesday, November 20, 1889
Text

This same combination [of AA clubs] ...perpetrated another blunder by selecting one of their number—Mr. Whitaker—to give the League, through Al Spalding, notice that the desertion of Brooklyn and Cincinnati would mean war; and that in such event the American Association would joint hands with the Brotherhood as against the League. The effect on the League can be imagined. Several of the League delegates were furious and were for taking in the two Association clubs at once, even if a ten-club League were necessary, but wiser counsels prevailed, it being decided to do nothing without careful consideration. The “big four” were, however, given to understand that if room could be made for Cincinnati and Brooklyn, and the latter were willing to enter, no Association threats would prevent their admission, and furthermore, that under such circumstances a breach of the National Agreement would injure only the Association, inasmuch as the latter had a number of valuable player that the League could use to advantage just now. The latter argument proved a settler for the “combine,” which probably had never given the possibilities of the situation more than a cursory glance.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the AA umpire committee abolished

Date Sunday, March 10, 1889
Text

The reason for doing away with the Umpire Committee of the American Association was that it placed the members of the committee in a bad position. Every one had the idea that the umpires favored the clubs of the committee, and there was always more or less bad feeling about it. The whole thing is now in the hands of President Wikoff, and he will be held responsible for the umpires hereafter. The umpires' schedule should have been ready before this, but the failure to complete the staff has delayed the work. New York Sun March 10, 1889

All last year Mr. Byrne was charged because of his chairmanship of that committee, with undue influence over the umpire staff. At the annual meeting in St. Louis in December last he positively refused re-election to that committee, as he would not subject himself again to such imputations. The committee this year, therefore, consisted of Baltimore, Kansas City and Columbus, Mr. Byrne, having nothing whatever to do with the action of the committee. The committee selected Messrs. Gaffney, Ferguson, Holland and Sullivan, and their action was ratified at the schedule meeting held in Columbus in March last. At this same meeting it was determined to abolish the Umpire Committee and clothe President Wikoff with full power of appointment and control of umpires. Subsequent to the meeting Mr. Sullivan refused to qualify, and Mr. Wikoff, under the authority given him, appointed Mr. Goldsmith to fill the vacancy. Mr. Wikoff did this without any consultation with or advice from any official of any association club. Brooklyn Eagle September 14, 1889

Source New York Sun
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Athletics go drinking

Date Wednesday, August 21, 1889
Text

[Athletic vs. St. Louis 8/20/1889] There were a number of ugly rumors current yesterday reflecting seriously on the reputation of the Athletic team for sobriety. It was said that the surplus beer in one of the famous breweries of the city had been materially reduced by a visit from several of the prominent members of the team. However true the charge, it is quite certain that the team player very beery ball. There was a lack of life and ambition about their work that soon set the spectators yawning. Seward was pounded constantly and his support was vile. “Curt” Welch was way off and his work was a disagreeable surprise to his admirers. Fennelly dropped a fly and Larkin gave a wretched exhibition of base-running. Add to this their weak exhibition at the bat and it appear as if the “jag” story was not altogether improbable. St.

Source St. Louis Republic
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Athletics' trainer

Date Wednesday, April 17, 1889
Text

The veteran player, Bill Hague, has become the trainer of the Athletic Club. He has been working on the pitchers' arms for the past week, and Seward, Robinson, Smith and Knouff say their pitching limbs were never before in such excellent condition.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Brotherhood and the Brush plan, player sales

Date Wednesday, May 29, 1889
Text

[reporting the Brotherhood meeting of 5/19/1889] Those...who predicted a strike during the playing season will be disappointed, as nothing positive will be done until the next League meeting. It is well understood, however, that then the Brotherhood will ask the League to abolish or greatly modify the classification rule, and to do away with the selling of ball players unless the player sold receives a portion of the purchase money. Not a contract for 1890 will be signed before the League's annual meeting, at which action will be asked upon the Brotherhood's suggestions whatever plan the executive council outlines at Sunday's meeting must be presented to and agreed upon by the various chapters before definite action can be taken by the delegates. There is little doubt, however, that the council's recommendations will be unanimously approved.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Brotherhood contract and the Brush plan

Date Wednesday, October 9, 1889
Text

[editorial matter] The general feeling is that the battle for supremacy—to decide whether the club organization or the players' organizations shall rule—must come sooner or later, and it might just as well come now as a year later. Indeed, that much might have been expected when the League recognized the Brotherhood and treated with it as with a co-equal power. Ever since that time the issue has been sharpening, and it has now narrowed itself to this alternative: Either the classification law or the Brotherhood contract must go, as the two are so utterly at variance and so conflicting as to be absolutely irreconcilable. The classification rule is regarded as essential to the League's existence, because it seeks to establish a limit to the never-ending demands of the players, to check financial extravagance and to enable clubs to live and realize something for the capital involved and the risk assumed. The Brotherhood contract practically nullifies all that the classification rule seeks to establish, inasmuch as its fundamental principal is a perpetuation of existing salaries, and the clause which binds a club not to reserve a player at less salary than his contract had called for, virtually making the classification and salary limit rule a dead letter, as under that clause a player who for any cause fails to maintain his standing in the class to which he was assigned originally cannot be graded into a lower class with reduced salary. That clause in the contract forbids reduction of previous salary and virtually makes a Class A player always a Class A player so long as his club considers him necessary enough to reserve, no matter how much he may deteriorate in skill and value.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Brotherhood's grievances

Date Wednesday, July 3, 1889
Text

There has been much speculation as to the exact nature of the Brotherhood's recent communication to the League. This letter both President Young and the Brotherhood have persistently refused to make public, but is herewith given in full:

New York, May 24-- N. E. Young, President—My Dear Sir:-- At a meeting between the League and Brotherhood committees in the fall of 1887 the former agreed for the League that players should not be reserved at a reduction of salary. In pursuance of this agreement the new contract was made to read that the player could not be reserved at a salary less than that mentioned in paragraph 20 of the contract, the understanding being that the full salary would be inserted. This last the League claimed to be unable to do because of the refusal of the American Association to agree to the repeal of the obsolete $2000 limit rule. But this need not have interfered in any way with its fulfillment of the agreement itself—not to reserve at a reduction of salary. In the application of the classification scheme the League has violated its promise by holding men at a reduced salary. At the annual meeting of the representative body of the Brotherhood last week it was resolved to insist upon a fulfillment by the League of its agreement, and to respectfully but firmly ask that justice be done in the case of those players who have been injured by this default. The evil of the “sales system” was also earnestly considered. The sentiment of the players was that it is unjust, unnecessary, never contemplated by the reserve rule, a crying disgrace to clubs and players and a blot upon the national game, which, it was decided, the Brotherhood would all in its power to wipe out. A committee, consisting of Messrs. Hanlon, Brouthers and Ward, was appointed to communicate with the League and lay before it the sentiments of the players. This committee will be pleased to present the case in its entirety, either by letter or in person as you may suggest, advising only that the players desire to see the matter settled at the earliest possible day. Yours respectfully, Edward Hanlon, D. J. Brouthers, John M. Ward, Committee.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Brotherhood's grievances 2

Date Tuesday, November 5, 1889
Text

[from a long statement of grievances issued by the Brotherhood] There was a time when the League stood for integrity and fair dealing–to-day it stands for dollars and cents. Once it looked to the elevation of the game and an honest exhibition of the sport–to-day its eyes are upon the turnstile. Men have come into the business from no other motive than to exploit it for every dollar in sight. Measures originally intended for the good of the game have been perverted into instruments for wrong.

The “reserve rule” and the provisions of the “National Agreement” gave the managers unlimited power, and they have not hesitated to use this in the most arbitrary and mercenary way. Players have been bought, sold and exchanged as though they were sheep instead of American citizens. “Reservation” became with them another name for property rights in the players.

By a combination among themselves, stronger than the strongest “trust,” they were able to enforce the most arbitrary measures, and the player had to submit or get out of the profession. Even the disbandment and retirement of a club did not free its players from the octopus clutch, for they were then peddled around to the highest bidder. That the player sometimes profited by the sale has nothing to do with the case, but only proves the injustice of his previous restraint.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Brotherhood's plans leaked

Date Wednesday, October 2, 1889
Text

It is first stated that a temporary organization has been formally effected with John M. Ward as its president, Dennis Brouthers, vice president, and Timonty J. Keefe as secretary.

It is to be made up of eight clubs, as follows:--Boston, New York, Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Cleveland, Buffalo, Chicago. Of these two are new clubs and not in the present National League. They are Brooklyn and Buffalo. The present Indianapolis team is to be dropped bodily into Brooklyn, where Association ball and Sunday games are said to be unpopular. The present Washington team is to be transferred to Buffalo and strengthened by the addition of Rowe, White and Myers, late of Indianapolis. In each city local capitalists are to operate teams formed and placed there by the Brotherhood, giving a bond of $25,000 for the performance of their part of the work. Albert L. Johnson, is the Cleveland capitalist, and his active participation in the deal as a missionary caused him to be mistaken for its national head. It has no national head at this time outside of the officers of the Brotherhood. The Association's officials are to be elected this fall.

The players are guaranteed their salaries at the 1889 rate for 1890, and a share of the profits. All expenses and receipts are to be pooled for the general benefit, and the gate receipts divided equally between the clubs. The first $10,000 profit is to go into a prize, and be distributed among the clubs as playing prizes--$5000 to first, $2500 to second, $1500 to third, $1000 to fourth. Of the first $80,000 after this, $10,000 goes to the capitalists, and $10,000 to those of each club. The next $80,000 goes to the players, and all other profits are pooled half and half. Each player shares equally with the others.

Each club is to be governed by a board made up of eight men, four capitalists and four players, and the main body by a senate of sixteen, each club having two representatives, one a player and the other a capitalist.

Each club is stocked for $20,000, half of which can be had by the players. The $20,000 is in two hundred shares of $100 each. No known gamblers are allowed to hold stock. Of course the classification and reserve rules go with the present management, but the 1889—or classification—figures are taken as the basis for 1890.

Score cards and general privileges are to be considered as profits and pooled as such. The Association is to make and sell its own ball.

Nearly all the work of rearing the fabric as it stands to-day has been done at Cleveland this summer. The papers were sent to each League club and signed by the players. Anson, Burns and Williamson have not signed the Chicago agreement. In each city capitalists are at work over grounds and plans for next season....

The players are united and present a strong front. They number about 130. The League expect that only part of each team will go out. In this they are mistaken. All are in with this play, and in all the eight League clubs not ten men will be left. In connection with this story it may be said that the Brotherhood figures and estimates are all the result of calculations and figures made by players appointed for the purpose in each League town last spring. There was talk last June of a general strike in the League cities before the morning game of July 4, as a means of forcing the club managers to wipe out the grievances about which the Brotherhood had complained. Each chapter of the Brotherhood—each League club is a chapter in itself—voted on the question of “strike” or “reorganization” on the plan outlined above, and laid before the Brotherhood early in the year. The vote was overwhelmingly in favor of reorganization. This serves to show how long the plan has been discussed by the Brotherhood.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Brush plan abolished

Date Wednesday, November 20, 1889
Text

[reporting the NL meeting of 11/13-15/1889] Sections 30, 31 and 32 [of the NL constitution], relating to classification, were stricken from the constitution.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the California League and the National Agreement

Date Wednesday, January 16, 1889
Text

There is a break in the stone wall the national agreement has built around the national game which should be repaired at once. The California League last season employed three ineligible players—J. J. Smith, Ebright, and Whitehead—and is likely to become a refuge for more of that ilk next season. Close upon the announcement that the Newark Club's reserved pitcher, Norman Baker, has signed with the Sacramento Club comes the news that Third Baseman Alvord, reserved by Des Moines, has also signed with that club, and that other Des Moines reserved players contemplate doing the same thing. The California League surely needs looking after. It is a prosperous institution, pays good salaries, and is apparently permanently established. Under the circumstances, no strong efforts should be spared to make the League an ally instead of a menace to national agreement interests. New York Sun January 16, 1889, quoting the San Francisco Chronicle

baseball reporter in Columbus

...the Ohio State Journal's base ball editor, Mr. Ed. K. Rife... The Sporting Life January 16, 1889

Harry Stevens the “prince of hustlers”

[from F. W. Arnold's column] [reporting on the meeting of the Columbus Club] The score card privilege was sold to that prince of hustlers, Harry Stevens. The Sporting Life January 16, 1889

Source New York Sun
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

The California League and the National Agreement; a refuge from the blacklist

Date Wednesday, January 9, 1889
Text

[from Waller Wallace's column] [reporting the California League convent of 12/13/1888] A very important matter which now arose was the question as to 3whether the League should join the National League Alliance or not. A letter was read from President Young urging the necessity of the League becoming a member and advanced many reasons. All were from an Eastern standpoint, however. After a great deal of discussion the matter was laid over until the spring meeting, when it will be finally acted upon. A good “hit “ was made by Robinson [of the Oaklands] when he said-- “Where one man will go East ten will come out here, so I think it better to remain as we are.” The Sporting Life January 9, 1889

[from the Kansas City correspondent] Your note of alarm, aimed at the California League, is very timely. It is high time that the League and Association were taking some action toward bringing these people under the National Agreement. The California League is certainly proving not only inconvenient but dangerous. This is to be noticed in a hundred ways. The “coast” league is especially disagreeable to Western clubs. For instance, Kansas City is having trouble right now with a lot of its young blood players. For instance, there are Johnson and Hammond, who were sold to St. Joseph, who say they will not go. Each has an offer to play on the “coast,” and insists that he will accept it. … McCarty said that if he jumped the reserve list and played on the “coast,” he had no fear of the blacklist. He talked pretty confidently, and it looks somewhat as if California League managers who had been making offers to reserved players, have been posting them as to the probable consequences of their actions. The Sporting Life January 16, 1889

[editorial matter] Contract-breaking is one of the graver offenses for the perpetration of which ball players rarely escape some degree of punishment. Catcher Ebright, just signed by the Washington Club, however, is an instance of how, through a peculiar construction of base ball law, a contract-breaker can profit by his offense and escape without the slightest punishment. Ebright, together with third baseman Whitehead, last winter signed with the Lynn Club, of the New England League, upon promise of certain sums of advance monies. After their contracts had been signed, however, the Lynn Club refused to pay the promised advance money, and, notwithstanding repeated demands, persisted in such refusal. About this time the case of pitcher Irwin came up before the Board of Arbitration, in which Chairman Rogers decided that the payment of advance money in minor leagues was not illegal, and would have to be taken into consideration in all cases where it entered as a condition of contract. Ebright and Whitehead, misinterpreting this decision, notified the Lynn club of their intention to ignore their contracts for failure to pay the promised advance money. The Lynn Club appealed to the Board of Arbitration and the latter body decided against the players upon the ground that while the club was in honor bound to fulfill its promise of advance money, yet it could not be compelled to pay the same, as the players by signing before receiving the money insisted upon as a condition of signing, had virtually waived their claims. The two players refused to accept this decision as binding, and in violation of their contracts with Lynn, went to California, signed with a California League Club, and played there all of last season at good salaries. The Lynn Club suspended Ebright and Whitehead. Like all minor league club,s however, Lynn had no power to blacklist these men, and the penalty of suspension inflicted, could, under Act III, of the Qualified Articles of the National Agreement then in force, run only to the end of the current season. Secretary Byrne, of the Board of Arbitration, in reply to an inquiry respecting the case, holds, however, that the Lynn Club, having the right to reserve its players under contract, could hold these men as reserved men, and they would have been this year in precisely the same position as blacklisted players. However, the Lynn Club met with disaster last season and disbanded, and having no existence and having failed to send in any list of its reserved players, there can be no doubt that the recent legislation in no way affects these players and that they are, through the death of the Lynn Club, again in good standing, and eligible to play with any National Agreement club, although no atonement has been made by them.

This glaring case serves to accentuate The Sporting Life's remarks as to the necessity of promptly bringing the California League into the National Agreement fold. Under present conditions this League is a menace, and if not absorbed, bids fair to become a refuge for reckless, dissatisfied and rebellious Eastern players, especially those in the minor leagues. The California League is a growing institution of fair financial strength, supports strong teams, pays good, even large, salaries, and receives excellent support. It is, therefore, a tempting field for the operations of contract-breakers, and the cases of Ebright and Whitehead are likely to be duplicated, in view of the apparent impmunity, which even the recent legislation enacted by the Board of Arbitration to specially cover the California League situation cannot counteract half so well as the legislators seem to think. Reserve jumpers cannot be reached at all by base ball law, for the reason that reserve jumping is not an offence punishable by the blacklist and because minor league reservation is not perpet5ual, but in the case of unsigned players falls at the end of a season. Already two players under reservation by National Agreement clubs,--Baker and Alvord—have taken advantage of this peculiar state of affairs and have defiantly signed with California clubs; and, we are reliably informed, many more reserved minor players are even now negotiating with a view to following in the footsteps of the two seceders.

An attempt gas already been made to bring the California League into the National Agreement fold, but the advances of the Board of Arbitration have been received with indifference. It now behooves the Board to act with promptitude and decision in order to check practices which may lead to the demoralization of minor league clubs and players. The National Agreement is essential to the welfare and good conduct of base ball. Every reputable organization now lives, moves and has its being under it, the California League alone being an exception. For the good of the game this League must be put on record promptly as either for or against the National Agreement and treated accordingly. If its officials are wise, hope for permanency for their organization, and have the best interests of the game at hear, they will not delay install the California League as a member of the great family of base ball leagues. The Sporting Life January 16, 1889

[from A. G. Ovens's column] It is quite evident that something must be done to check the dishonorable methods that are being employed by managers on the Pacific coast. The big organizations will probably not suffer much on account of these pirates, but the minor leagues are in danger of being greatly crippled. The California managers cannot offer enough to induce League or American Association players to jump, but this is not the case with the smaller and weaker organizations, especially since they have adopted salary limits. Already several young players have gone to the coast, and others threaten to do so. Of curse this state of affairs cannot exist long without harm to the game generally. The players who are falling into this trap will regret it at no distant day. Sooner or later the California League will be compelled to come under the protection of the National Agreement, and then those rash and misguided young men will realize their mistake. The California managers who engage in this discreditable business will see their error, too, some of these days. The Sporting Life January 23, 1889

Source The Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the California League joins the National Agreement

Date Wednesday, May 22, 1889
Text

From the secretary of the Board of Arbitration, Mr. Charles H. Byrne, comes the pleasing news that, after holding out for two years, the California League has at last come to a realizing sense of the necessity of entering the great family of base ball organizations, and accordingly applied, through its president, John J. Morse, for the protection of the National Agreement. This protection has been accorded, and the California League is now safely anchored in the base ball harbor of refuge. The California League was the only base ball organization of any importance outside of the great national alliance. With her admission the last resort of contract-breakers and reserve-jumpers is cut off. This will be a good thing for the national game in general and the California League in particular, as the latter will now be secure from the invasion of outside disturbing influences and will have a chance to develop her own players and profit thereby accordingly.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Cuban Giants and the Middle States pennant

Date Wednesday, October 16, 1889
Text

Though Harrisburg has been awarded the Middle States League's pennant, the Cuban Giants protest the award and claim the flag on the ground that they lead Farrington's team by 0.27 points. President Bright says Harrisburg claims two forfeited games with the Gorhams, at Hoboken, and while he concedes one of them, he says Harrisburg was not even at Hoboken ready to play the second game, but it was given them anyhow. On Sept. 13 and 14 Harrisburg was scheduled to play at Wilmington, and as that club was no longer in existence Mr. Farrington claimed the two games by forfeit and his claim was sustained by the president of the League, though no club or umpire appeared on the field and no umpire awarded the game to them. The Cuban Giants want these two games thrown out. On the other hand, the Cuban Giants defeated the Philadelphia Giants two games at Trenton, but both were thrown out on the flimsy technicality that the regulation ball was not used. The very same thing occurred at Easton later on when the Cuban Giants took two games from the Gorhams, and both these were also thrown out because it was discovered subsequently that the Gorhams did not furnish the regulation League balls. Next came the games in Hoboken with the Hazletons, two regular and two postponed games, the Cuban Giants won all four, but the secretary of the League threw the two postponed games out because he had failed to have regular umpires and an official scorer on hand, though he had been duly notified the night before that these games would be played. The funny part about this procedure is that both scores appeared in the secretary's own paper. Harrisburg and Lebanon were scheduled to play on Sept. 6 and 7, but for some reason or other they only played on the 7 th. Lebanon won, and then Harrisburg turned the game in as an exhibition game and the secretary allowed it to go that way. With these alteration made the correct standing of the clubs would be:--Cuban Giants, 57 won, 16 lost, percentage .780; Harrisburg, 61 won, 20 lost, percentage .753.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Giants consider Hoboken grounds

Date Friday, April 5, 1889
Text

President Day, of the New York Club, went to Hoboken yesterday, and carefully examined the St. George cricket grounds with a view to making it the future home of his club. The inducements which have been offered Mr. Day to locate there are said to be remarkably fine. He cannot only secure a ten-year lease of the grounds, but a well-known real estate dealer said that if the New York managers took the grounds they could secure a percentage on the increase in the value of the surrounding property for the time that they remained there. It is also understood that the ferry companies will help the club as much as possible in the way of transferring the people quickly. The fences and grand stand at the Polo grounds can be moved to Hoboken and put up in about two weeks, and can be made to do for a short time, or until others can be put up at least.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the League asks to meet with the Brotherhood

Date Wednesday, October 9, 1889
Text

In reply to President Spalding's letter to John M. Ward relative to the appointment of a date for a meeting between the League and Brotherhood, Ward wrote Mr. Spalding as follows on Saturday last:

“Last May the Brotherhood appointed a committee to present all grievances to the League and made an attempt to have them righted. The committee was, however, unable to obtain a hearing from the League, and it so reported at a subsequent meeting of the Brotherhood held July 14, and was accordingly discharged, as it was not a standing committee. I will refer your communication, therefore, to the entire Brotherhood. The Sporting Life October 9, 1889

[editorial matter] A sudden silence has fallen over the League and Brotherhood, and the members and adherents of the latter organization have, since the untimely expose of their alleged plans, come to realize the importance of future secrecy, and the order has probably gone forth to keep mem. But this sudden subsidence of news relative to the Brotherhood's hopes and plans should not, and probably does not, delude the League people, in the face of President Ward's evasive and crafty reply to President Spalding's request for a date for the conference asked for by the Brotherhood and refused by the League committee earlier in the season. If Ward's answer signifies anything it means one of two things—either the Brotherhood is in no mood now for compromise or it has so far committed itself to new connections that retreat with honor or safety is impossible.

It has been held that Mr. Spalding's request for a conference was ill-advised at this stage, and showed weakness. The time for a conference was when the Brotherhood committee asked for a meeting for that purpose. As The Sporting Life pointed out at that time, that refusal was a mistake. Though not so intended, probably, it looked like an intentional slap at the players, and simply increased the already existing irritation. Mr. Spalding's recent request, however, for such a conference was probably only extended with a view to placing the onus for refusal upon the Brotherhood and putting it in a position to make any future overtures for conference come from it instead of the League. If that was Mr. Spalding's purpose, it succeeded admirably. The Sporting Life October 9, 1889

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the League reaction to the Brotherhood

Date Wednesday, May 29, 1889
Text

[from an interview of Soden] You don't think the Brotherhood would be foolish enough to make any bad break on the classification law, do you? If the players in the Brotherhood have any grievances, individual cases, I should favor giving them a hearing and think matters could be arranged satisfactorily. But as for anticipating that they would demand an abolishment of the classification or would think of striking, why, I think that is absurd.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the League's budget; finances

Date Wednesday, October 30, 1889
Text

[from R. M. Larner's column] The annual expenses of the League are about $16,000. This includes salaries and traveling expenses of umpires and the other incidental expenditures of the organization. The money is raised by a pro rata assessment upon each of the League clubs.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Metropolitans reorganize

Date Saturday, March 2, 1889
Text

A large number of the old Metropolitan Club players of this city were at the Fifth Avenue Hotel yesterday afternoon, and as many, if not all, of them are not under engagement for next season, they decided to reorganize the old Indians and play their own hook. A meeting looking toward such a move will be held at 21 Park row on Wednesday next. The make-up of the team as it has been suggested is as follows: Holbert, c.; Lynch, p.; Charley Jones, 1st b.; Troy, 2d b.; Nelson, 3d b.; Kennedy, l.f.; Roseman, c. f.; Burdock, r. f.; Sam Crane and Hankinson, substitutes. Three of the players are willing to put up $20,000 to back the team, while outside parties have already offered to p ut up from $10,000 to $15,000. It looks very much as though the team would make it a go, and there is no reason in the world why they should not play good bal, and they will to.

Source New York Sun
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Metropolitans revived as a cooperative club

Date Wednesday, March 13, 1889
Text

The famous old Mets, who in 1880 helped to bring base ball back into popular favor on Manhattan Island, have been rejuvenated. A year ago the Metropolitan Club died, but the evens of Wednesday brought the old institution back to life again. The team has been reorganized and will play base ball as the game was played ten or more years ago. The club will be run on the co-operative plan and no club owner will get rich while the players get only salaries. What money is made will go to the players themselves in equal proportion. There will be no stars or favorites, and all will share alike, consequently there will be no jealousy among the men.

A meeting was held at the office of Alex. F Blinn, the lawyer, at No. 21 Park row, Wednesday, and all the needed arrangements made. The old “Indians” present were:--”Jack” Lynch, the pitcher; James Roseman, Eddie Kennedy and Jack Nelson, the outfielders; William Holbert and John Hayes, the catchers; Charles Jones, first baseman; Sam Crane, second baseman; John Troy, short stop; and Mell Becannon, third baseman. Hankinson and Reipschlager were not present, but will join their old companions later. Among the others present were:--Rooney Sweeney, John Farrell, William Primrose and James Jackson.

Sam Crane, formerly of the Scranton Club, was chosen manager and secretary. Jack Lynch was elected president and treasurer.

The board of directors chosen were Lynch, Holbert and Jones. The directors are empowered to pick out the players for each game. A committee of three was appointed, consisting of Crane, Jones and Collins, to draft a constitution and by-laws. The official name of the club will be “The Metropolitan Base Ball Club, of New York City.

The club has secured an office at 140 Broadway, where another meeting will be held to-day.

The players hope to make arrangements with the New York Club so that they can play at the Polo Grounds while the Giants are away. They also expect to make arrangements to play Sunday games in Brooklyn when the Brooklyn team is away from home. The players seem to think that the venture will be a success.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the NL and the minor leagues

Date Wednesday, December 18, 1889
Text

[editorial matter] The minor leagues are standing together with the League under the National Agreement, it is true, and 'tis well 'tis true. But whether the League and the minors are running together purely for love of the Agreement time will tell. At present the minor leagues benefit largely by the reserve rule; they also have some player for which the League clubs may become customers. The National League on the other hand already has one fight on its hands and isn't hunting for more. If the Association steps down and out, and a reconstruction of the National Agreement becomes necessary, then we shall see just how great the love of the League is for the minor leagues, and how much it is prepared to do for their perpetuation; but it is quite probable that some of the more ambitious minor league magnates will be disappointed in their hopes and expectations. Meanwhile it is well, however, that the minors are keeping out of the fight and standing by the National Agreement, else chaos would surely come to base ball.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the NL signs an AA player without going through waivers

Date Friday, August 23, 1889
Text

Once more there is a war cloud between the League and its humble ally, the American Association, due, as usual, to a slight imposed upon the junior organization by the stiff-necked old League. The latest row is similar in its aspect to the Latham case as it relates to the national Agreement waive rule. It appears that pitcher Ed Daily, of the Brooklyn Club, because his club was in arrears to him for salary, entered into negotiations with the New York League Club, and on Monday last left the Brooklyn Club and entered the service of the New York League club without the usual claim to his services having been waived by the other Association clubs, which, under the National Agreement, would have been indispensable even when a player has been regularly released. The matter, following so closely upon the sharp Latham trick, has caused the greatest irritation in Association circles and a big row is among the possibilities judging from the following despatch:

“Louisville, Aug. 20.--Should Daily, the released Brooklyn pitcher, play with the New York National League Club before the ten days expires in which the Association clubs are given to waive claim to Daily a bitter war will follow, and it may result in the disruption of the National Agreement. 'We intend to make a warm fight over the matter,' said Mr. Phelps. 'We have never broken the National Agreement, despite the rumors of our being about to do so, and we do not intend to do so. I cannot see how the National League can afford to do so, and I do not think they will do anything of the kind. The Daily case is very clear. No player in the American Association can sign with a club of any other association until the other clubs of the American Association have waived all claims to his services and they are allowed ten days' notice of his release. I have notified President Young of the purpose of the Association to contest the right of the New York Club to sign Pitcher Daily, and do not think there will be any trouble. If the matter is not adjusted, well—there'll be trouble.' The Association, it is thought, is anxious for the National League to play Daily, as it will only furnish an excuse for the former to join hands with the Brotherhood.”

Daily has played in two games with New York against Boston, in one of which he pitched part of the game. After the conference at Louisville on Baltimore's admission Barnie and Phelps were asked point blank if it were probable that there would be an amalgamation of the Brotherhood and the American Association. To the query both gentlemen replied firmly in the negative, and said they were entertaining no ideas, neither was it probable, although they admitted having been approached by a Brotherhood agent, who endeavored to lay a basis for such a consolidation. Both gentlemen, however, admitted in a guarded sort of way that the League wasn't treating the Association right.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the New Polo Grounds

Date Wednesday, July 3, 1889
Text

The new grounds, as The Sporting Life readers have already heard, are situated at One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street and Eighth avenue, and take in two blocks. The contractors are hard at work getting it in shape, and if they keep their contracts the Giants will open , as the park will be called, July 8, A large force of men are at work and much progress has been made. In between the two blocks, which are, perhaps, twenty feet below the street level, Mr. Coogan had built a street. This street must be dug away and the whole field graded evenly. It was at first thought that this work could be done very quickly, but experience shows it to be a tremendous job. However, sixty carts and 500 men can make things hum, and the embankment is rapidly disappearing. The outside fences are all up and the place really begins to look like a ball ground.

The grand stand, of course, is the main point of interest, and if promises go for anything it will be the largest and best in the country, although not so elaborate in architectural design as the grand stands are in Boston and Philadelphia. It will be 410 feet in length extending on the line of One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street, and 320 feet on the front line. The stand in shape will be a large segment of a circle with straight sides, having an average depth of fifty feet with a second tier or balcony having an average dept of 31 feet. The seating capacity will be 5500. This together with the bleachery accommodations will enable the club to seat 15,000 people. The stand will be substantial, but will be built on framed trusses, bolted together so that in case of necessity the whole business can be taken down and put up elsewhere.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the PL and the American Association

Date Sunday, October 27, 1889
Text

Notwithstanding President Ward's denial, the brotherhood has virtually decided that the association cannot help its cause and cannot be trusted to pursue a policy of non-interference. Therefore it will take association men wherever the men are strong enough to aid business association teams. The St. Louis, Brooklyn, and Athletic clubs will certainly be raided, and one association star is slated for Anson's place in Chicago.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Phillies buy out Tyng's contract

Date Wednesday, February 27, 1889
Text

The Philadelphia Club and Mr. James A. Tyng have settled all differences and canceled the contract which guaranteed Mr. Tyng a yearly salary as “director of amusements and athletic sports.” This amicable result was brought about by an interview between Mr. Tyng and Secretary Rogers, and the two gentlemen parted with mutual good wishes for each other's welfare. The amount paid Mr. Tyng has not bee made public. Mr. Tyng has for the present abandoned law practice and has become a stock broker, having opened an office at 62 Broadway, room 200, and has been admitted to membership in the Consolidated Stock and Petroleum Exchange.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Players League and the Polo Grounds

Date Wednesday, October 9, 1889
Text

The New York syndicate of the Brotherhood of Base Ball Players to-day [9/28] leased of James. G. Coogan two blocks of ground lying between One Hundred and Fifty-seventh and One Hundred and Fifty-ninth streets and Eighth and Ninth avenues for a term of ten years, at an annual rent of $4000. They also leased the New Polo Grounds at One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street, now held by President Day and the New York team for a term of ten years, subject, however, to the leave now held by Mr. Day for two years. The sureties to the lease have qualified and a check for $2000 for the first six months' rental was handed Mr. Coogan to-day.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Players League plan developed on the Spalding tour

Date Sunday, November 3, 1889
Text

While the Spalding Australian party were on their way home Ward, Hanlon and Fogarty put their heads together and hatched up the present scheme, which has been carefully looked over by Layer Russell of Cleveland and put into the present shape.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the Players' League forms

Date Wednesday, December 25, 1889
Text

[reporting on the PL meeting 12/16-12/17/1889] The Players' National League was permanently organized at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, New York City, in a meeting which required two days for the transaction of all the business incidentals to the formation of so vast an enterprise.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

The Rowe and White cases and the status of the Detroit Club

Date Wednesday, March 13, 1889
Text

[reporting the NL meeting of 3/5/1889] When the League reconvened the Detroit Club matter was taken up. After careful consideration of the case of Rowe and White it was determined not to accept the Detroit Club's resignation but to place the same in President Young's hands, subject to his acceptance at the proper time—which means when Rowe and White come to terms. The Detroit Club then released Jas. L. White, J. C. Rowe, E. Hanlon and C. H. Getzein. Thereupon the Pittsburg Club accepted the services of J. L. White, J. C. Rowe and Edward Hanlon and Indianapolis accepted the services of Getzein. This relieves the Detroit Club of any further trouble about the recalcitrant players and enables the League to hold them in reserve.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

The Sporting Life's finances

Date Tuesday, April 2, 1889
Text

The Sporting Life is very successful. It declared a semi-annual dividend of four per cent. yesterday. Editor Richter is progressive and is deserving of all the credit for the success of the paper. The Philadelphia Item April 2, 1889

scoring in Boston; sacrifice hits; RBI

The Boston Herald says: “The Boston scorers have decided to score as last season, but will eliminate the stolen base column, substituting the sacrifice hit column. The total base column will be retained.” This is simply offering their accustomed premium for record batting, just as the offering of prizes for the best batting averages. Both are opposed to team work in batting. Suppose a batsman makes three hits in a game, yielding third base each time, when no man is on the bases, and he is left on third each time. In the record he gets the credit of three base hits, with a total of nine. Suppose another batsman makes three sacrifice hits, when a runner is on third base each hit; he makes no base hit and of course no total his, and gets no credit for such on the average. Yet the man who made the base hits and gets the credit does not help the score for his side in a single instance, while the batsman who gets no base hit average brought in three runs. This is a sample of the beauties of the average of base hits, and the publishing of the column of total hits. It is simply offering prizes for record play at the bat. Brooklyn Eagle April 2, 1889

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the White and Rowe settlement

Date Sunday, July 7, 1889
Text

It will doubtless be interesting to patrons of the local club to know that the White and Rowe difficulty has finally been settled, and that the two players named will joint the Pittsburg team at New York tomorrow or Tuesday.

Manager Phillips stated last evening that since White was here negotiations have been going on with ex-President Stearns, of Detroit, and that everything has been satisfactorily arranged. At any rate, Messrs. White and Rose wired to President Nimick yesterday to the effect that they will join the club at New York as stated above.

The local officials refuse to state what the terms of settlement are, but it is understood that both this club and Mr. Stearns have made concessions to the players. The principal concession, it is stated, has been made by Mr. Stearns, who has given the players half of their purchase money. The price of each player was reduced, that is the local club has not paid as much for the releases as was originally bargained for. Part of this difference has been given to the players by the Pittsburg club, and Stearns has given the balance. At any rate the players have carried their point by getting half of their purchase money, although the amount is not as big as it was intended to be.

Source Pittsburgh Dispatch
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the abortive amalgamation of the Players League and American Association

Date Wednesday, November 27, 1889
Text

[editorial matter] The project of the amalgamation of the Brotherhood and American Association died abornin'. The Brotherhood could not entertain such an idea, because it would have far less to gain by such a move than the Association, as the Brotherhood League can get as many players as it needs without a coalition; has no use for the remaining Association clubs, and would lose rather than gain in public estimation and in business relations by taking some of the Association magnates into partnership. On the other hand, the move would prove a good thing for the Association, which cannot hope to live and maintain a leading position in base ball without larger cities and stronger teams than those now available. Of course, a move toward coalition with the Brotherhood would break the National Agreement and leave the Association players open to a raid by the League. But even so, the Association could be no worse off than it is at present with its players in sympathy with and at the mercy of the Brotherhood. But it won't work. The Sporting Life November 27, 1889

[from the column of “The Veteran”] A decided sensation was occasioned in the base ball world yesterday by the announcement that the Association and Brotherhood had decided to join hands and make a fight against their common enemy, the League. That such a movement has been going on for some time I know well, but was placed in such a position as to be unable to use it, as a premature publication was liable to cause a miscarriage of all the plans.

The details of the amalgamation are as follows: As soon as the League invited Brooklyn and Cincinnati to join their ranks and Kansas City retired, the other clubs of the Association saw that the Association was doomed. They knew that Baltimore was shaky and Louisville uncertain, so that there were really only three clubs left. There was some earnest talk of declaring war at once on the League, but more sober counsel prevailed. It was decided that the Association clubs remaining should sign their players as rapidly as possible and then break away from the National Agreement and joint hands with the Brotherhood.

Conferences have been held in this city and Columbus between Association and Brotherhood magnates and all the details of the union have been practically agreed upon, but will not be made public until the Association and Brotherhood meet next month.

The union of the Athletic and local Brotherhood clubs meets with much favor in this city as it is believed that Philadelphia will now have one of the very strongest clubs ever in the field, and one that should prove a pennant winner. All the old favorites will be retained, and the financial success of such a club is beyond all doubt. The Philadelphia Sunday Item December 1, 1889

[from an interview of Albert Johnson] Mr. Johnson was asked about the alleged combination between the Brotherhood and the Association, and was pressed for a definitive answer. He said: “The talk is not without foundation. It will be one of the principal themes for discussion at our Brotherhood meeting on the 16th. I would not like to say that the proposition is not under consideration, but I cannot anticipate the outcome.” The Philadelphia Item December 3, 1889

At the recent meeting of the American Association President Zack Phelps and Hon. Allen G. Thurman, the legal adviser of the Columbus Club, were appointed a committee to formulate a proposition or agreement under the provisions of which could be brought about an amalgamation of the Brotherhood and American Association. That committee has performed its work, and is ready to report progress. The document is a voluminous one, buts its salient points can be enumerated as follows:

First. The full amalgamation of the two organizations.

Second. The total abrogation of the reserve clause in all future contracts.

Third. The abolition of Sunday games.

Fourth. Each club to fix the price of admission on its own grounds.

Fifth. The formation of a guarantee fund out which all players shall receive their salaries and the 1st and 15th of each month without regard to receipts.

Sixth. The organization of a Board of Control, made up as hereafter may be determined, which shall have full power in the new body, and to which all appeals shall be made.

Northing is said as to what cities shall make up the new organization, the agreement providing simply for the merging of the American Association and the Players’ League. The composition of the consolidated body will be the subject of future consideration. John Ward has been fully apprised of what is being done, and, at his suggestion, President Phelps will be on hand next Monday when the Players’ League holds its meeting in New York. The Philadelphia Item December 12, 1889

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the advantage of batting second

Date Saturday, May 4, 1889
Text

Despite the fact that Manager McGunnigle is in favor of placing the opposing team first at the bat in every game he allows his men to overrule him on this point and to still keep in the old rut of having “the first crack at the new ball.” What possible advantage there is in this rule is as much at command of the side last at the bat in the first inning as it is for those who go in first; but under the rule of using two new balls neither party have any advantage. Granting, however, that the rule does work the way the rutty ball captains claim it does, it does not compare with the far more important advantage of being last at the bat, thereby having the benefit of an opportunity for a winning rally. In the large majority of games thus far played in the championship arena this season the teams last at the bat have won. It is a blunder beyond question to give an opposing team the chance for such a rally...

Source Brooklyn Eagle
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the argument for foul tips as strikes

Date Wednesday, November 13, 1889
Text

[from the Baltimore correspondent] Mr. Barnie is one of the joint committee on playing rules, but does not anticipate any material change except to denominate a foul tip a strike. It is also understood that Mr. Spalding is in favor of abolishing the entire system of outs of fouls, but it is not thought such a radical change will be made. Many believe that even defining a foul tip as a strike will again go far towards throttling the still weak batting of the game, but it is to be supposed a certain amount of tinkering with the rules must be done to justify having a committee on playing rules. What is the use of a committee if they don't do something? It is argued that umpires officiate much of their time behind the pitcher, and that many foul tips already pass as strikes, owing to the inability of the umpire to hear the tip at that distant position, and that the umpires' errors in that respect causes much dissatisfaction among spectators and players. That is the principal excuse given for calling the tip a strike and weakening the batting, and it hardly seems justifiable. However, if the maggots say the tip must go, it must, and that settles that.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the argument in favor of capital; player salaries too high for sympathy

Date Sunday, November 10, 1889
Text

[editorial matter signed by “The Veteran] I am free to confess that I can see nothing encouraging to the Brotherhood in the results of the meeting. They seemed to be at sea, and their declaration of independence was, to say the least, a bad piece of judgment.

It will be hard to make the public believe that men who receive salaries ranging all the way from $1,500 to $5,000 for six months are deserving of pity. It will also be hard to make the people believe that men who put up their money and organize clubs and make such salaries possible should not be entitled to all they make.

The club owners are the men who came forward when the game was at its lowest ebb and put up the money that made the resurrection of the game possible.

Their confidence in the game and their boldness at a time when the investment of money in base ball clubs was looked upon as a sure investment is certainly entitled to great consideration.

If these men have made base ball profitable they are the one’s who should receive the profits and not the players who wouldn’t risk a cent, and demanded their salaries promptly, whether any money was taken in or not.

I say that the plea that the managers are making all the money and refuse to divide up with the players is childish and not worthy of serious attention. So much for the declaration of independence.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the black list provision for hold outs repealed

Date Wednesday, March 13, 1889
Text

[editorial matter] After defiantly keeping the infamous resolution to blacklist recalcitrant reserved players on the statutes for two years, the American Association finally last week acknowledged the blunder... by repealing the odious, illegal and inoperative resolution.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the coach asks for the ball trick

Date Sunday, September 1, 1889
Text

The other day Worcester scored a funny run. Capt. Cudworth of the team was coacher at the first base line and Jones was on second base. The ball was in the hands of Smith, the Norwalk pitcher. Suddenly Cudworth shouted to Smith: “Say, old man, isn't that ball ripped?” “No,” said Smith, holding the ball to view. “Let's see it,” persisted Cudworth. Smith, without thinking, threw the ball at him. Cudworth dodged the ball, and it rolled clear to the bleaching boards. Johnson meantime scored, and the crowd howled.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the color line in Buffalo

Date Monday, April 15, 1889
Text

Mascot Grant, the ebony second baseman, is not likely to play with the Buffalos this year. Manager Rowe has been looking for Grant and Cliff Carroll with a view to signing them. Grant played with the Cuban Giants in Washington yesterday, and in reply to an inquiry said he would sign only for $250 a month. This is considered too high, and the other members of the nine threaten to rebel if he plays. Last year they refused to have their pictures taken on Grant's account, and objected to traveling with him. They boys acknowledge that he is a good player, but they are in rebellion just the same. Their sentiment is that colored men should not play with white men.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the comparative strength of the League and the Association

Date Tuesday, May 7, 1889
Text

The Clevelands are making a much better showing in the League than they did in the Association, and yet some people would have us believe that the League puts up a much better game than the Association.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the condition of the St. George grounds field; Staten Island

Date Friday, May 17, 1889
Text

The club has decided to allow the boarded outfield to remain, also the skin diamond. The infield is very rough at present and when the clayey surface becomes baked by the sun it will be a hard field to play ball on. There is nothing like turf. Mr. Wiman is ready to make the field perfect if the club would stay, but it is not worth his while for a single season. The club’s team will not win the pennant on the ground as it is.

Source Brooklyn Eagle
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the contract-breakers

Date Wednesday, December 18, 1889
Text

Here is the list of the Brotherhood players who have gone back on that organization and have returned to their old masters in the National League:

Boston—Clarkson, Ganzel, Smith

Cleveland—McKean, Beatin

Pittsburg—Sunday, Beckley, Miller

Philadelphia—Delahany, Clements, Gleason, Schriver

Indianapolis—Glassock, Denny, Boyle, Sommer, Rusie, Buckley, Getzein.

Burns and Hutchinson are also among the League's reserved men who have signed with the old League, but they were not members of the Brotherhood and no stigma can attach to them; Sunday also is free from blame, as his resignation from the Brotherhood was granted. The others, without exception, have broken faith with the Brotherhood and most of them have signed double contracts. It is thought that Sam Thompson will also be added tot he list of contract breakers.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the crowd assists on a block ball

Date Tuesday, September 3, 1889
Text

[Chicago vs. Philadelphia 9/2/1889] In the third inning, with Ryan on first, Van Haltern hit a hard one to right, which Thompson let go by him into the crowd. A spectator, however, promptly fielded the ball into the diamond and Ryan was held on third, while Van got no further than second. Had Thompson been compelled to field the ball both men would probably have scored.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the defunct Detroit Club attaches Boston Club's receipts

Date Saturday, July 6, 1889
Text

Late on Thursday evening the old Detroit League Club sued the Boston Club for $500 and interest, and attached the receipts of the games on that day in the hands of the Cleveland Club. They cover the claim, amounting to about $4,700 in all. It is a move that the old Detroit Club has been contemplating all the year, only waiting for the Boston Club to get here [Cleveland] to take action. The suit is one of the side issues of the Detroit sell out. Boston agreed to take Brouthers, Bennett, Richardson, Ganzel and White. It don’t [sic] want White, but agreed to take him for the moral effect it had on th other men. When they signed and White grew obstreperous it gave Boston a chance to get out, and it agreed to pay Detroit $500 to take him off its hands. He secured the League’s consent and transferred White to Pittsburgh.

This was in March. After it was done Boston coolly repudiated the deal, and Stearns brought suit. The base ball contract and its peculiar relations to law will not come into court by way of this suit. It is on a side contract only. When the receipts for the Thursday games were all footed up it was found that the amounted to about $11,000. This was the best attendance in the country.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the duration of the reserve

Date Wednesday, July 10, 1889
Text

[from the Pittsburgh correspondent] I may be giving a little of the inside, when I say that the Brotherhood has discovered a flaw in the contract by which any man, it seems, can get his release after laying off a year. Does not the contract say the party of the second part agrees to be reserved the following year? “now,” as Deacon put it, “this means one year, and not years, and the Brotherhood decided that Rowe's case should be made the test case of this defect. They got good lawyers to examine it, who decided that there was nothing to prevent him from getting his release this way.

Source The Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the duties of the manager

Date Saturday, April 20, 1889
Text

This is Ned Hanlon's idea of a manager's duties: “What good are base-ball managers anyhow, except to look after the financial interests of the club? All matters relating tot he team should be left to the captain, who nine times out of ten is much the better qualified to attend to them. So far as my experience goes there is but one exception to this rule, and you have that one right here in Philadelphia. I mean Harry Wright. He has had experience, is cool headed, and can make allowances for a man.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the early formation of the Players League

Date Wednesday, November 20, 1889
Text

[from a letter from Al Johnson dated 11/12/1889] At the time I was called on by the Brotherhood the League had refused it even a hearing, so, fearing worse treatment at the end of that season, it began to organize for itself, and in so doing signed an agreement of good faith with the parties who were to furnish the capital.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the effect of the four ball base on balls

Date Wednesday, June 12, 1889
Text

[from Chadwick's column] The four-ball rule has transformed the successful, swift pitchers of 1888 into decided failures in the box in 1889, while the strategic class of headwork pitchers have become strikingly prominent from their effectiveness. Look at Clarkson and Radbourn, for instance, of the Boston team, the latter especially, and contrast their box work under the new rules with that of Krock, of Chicago, who made such a hit in 1888, not to mention others of the class of pitchers who have hitherto depended on mere speed alone for their success.

To strike out eight or ten players a game last season was an ordinary result with some of the “lightning twirlers” of 1888, while this season the strike-out records are remarkably small in comparison. All this is to the advantage of scientific work in the box, and to team work at the bat, both of which develop the beauties of the game to the point approaching perfection...

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the effectiveness of four balls for a base on balls

Date Sunday, May 5, 1889
Text

The four balls-three strikes rule has come pretty nearly depopulating the strike-out department in the scores and has increased the batting appreciably. Judging from the few games played so far this season it would seem that the desired object has been attained.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the end of the Polo Grounds

Date Wednesday, February 13, 1889
Text

The decision rendered a week ago to the effect that the Park Commissioners alone had control over the Polo Grounds property in regard to its further use as a ball field, has resulted in a practical notice to quit being served on the new York Club occupants, the said notice coming in the form of the removal of that portion of the fence enclosing the ground which crossed the lines of One Hundred and Eleventh street at Fifth and Sixth avenues. The openings were made on Thursday morning, and before the week expired preparations were being made to run the street through the grounds, this, of course, rendering the place untenable for a ball ground. The sudden action taken by the Park officials comes at a most inopportune time for the New York Club, and it will place them in a very bad situation for the coming season's campaign. It is true that they have the Jersey City Club [illegible] is as a temporary field, but the difficulties patrons of the club will have in reaching it from the city must materially affect the attendance this season, one thing being certain, and that is that the club will lose its large contingent of patrons from Brooklyn. The club can procure the St. George Cricket Grounds a Hoboken, and this field is by far the best in every respect that the club can occupy this season, as it is easily reached from the city, while the cricket field will make a splendid diamond for playing on. What is New York's loss in this matter will undoubtedly Brooklyn's game, for last year hundreds patronized the Polo Grounds from Brooklyn who will not now to to Jersey City to see the Giants play.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the financial failure of the Louisville Club

Date Wednesday, July 10, 1889
Text

On Wednesday, no avenue of escape having meantime opened itself, and the wherewithal to pay the salaries—aggregating $3200 per month—not being forthcoming, Mr. Davidson pursued the only other course open to him—that is, place the club in the hands of the Association. He wrote a letter to President Wikoff explaining the situation, and directed him to sell the club for him. Mr. Davidson will, of course, get what it brings, and will settle with the other shareholders upon that basis should the club franchise be sold.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the gong; pregame practice

Date Sunday, June 16, 1889
Text

[St. Louis vs. Athletic 6/15/1889] As soon as the visitors had doffed their jackets Manager Sharsig range the bell for practice and the Browns scampered on the field for the usual unlimbering. As on everything else they do, the visitors entered on the practice with a dash and vim that frequently called out applause.

At 3:30 the gong again sounded and a second later the Athletics, led by stalwart Captain Stovey, emerged from the dressing room, and there given a hearty cheer as they arranged themselves along the line preparatory to scampering off for their positions.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the meaning of 'to root'

Date Thursday, July 25, 1889
Text

The verb “to root”... is entirely modern and is limited in circulation. It concerns an art invented by and practised chiefly by sporting men. This is the concentration of individual or aggregate psychic force upon the accomplishment of some particular effect desired by the rooter.

Source Brooklyn Eagle
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the mechanics of a player trade

Date Monday, March 25, 1889
Text

...The management of the home team have made arrangements for the exchange of Whitney for Healy, and the League clubs have been requested to waive claim for both men. The deal is practically completed, as is shown by the following telegram to President Young from John T. Brush:

“Whenever the League clubs waive claim to Whitney and Healy, and Washington releases Whitney, Indianapolis will accept his services. At the same time Indianapolis will release Healy.

“It is understood that the trade is made even, no money consideration being paid by either club. While a great many baseball enthusiasts will regret to see Whitney leave the team, many will recognize that Washington gets equally as good a pitcher, if not a better. Whitney's repeated declarations that he would not play here next season, his dissatisfaction with the management, and the uncertainty as to whether he would be able to play any better than last season contributed to make his services very undesirable. On the other hand, Healy is a splendid pitcher, is in excellent health, and has always wanted to play in this city. Washington certainly loses nothing by the trade.” Indianapolis Journal March 25, 1889

It is doubtful if Healy knows anything of the deal yet, but he is not likely to make any objection to the transfer. Even if he did, it would avail him nothing. The clubs have all waived claim to his services, barring New York, and no trouble is anticipated from that source, as President Day has not, and will not, object to the deal. Indianapolis Journal March 31, 1889

Source Indianapolis Journal
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the old Detroit Club pays a dividend

Date Sunday, December 1, 1889
Text

The old Detroit League Club has declared another dividend of $17.50 on each share, payable December 10. This comes from the $7,000 received for players released to Pittsburg.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the organization of the Players League

Date Wednesday, November 6, 1889
Text

[from W. I Harris] The plan of the new league is only partly co-operative. The movement is really but little more than a change of employers with more privileges and liberties accorded to the players. … visiting clubs will be given 50 per cent. of both gate and grand stand receipts, and when the receipts exceed a certain figure they will be divided pro rata among player and stockholder.

The governing board, called the central board of directors, will consist of the president and sixteen members—one player and one stockholder from each of the eight clubs. This board at the end of each season will make up the teams for the ensuing year. The aim will be to equalize the playing strength of the clubs as nearly as possible, and changes will be the rule rather than the exception. …

Every League player, except Decker, of the Philadelphia club, and Anson, Burns and Hutchinson, of the Chicagos, has signed a contract next for [sic] season. President Ward says that they will keep the contracts, too. “You won't find any scabs among the ball players,” was the confident remark of Mr. Ward last night. …

The one question to be settled now is the policy of the Brotherhood toward the American Association. The matter may not be decided until after it is known what action will be taken by the National League and Association on the subject of consolidation. If the two bodies amalgamate, the Brotherhood men believe the best men in the Association will quickly jump into their ranks.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the perpetuity of the reserve

Date Wednesday, February 13, 1889
Text

[from an interview of Deacon White] If we can make a satisfactory deal for our releases we ill do it and then we will play with the buffalo Club, not before. The reserve holds good for only one year, the contract plainly states it, so that if we held off for a year,we would in all fairness be free. But the League claims that the reserve continues in force. This point the Brotherhood of Ballplayers disputes, and I think they would support our position. I am not a member of the Brotherhood, but Rowe is.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

The position of the field umpire; two umpire system

Date Wednesday, August 14, 1889
Text

Captain Stovey objected to Goldmsith umpiring from the centre of the diamond last Monday, claiming that with two umpires it was not necessary to run any risk of blocking the players. Goldsmith umpired from that position only when there was a man on second base, but it was quite evident that he interfered with the throwing of both Cross and Weyhing to second. With two men umpiring no standing in the infield should be permitted.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the potato trick 2

Date Wednesday, June 12, 1889
Text

[Yale vs. Staten Island Athletic Club 6/5/1889] Yale was at the bat, and taking advantage of the rattled condition of the Staten Island pitcher had put three men on bases. Third base was covered by L. Small, conceded to be one of the best basemen in the amateur field, but slightly given to a fondness for pranks and horse play. Bates had placed himself in position to pitch the ball when his attention was attracted by a loud “Hist” from Small, followed by “Quick! Give me the ball.” Believe that the third baseman had a chance to make a point Bates let drive at him. Small caught the ball, touched the man on the base, and then pretended to toss the ball to the pitcher, but instead of doing so he put it in the hollow of his right arm. The movement was executed so slowly and awkwardly that the spectators laughed and the man on the base smiled disdainfully. He was not to be caught by such a clumsy maneuvre.

Suddenly Small reached under his left arm with his right hand and then threw swiftly to the pitcher; but he did not throw the ball. With a quick and almost imperceptible movement he took from the left breast pocket of his shirt a round potato and tossed that. Bates caught it, looked at it for a second, and then with a gesture of annoyance threw it down towards centre field. Of course the man on the base thought the ball had been thrown, and he started for the home plate. Instantly Small took the ball from under his arm, touched the runner, and called for judgment. The umpire could give only one decision and that was “Out.”

The trick was not discovered for half a minute at least, but when it was then came the uproar. A chorus of hisses came from the ladies in the grand stand and the men groaned in unison. Manager Thomas J. Conroy was in the clubhouse at the time and was called up by the furious ringing of the telephone, followed by an angry inquiry as to whether he intended to permit Small to continue playing. Although perfectly innocent of any knowledge of what had been done, Mr. Conroy was treated to the same goosey disapproval as soon as he appeared. Mr. Small did not appear to consider that he had done anything calling for censure and felt rather proud of his achievement. He continued playing to the end of the game. Staten Island was beaten, being genuinely outplayed. Had the substitution of the potato resulted in defeating the Yale men there would have been serious trouble. At least this is the opinion of a majority of the members of the home team. quoting the New York World

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the reserve put into the AA constitution

Date Wednesday, March 13, 1889
Text

[editorial matter] The most important piece of work accomplished [at the AA spring meeting], and which is worthy of special mention, was the adoption of the amendment by which reservation of players is recognized by and incorporated in the constitution of the Association independent of the National Agreement. The amendment was conceived by President Byrne and presented by him to the Association, which adopted it unanimously. … Mr. Byrne's idea appears to be to legalize reservation, to make it more binding upon the players, , whom he seeks to make a party thereto, and to devise a means of maintaining it in the event of a collapse of or withdrawal from the National Agreement.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the reserve team craze

Date Wednesday, January 23, 1889
Text

The reserve team craze seems to have gone the way of the other base ball fads. Very few major league clubs will sign many more men than they expect to have regular use for, and in the minor leagues, where even more rigid economy is necessary, few extra men will be carried. Retrenchment is the order of the day.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the soaking the field trick

Date Monday, August 26, 1889
Text

Manager Mutrie tells a story of how, in order to avoid a game with the Giants on a wet day, to make things worse, the Hoosier groundkeeper had brought out a hose and sprinkled the base lines, pitcher's box, and home plate to such an extent as to make a game wholly impossible. Jim insisted on a game, as it was not raining. The Hoosier people hummed and hawed, and finally agreed to play at 4:35. They did play and defeated the Giants, much to Mutrie's chagrin.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the squeeze put on the Huntingdon Street grounds

Date Wednesday, March 27, 1889
Text

The New York Club is not the only club in the League that is troubled by municipal interference, the Philadelphias being placed in a similar position. In Common Council last week John D. Heins, of the Twenty-eighth Ward, introduced an ordinance authorizing the opening of Carlisle street, from Huntingdon street to Lehigh avenue. Carlisle street is now opened as far north as Huntingdon street, and is on a line with the centre of the filed of the grounds of the Phillies. The opening of the street would, therefore, divide the grounds, rendering either half too small for the use to which it is now put. The street would cut through the eastern end of the grand stand and across the diamond to the left field fence, near Lehigh avenue. The grounds were were secured by the Philadelphia Base Ball Club in 1885 on a lease for ten years, and $80,000 was spent in building the grand stand and fitting up the place. Last year the grounds were purchased by the club, and are the finest and most expensive in the country, and perhaps the world. The ordinance was referred to the highway committee.

There is no likelihood, however, of the Phillies submitting to the Councilmanic brace game. Carlisle street was not upon the city plan when the ground was purchased by Reach and Rogers, and to open it now it would be first necessary to prove that it would be for the best interests of the city, which would be a rather difficult undertaking. Col. Rogers says of the matter:

“When we secured the grounds do yo suppose we did it blindly, without thought of the future? We ascertained at the Survey Bureau that Carlisle street was not on the city plan, and so we were safe to go ahead. For Councils to open the street now an ordinance would have to be introduced to put it on the city plan. Then the matter would have to go into the courts, where the necessity of such an opening would have to be shown, and then, mark you, we would have to be paid every cent of damage the destruction of our grounds would entail.

Source The Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the status of the Brush plan

Date Wednesday, November 6, 1889
Text

President Young, of the League, has not made any reclassification under the new rule, for the reason that none of the clubs have yet sent their annual affidavits showing the amount of salary paid to the various players. He insists that the classification rule is not a dead letter, and predicts that it will be maintained in the best interests of the League. The Sporting Life November 6, 1889

[from Chadwick's column] Here is an interesting paragraph the League magnates had to attend to last month:

“The attention of League clubs is respectfully invited to Sec. 32 of the League Constitution, which requires each club to file an affidavit before the 31st inst., setting for the the full amount paid to each player as a salary, bonus, reward, etc. N. E. Young.”

Were the aforesaid affidavits sent in? The Sporting Life November 13, 1889

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the status of the Indianapolis franchise

Date Sunday, January 27, 1889
Text

In the fall of 1886, when the St. Louis Club was about to throw up the sponge and Pittsburg was asking for admission, a resolution was passed at the League meeting on November 18 which exactly meets the case now presented. Under this resolution Messrs. Day, Spalding and Young were appointed a committee and have been re-appointed at each annual meeting since, and still have full authority in the premises. Mr. Young said that “no immediate action would be taken. The League now has a franchise and a complete outfit of players for a club. It is competent for the League to transfer it to any city which will offer sufficient inducements, or it can hold the club under its own control, employ a manager, secure grounds and play the season out in Indianapolis. Under no circumstances will there be less than eight clubs this year, and the present personnel of the Hoosier club will form one of them. There will be no scramble for the stars, for there will be no distribution, and in short there is no vacancy in the League, though some other leaders may direct the organization now located in Indiana. Denny will not be sold to Washington or any other club, but will remain just where he is.

Source Philadelphia Times
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the story behind the Clarkson sale to Boston

Date Tuesday, November 12, 1889
Text

[from an interview of John Clarkson] Mr. Spalding could have satisfied me financially and kept me here during 1888 and 1889. It was only a question of money at first. I was paid $2,800 in 1887. I wanted more, couldn't get it, and opened negotiations with Boston. After I had offered Mr. Spalding $7,500 for my release—it would have been returned to me by Boston—and had found out what I could get for pitching for Boston I refused to settle with Mr. Spalding and refused an advance, which he knew I would refuse as well as he knew that he could get $10,000 for me from Boston. Until I had been refused an increase of salary and had promised Boston that I would go to it there was no personal reason in the way of my staying in Chicago.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the tourists learn of the Brush plan

Date Wednesday, March 6, 1889
Text

In Italy the absent ball players for the first time learned of the League's new salary limit and classification rule. As was to be expected, none of the players are in love with it. Still, they probably have no clearer conception of it yet than our home players had when it was first promulgated. When they come to understand it more clearly they may like it better. At any rate their like or dislike of the needed financial safeguard will not affect it one way or the other.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the undesirability of the St. George grounds

Date Sunday, April 28, 1889
Text

The New York Club will have to play on Staten Island this year, and it is going to make a big decrease in the receipts. I cannot imagine a more undesirable spot to play ball on that this place. In the Spring and Fall it is too cold for comfort and in mid-Summer the players will have to devote more time to killing mosquitoes than playing ball.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the use of courtesy runners

Date Friday, August 16, 1889
Text

[Washington vs. Chicago 8/15/1889] Although Mr. Williamson is “weak on his pins,” [following an extended illness] with the aid of a base runner he is able to render valuable assistance to the Chicago team. Yesterday he hit the ball safely four times out of five that he was at the plate, and his last hit brought in the winning run.

Anson did Williamson's running in the second, fourth, seventh, and ninth. In the fifth the captain was at second when Ed went to the plate and Tener had to do the sprinting act.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

the whole team comes in to kick

Date Monday, April 29, 1889
Text

[Cincinnati vs. St. Louis 4/28/1889] After bunting four fair balls foul, Latham obtained his base, but was almost caught napping by Duryea. This little incident showed that the “Nadjys” [i.e the Reds] were ripe for arguments, for at eery close decision the whole team came in from the field. St.

Source St. Louis Republic
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Thomas Fitzgerald the son of an Irish revolutionary

Date Tuesday, May 7, 1889
Text

[reporting Thomas Fitzgerald on an extended visit to Europe] The Colonel has just visited the ducal house, whose family name he bears, and his father, Gerald Fitzgerald, stood bravely by the side of the unfortunate Lord Edward Fitzgerald in 1798.

The elder Fitzgerald escaped the fate of his associates, and fled to the United States. He settled in the city of New York, where his eldest son was born, when the century was very young indeed.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

throwing firecrackers onto the field

Date Friday, July 5, 1889
Text

[Washington vs. Chicago 7/4/1889] The “bleachers” had any amount of fun throwing “crackers” at the old man while he stood at first. One “giant” cracker almost scared him into dropping a fly ball, but he took it good naturedly. He had to.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

tie goes to the runner 4

Date Sunday, April 7, 1889
Text

The umpire must bear in mind that the striker, running to the first base, is not out unless the ball is held on the base by the baseman before the striker touches it. If at the same time, the striker is not out; it must be palpable that the ball was held on the base before the striker reached it, or he is not out. It should be remembered that the ball is to be held by the base player with some part of his person touching the base at the same time. Touching the base with the ball in the player’s hand without some part of the player’s person touching the base at the same time does not put the striker out at first base. “Holding the ball on the base” means having the ball in hand whiel standing on the base or touching it.

Source Brooklyn Eagle
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

trade unions on the Brotherhood

Date Tuesday, November 5, 1889
Text

[dateline Indianapolis 11/4] The base ball war is likely to assume a new phase from indications at this point. Samuel L. Leffingwell, one of the oldest trade unionists in the West, in talking of the probably coming struggle on the ball field, said: “The latest subject of discussion among organized laboring men is the base ball war now on. It may appear a little singular to outsiders, but a peculiar interest is being manifested in the trades union element favoring this base ball brotherhood movement.

“The way we look at this matter in its present shape is that the brotherhood is a legitimate organization of skilled workmen. No one doubts the necessity of skill for a position in either the league or the association; all minor leagues and clubs are mere schools of apprenticeship to the full fledged skilled workman of the leading leagues; the men are hired on salaries, and outside of the oppressive restrictions under which they are placed, they are to be as fully recognized as the skilled workman of the printing craft, the moulder or the carpenter.

“The key-note given by Von der Ahe in his statement that the fight now going on is a fight of capital against labor; that capital must stand shoulder to shoulder, etc., should be the cue for the brotherhood managers. Let them make application to the American Federation of Trade and Labor Unions, or to the officers of the general executive board of the Knights of Labor, or to both for that matter, and they will find no difficulty in being admitted as a trade organization to either.

“They will then be allied to organizations representing over 1,000,000 of skilled union mechanics, and if it is to be as Von der Ahe says a fight between capital and labor, it will be demonstrated by the attendance upon the games of the respective interests. The people care little who manages the games or who makes the money. They go to see good ball playing; therefore, as the brotherhood will have all the skilled players, and as the main support comes from the workingmen, it will be seen whether mere capital is to rule with despotic sway over the masses of the people in base ball as it would like to do in many other leading industries of the country.

“Oh, yes, the workingmen are in sympathy with the brotherhood.” St.

Source St. Louis Republic
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

turnstile duty

Date Wednesday, November 13, 1889
Text

[Oh, he's doing duty on the gate until he picks up in his batting,” was the careless remark of a base ball player during the sojourn of his club in his city, referring to a friend in the same team. It seemed like a very trivial remark, and to one who has not played professional ball not a great deal of importance would be attached to it. Working the gate is an altogether honorable means of acquiring a livelihood, and withal an easy one, but is by no means a sinecure. The average player realizes that he receives too large a salary fro such trivial work, and unless occasionally relieved it means that he is soon to be released or sold. It is also a way managers have employed to get even with refractory but ambitious players. There is also a certain amount of ignominy involved, and an insinuation that the man engaged at it is not good enough for anything else. It is the especial province of a young players with whom the club may be experimenting, and even a pitcher on an off day may be found turning the stile. The player is yet to be found who would not sooner be disporting himself in full gaze of the crowd in the uniform of his particular club. Like an actor, so long as he is under contract, the ball player revels, indeed almost exists, on the plaudits of his fellow-men, and to be deprived of this even for a short time is a due punishment to him.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

umpire calls 'not out'

Date Sunday, May 19, 1889
Text

[Chicago vs. Washington 5/18/1889] Anson waxes wroth in the ninth when Hoy hit a grounder just off first and Barnum permitted the base runner to hold the base on Anson's error. Pfeffer and Gumbert were both at the bag, but Anson wanted the put-out himself, and so, holding the ball, he did a foot-race with Hoy for the bag. The deaf one took first money and Anson turned three shades of red when the umpire said “Not out.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

umpire moves behind the pitcher

Date Tuesday, April 30, 1889
Text

Barnum goes behind the pitcher as soon as two balls or three strikes [sic] have been called called, and remains there while men are on bases.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

unreliable attendance estimates

Date Tuesday, May 21, 1889
Text

Charley Byrne is preaching against over-estimating attendance at ball games. This is a case of glass house, s there are no cities in the country where crowds are over-estimated oftener than in New York and Brooklyn. The trouble is these cities cannot bear to have Philadelphia over-top them, and that is just what it does when it comes to base ball crowds.

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

value of the New York Club

Date Sunday, October 13, 1889
Text

[from an interview of James Coogan] “...Mr. Dillingham, one of the stockholders of the New York Club, told me that $500,000 could not buy the New York Club franchise, but if $750,000 were offered it might be considered.

Source The Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Von der Ahe comes out in support of the League against the Brotherhood

Date Friday, October 25, 1889
Text

[a statement purportedly by Von der Ahe:] The Association will have to stand by the League. I don’t speak officially as President of the Association. But I believe that is the inevitable outcome of the fight. It is a question of capital against labor, and capital must stick by capital. The Brotherhood may think it can command capital on its side, but it will get left on that point. To mention nothing else, there are not six men in the whole Brotherhood who have an ounce of business brains. They are good ball players, but can’t manage. They can’t even take care of the salaries they are getting. And capitalists are not going to trust their money in such hands; and right here let me emphasize the fact that it takes capital, and big capital, to run the ball business. I exhaust this point when I say that A. G. Spalding is the only instance in the history of the game of a ball player developing into a successful manager. Johnny Ward, no doubt, thinks he could manage. Johnny also calls him self a lawyer. Why doesn’t he practice law, then? Simply because he is a ball player, nothing more, and couldn’t make enough money at law in a year to pay one week’s board out of fifty-two. The Philadelphia Item October 25, 1889

[a statement purportedly by Von der Ahe:] I do not think the Brotherhood movement will amount to anything, but if there is going to be a fight we might as well have it now and have it out. The reason why it won’t last if finally arranged is that the players will find that they haven’t got as good a thing as they had before. They will find that the capitalists who have it in charge will watch the dollars closely. They want all they can get out of it. The men can’t run it themselves. I don’t know six of them that can manage their own affairs, but if it is organized the Brotherhood need not think it will affect us. Take out all the players you want; there are enough new ones to fill their places. The Philadelphia Item October 26, 1889

Source Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Von der Ahe on capital and labor

Date Saturday, November 16, 1889
Text

A few days ago a dispatch was published stating that President Von der Ahe had said that the fight between the League and Brotherhood was simply a fight between capital and labor, and that he would be found on the side of capital. Eddie Von der Ahe, President Von der Ahe’s only son, to-day said:

“That was a lie made out of the whole cloth. My father has never abused the Brotherhood in any way. Mr. O’Neall, his colleague, is a friend of labor, and has always spoken well of the Brotherhood. Under the circumstances I see no reason why the remaining clubs of the American Association can not at once come to an understanding with the Brotherhood and form a combination that will easily put to rout that formed by the League at New York yesterday. It, in fact, seems to me that this is the only remaining and possible plan. The people of St. Louis seem a unit in favor of it and I would like to see my father respect their wishes.

Source The Philadelphia Item
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Von der Ahe reportedly accuses Byrne of bribing umpires

Date Wednesday, September 11, 1889
Text

In an interview with a New York World reporter on Monday Von der Ahe used these costly words:

“Mr. Byrne cannot bluff me. He has been running the association to suit himself and now I’m going to put a stop to it. I’ve had enough of his bribing umpires and won’t stand it any more.”

“What umpires do you refer to when you say Mr. Byrne has bribed umpires?”

“Mr. Byrne knows the umpires I refer to, and sooner than have him continue this sort of business I will give up base ball forever.”

Von der Ahe will have to retract these words before the month expires. It is an imputation Mr. Byrne cannot and will not let go by without a strict accountability. When a man’s temper gets the best of his, brains go out of the business.

Source Brooklyn Eagle
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Von der Ahe wants to buy real estate

Date Sunday, February 24, 1889
Text

Some new improvements are being made at Sportsman's Park this month. The grand stand and the fences are being repaired, and additional accommodations constructed for the ladies. The property is still in dispute, and a final adjudication of the case is not expected for several months. Von der Ahe has made a big offer for the ground, but owing to the conflicting interests it is doubtful if a sale can be negotiated. The ground, at a low estimate, is worth $30,000, just double what its value was six years ago. Von der Ahe is anxious to purchase it, and says if he gets possession he will make it the finest base ball park in the country.

Source New York Sun
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Walter Hewitt on the gate receipts split

Date Sunday, November 17, 1889
Text

[from an interview of Hewitt by an AP reporter] He said that the weaker clubs of the organization, which had heretofore been in the minority, and had consequently little influence at League meetings, were enabled, because of the attitude taken by the Brotherhood toward the League, to demand what had been religiously refused them—an increase in the percentage of visiting clubs from 25 to 40 per cent. The meeting, he said, was the most harmonious he had ever attended, and the disposition and aim of the delegates was to strengthen the weaker clubs, and all united in the fight against the Brotherhood. So far as the Washington club is concerned, he said it was in better condition to-day than it ever has been since its admittance into the League, for the reasons that it had no opposition in this city [Washington] to contend with, and also because it would open the season on the same footing as the remaining clubs in the organization.

Source Indianapolis Journal
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Ward denounced the Brush plan

Date Wednesday, June 12, 1889
Text

Johm M. Ward, president of the Ball Players' Brotherhood, is outspoken in his denunciation of the classification rule, and says that it “is in spirit of a nullification of every benefit derived by the player, and, in its practical application, the National League has practically violated its promise not to reserve at a less salary. Of those classified the great majority have been held at a figure less than that received last season, and the fact that wo or three have been given an advance is a blind too transparent to deceive anyone as to the true character of the steal. The rule was passed, it is claimed, in order to allow several of the weaker cities to at least clear expenses. To the average mind the conclusion would be that if Indianapolis and Washington cannot afford the rate of salaries their associate clubs pay, then they are not entitled to the same class at ball. They are in too fast company, and they ought to get out. They have no right to stay in at the expense of their players. But if it is objected that the that the success of the National League demands the continued existence of these clubs, the fair reply is that the League then should stand the expense. Indianapolis has about as much right in the National League as Oshkosh. Yet if the League admitted the latter city, would it be fair to ask Denny, Myers, Boyle, Glasscock, etc., to play there at figures which would allow Oshkosh to clear their expenses? … It is a fact which cannot bainsaid that taking all the clubs together there is a great deal of money made each year from base ball. The Boston, New York and Chicago clubs pay immense dividends. The low-salaried Philadelphia Club, notwithstanding the wails of its owners, pays largely. Pittsburg makes something, and Detroit, which was said to have lost last season, is now settling up its affairs and publicly chuckling over the division of $54,000 profit derived from somewhere. It would not be exaggerating to say that the aggregate annual profit from the eight League clubs amounts to from $200,000 to $300,000. Now, if the National League wishes to carry several weak cities along, why did I not devise some scheme by which the deficiencies in those clubs sould be made up out of this enormous profit, instead of taking it out of the pockets of the players in those clubs? If, for instance, the League, instead of attempting the unjust and impossible classification scheme, had simply voted to pay the visiting club 50 per cent. instead of 25 per cent., as at present, the alleged losses of the Indianapolis and Washington clubs would have been made up out of the general profit, and there would still be sufficient left to more than compensate the magnates for the capital invested and the risk incurred.

Source The Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Ward on the legal status of the reserve clause

Date Wednesday, October 16, 1889
Text

[from W. I. Harris's column] Mr. Ward is not worried about Colonel Rogers' point as to the League's legal ability to hold the players for another year, under section 18 of the players' contract. Mr. Ward says that Mr. Rogers' point is merely Mr. Rogers' legal opinion, and that Mr. Rogers has frequently been mistaken in his law. Mr. Ward asserts that the Brotherhood has legal advice, and the best, too, and that Colonel Rogers is wrong. Ward says the question rests entirely on what is meant by the word reserve. He substantially admits that the players could be reserved another year against any club playing under the National Agreement but he holds that it would not be binding if the players, was in a league not under the protection of the National League. He says that the reserve means simply against National Agreement clubs.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Ward refuses to play in Washington

Date Wednesday, April 10, 1889
Text

The much and long-talked-of Ward deal is finally settled. The great short stop during the past week positively refused to play in Washington, whereupon the latter at once made a deal for Morrill and Wise, of the Boston Club. This move reduces Ward to the alternative of re-signing with New York or in some way securing his transfer to Boston. The Sporting Life April 10, 1889

President Young says of Ward's refusal to go to Washington:-- “I think that Ward has made a big mistake and he will live to regret it. This was a turning point in his career and he was given a grand opportunity to show himself a base ball general. He could have made himself a national reputation as a base ball manager, so that his services would be in demand after his playing days are over, and he could have worked so as to secure a financial interest in the club, I've no doubt.” The Sporting Life April 10, 1889

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Ward signs

Date Wednesday, May 1, 1889
Text

[from George Stackhouse's column] at the same salary he received last year--$4200.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Ward's response to the League putting off the Brotherhood

Date Wednesday, July 17, 1889
Text

[from W. I. Harris's column] I had an interesting talk with John Ward a day or two ago on the status of the Brotherhood. Mr. Ward had a great deal to say, but much of it was to the point and was said in very plain language. I asked him what he thought of the refusal of the League committee to meet the players and the reasons which Mr. Spalding gave for not doing so. Ward mused a few moments and then said with deliberation and emphasis, which showed that he had thought the matter over very carefully, and had prepared himself to meet just such a question: “The whole truth of the matter is that they were afraid to meet us and discuss the points which were to have been raised that's the size of it.”

“You don't really mean, John, that you believe the League are afraid to talk over the grievances of the players?”

“That is exactly what I mean. Nothing more and nothing less. They knew what the points were to be discussed and do not relish them overmuch. They know that they have broken faith with their players, and dared not face the issue. Moreover they have no intention of conceding anything they may have gained by their action, and consequently are anxious to dispose of the matter with as little discussion as is possible.

“The reasons given by Mr. Spalding for not meeting the Brotherhood committee at this time are amusing and simply absurd in the eyes of every man in this country who knows anything about base ball legislation. Everybody knows that the League held a special meeting at Asbury Grove to decide the question of a forfeited game, and it was one, too, which had very little bearing on the championship question. It is true that other business was transacted at that meeting, but it was called primarily for the purpose I have stated. Certainly, if such a matter was of sufficient importance for a special meeting this Brotherhood matter is far away more imperative because it affects the rights of the players and is considered by them to be a question of pressing moment. Naturally enough it is not so important a question for the League, for at present they have all the best of it and have, as they think, nothing to lose by delay. But it seems to me, and I think it must appear so to every fair man, that as the players are the real cause of the prosperity of the club,s they have a right to be heard at the time which is mos convenient to them. If they think their business is of importance enough to merit an immediate consideration they ought to be heard and the League will stand before the public in a very bad light and be open to the charge of unfairness by their refusal to meet the players.”

“Well, now that Mr. Spalding has refused, what is the Brotherhood going to do about it?”

The Brotherhood's president thought a moment and then said:-- “On that question just at the present time I am neither able nor at liberty to say. There is one thing, however, of which you may be certain. The players have asked only what is right and they will not rest until they get it. The men who are playing ball nowadays are not of the calibre to be hoodwinked or talked out of their rights.

Source The Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

warm up throws by a relief pitcher

Date Tuesday, April 30, 1889
Text

[Chicago vs. Indianapolis 4/29/1889] Beginning the tenth inning Anson relieved Krock and put in Dwyer, who was on the card as tenth man. Before he would let him go into the box he told him to limber up his arm. Glasscock demanded that the game should not be delayed. Barnum commanded Dwyer to play ball. Anson told Dwyer to go ahead. Dwyer continued throwing the ball to Burns [third baseman], and Barnum rushed into the diamond to fine him. Anson said: “Hold on; that man has got to have practice. It would be dangerous to go in there and pitch without a little exercise. You can’t stop him either. You have no right to. There is no rule that I know of which empowers you to stop him. If I delay the game over five minutes you can declare it forfeited; that’s all you can do.” Barnum argued the point with Anson, and the crowd yelled “Fine him.” Glasscock got a chance to hit the ball and knocked it away from Dwyer. Flint threw it back and Glasscock again knocked it away. At this juncture Barnum declared that he would fine Dwyer $10 a ball for every ball he would throw if he continued. Dwyer then got into the box. Anson in backing up to first called to Dwyer to “throw it here,” which was done a couple of times before Anson reached his position. The crowd yelled frantically, and Barnum shouted, “Here, Dwyer,” at the top of his voice. Then Dwyer began pitching to the batsman. After the game Anson said: “I didn’t know of any rule against what I did, and was willing to take a chance that I was right.” Barnum said: “It was one of those cases not covered by the rules, and I couldn’t do anything. But I had fully made up my mind to fine Dwyer $10 a ball and see if the fine would not stand if he didn’t mind me.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Washington Club ownership; finances

Date Sunday, August 11, 1889
Text

There is a growing impression among the patrons of the national game that Walter Hewitt is growing weary of being a baseball magnate and is systematically unloading his interest in the senatorial combination. The late R. C. Hewitt was a baseball “crank” in the fullest meaning of the term. The result was that he put his boat into the league and never lived to realize a single dollar on his thousands expended. His son Walter is made of different material and only looks at baseball with business eyes.

The elder Hewitt was unusually successful in many of his business ventures and Walter is now reaping the benefits from them. Since the latter succeeded his father as the leading and producing spirit of the Washington club, his sole ambition has been to get back some of the money his father invested in the sport. By judicious management, coupled with several brilliant bursts of enterprise, the younger Hewitt is now in a position to retire from the ballfield nearly $50,000 ahead of all outlays. At the present writing he declines to go into details as to his future intentions further than to smile knowingly and say that he has no idea of leaving the league. He insists that because he disposed of Capitol part to a good advantage it does not necessarily follow that he contemplates disposing of his franchise. He says he is well satisfied with the present condition of his team, and predicts that he will put even a stronger combination in the field next season. Chicago Tribune August 11, 1889

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

waste pitches

Date Wednesday, January 2, 1889
Text

It is said of Keefe that he can have four bad balls called on him and then strike the batsman out. He has performed this feat on the Polo Grounds time and again. Some incredulous persons have said that it was more dumb luck than good judgment, and whether they are right is not known, but he has performed the feat so often that people in New York are of the opinion that there is something more than dumb luck back of it. It certainly proves what has so often been said of him, that he has perfect command of the ball, and that he wastes those balls to deceive the batsman, as the latter will not expect the next three balls to come over the home plate. St., quoting the Boston Herald

Source St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

watching the pitcher's grip

Date Wednesday, March 20, 1889
Text

Jack Kerins says that the “only way to get onto the different curves is by watching the grip which the pitcher takes on the ball before it leaves his hand. A smart pitcher will shift his fingers and fool you at the last minute as he draws back his hand; others will give away their trick like children.

Source The Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

why the California League joined the National Agreement

Date Wednesday, May 29, 1889
Text

[from Waller Wallace's column] Some of the local managers are now beginning to realize that a mistake was made when they refused to enter the National Agreement. The Eastern ball magnates are closely watching the work of California League players, and when they see a man worth taking negotiations are entered into with him, and the chances are ten to one that the player leaves the Coast. Fudger, it is believed, is now on his way to a Southern League club; Indianapolis wants Coughlin; Veach and Hapeman are offered terms by Milwaukee, and “Peek-a-boo” will certainly not be in Sacramento last month. It does not injure a ball tosser to be blacklisted by the local League, as he may immediately play elsewhere; but if the National Agreement embraced the Pacific Slope, the result would be different, as the man's chances of obtaining a living on the diamond w3ould be at an end. The Sacramento managers are in favor of joining hands with the majority, and surely Robinson has suffered enough to agree with them on this proposition. It is possible that a meeting of the League directors will be held soon to consider the matter., quoting the San Francisco Call

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

winter ball in New Orleans

Date Tuesday, January 15, 1889
Text

There are some professional players down here [New Orleans], and semi-professional ball is being played. Billy Smith of the Detroits and other nines, Cartwright, the famous slugger; Phelan of Des Moines, Beban of Lynn, and other winter here, and the climate gives them a chance to keep in good condition. There is an effort being made to get up a regular professional nine to play against visiting combinations that it is proposed to bring South. The Detroit team of the International League have in contemplation a visit to the South. They will spend most of their time in New Orleans practicing, and will go North in time for the opening of the base ball season. Other teams are being corresponded with, and the Baltimores and other teams will probably come down. Manager Mutrie and the colts spent some time in New Orleans last year, and Handsome Jeems may come to the Cresent City again this year. He has many friends down South who would be glad to see the youngsters of the gilt-edge team play ball.

Source New York Sun
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

winter baseball in Florida

Date Thursday, September 12, 1889
Text

Florida is rapidly coming to the front as a rival of California in thew inter base ball business. Mr. H. M. Flagler, proprietor of the famous Ponce de Leon Hotel, St. Augustine, has decided to fit up a winter ball park at St. Augustine that, in appointments and accommodations, will be second to none in the country. The contract has already been let for the construction of a magnificent grandstand, and by the time the regular season in the North is at end the St. Augustine Park will be ready to welcome the strong Northern teams. Mr. Flagler is determined to have the best, and his agents will engage the best base ball talent in the market. Offers will be made to leading league and association teams to spend the winter in Florida and make St. Augustine their headquarters. It is safe to say that the offers will be accepted, for there are few men in the base ball business who will refuse a life of ease and comfort in a beautiful climate with expenses guaranteed and a good profit assured. Besides base ball, the park will be used for bicycle, foot ball and tennis contests. St.

Source St. Louis Republic
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

wire fence at Ridgewood

Date Monday, May 13, 1889
Text

But few improvements will be made on the ball grounds at Ridgewood this season, other than to put up a wire fence around the outfield to keep the crowd off the diamond. Manager Wallace says that only a part of the ball ground belongs to the Ridgewood Exhibition Company, and that the lease for that part which does not belong to them will run out next season. In case it can be renewed, then the grounds will be reconstructed. The grand stand will be moved to the other side of the field, and the whole ground surrounded with free seats.

Source New York Sun
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

word of the Players League in New York; projection for the Polo Grounds

Date Wednesday, September 25, 1889
Text

[quoting an unidentified New York afternoon paper] “A syndicate had been formed in this city with a view to running a club in opposition to the New Yorks, and that it was after the plot of ground on Eighth avenue, from One Hundred and Fifty-seventh to One Hundred and Fifty-ninth street, just above the Polo Grounds, and also wanted to take the latter on rental at the expiration of John B. Day's lease. One member of this syndicate has offered to get $1,000,000 to back the Brotherhood, he offering $200,000 himself. … “

President Day, of the Metropolitan Exhibition Company, leased the Polo Grounds from the Lynch estate for two years. This lease will expire next year. The syndicate could then, it is said, lease these grounds, as well as the lot above, and turn the whole into one of the finest base ball fields in the country. The projectors of the new deal say that there is a mint of money in base ball in New York, and that, as the Manhattan elevated railroad is to to build a line from the Third avenue terminus at One Hundred and Twenty-eighth street to One Hundred and fifty-fifth street, there will henceforth be many thousand more people attend the games than the Polo Ground can accommodate. A hotel is to be erected inside the grounds and plenty of room given for spectators and players.

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

World Series share, gate receipts, attendance

Date Thursday, October 31, 1889
Text

...the players assembled in the club-house and heard President Day read these figures:

Gross receipts, world’s series.............................. $20,067.61

Expenses.............................................................. 7,902.86

______________

Net profit............................................................. $12,055.15

Of this sum each player received $380.13. The attendance at the nine games was: At the Polo Grounds, 22,264; at Washington Park, 24,702; total, 47,266. New York World October 31, 1889

The Brooklyn players’ share of the gate receipts in the recent games for the world’s championship amounted to $6,228.65. This was divided among sixteen men, including Manager McGunnigle. Thus each man received $389.29. New York World November 1, 1889

Source New York World
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Young does not credit earned runs on bases on balls

Date Wednesday, May 15, 1889
Text

[from R. M. Larner's column] Many of the official and unofficial scorers are laboring under the impression that a base on balls is a factor in securing an earned run. The President of the League decided otherwise, although he admits that there is no specific mention of the fact in the proceedings of the League meetings of 1888-89. I had quite a long talk with Mr. Young on this point, and he states that when a base on balls was credited as a base hit, it was necessary that a base on balls should be given in an earned run. By abolishing the base-on-balls-a-hit rule, it was generally understood by the playing rules committee that a base on balls figured no longer as a factor in an earned run. The Sporting Life May 15, 1889 [N.B. The rules don't support Young's interpretation.]

Source Sporting Life
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Young instructs close calls should go to the home team

Date Friday, June 21, 1889
Text

In extenuation of his wretched work as an umpire Barnum declares that, under President Young's instructions, all close decisions should be given to the home club. Judging from the gentleman's umpiring, he must have mistaken the word “decisions” in Mr. Young's instructions for the word “games.

Source Chicago Tribune
Submitted by Richard Hershberger