Long Before the Dodgers: Baseball in Brooklyn, 1855-1884

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McFarland, 2002 M04 3 - 196 páginas

Exactly one hundred years before the Brooklyn Dodgers won the 1955 World Series, the Brooklyn Excelsiors were playing on the same grounds where the Dodgers would begin their long history. Brooklyn and its teams played a prominent role in the early history of the game and reigned as champions of baseball's first organized league through most of the 1860s.

The early years of organized baseball (1855-1884) in Brooklyn when it was the center of the baseball universe is the focus of this book. In addition to discussing the early clubs and players, this work examines the transformation of baseball from a recreational pursuit of gentlemen's clubs to a professional spectator sport. It also reveals much about the social norms, gender and race relations, and the role of the media in the early game and covers the many firsts that are attributed to early Brooklyn teams, such as having the first paid player, tragic hero and curveball pitcher, and being the first team to take road trips, play in enclosed ball parks and charge admission. Notably, they were heralded by the most famed sports journalist of the nineteenth century.

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Contenido

Introduction 1
1
One In the Beginning 7
7
Two Excelsiors and Eckfords
29
Three Reign of the Atlantics
45
Four The Rise of Professionalism
67
Five For the Love of the Game
89
Seven The White Mans Game
112
Eight The Birth of the Dodgers
124
Nine Brooklyns Early Stars
131
Epilogue
155
Records of Brooklyn Clubs in the National Association
162
Bibliography
177
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James L. Terry is currently a Social Science Librarian at New York University. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.

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