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MORE: How Baseball Became The National Pastime |
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Trade catalog, “Black band” Spalding bat |
On July 14, 1867, The Detroit Free Press carried
an announcement of the tournament, which was held at the grounds of the
Detroit Base Ball Club from August 14th to August 21st. The international
tournament attracted teams from Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Ontario. When
Detroit hosted the World’s Tournament in 1867, it announced it would
abide by the rules as published in Henry Chadwick’s book, Haney’s
Base Ball Players Book of Reference. Chadwick, along with Albert
G. Spalding, were the two individuals who helped baseball achieve national
prominence. Chadwick, a New York sportswriter, immigrated to the United States from England as a boy. He reported on baseball games, and created a system for scoring games that continues to appear in sports pages today as the box score. Chadwick also authored a number of instructional books on how to play the “national game.” Books, such as Chadwick’s, helped create a uniform game, and promote baseball as acceptable recreation for men, and appropriate for men, women, and children to watch. Chadwick also authored the annual publication, Spalding’s Official Base Ball Guide, until his death in 1908. |
In the early 20th century, Spalding and Chadwick put forth different
versions of the origins of the game of baseball. Chadwick had long asserted
that baseball developed based on British bat and ball games, such as
“rounder." In an era of American nationalism, Albert Spalding
hoped to find an American source for the game. He cajoled professional
baseball to appoint a commission in 1905 to investigate the origins
of the game. Chaired by A.G. Mills, the commission received a letter
from a Denver, Colorado engineer by the name of Abner Graves asserting
that he was present when Abner Doubleday developed the game in Cooperstown,
New York in 1839. Chadwick responded with evidence detailing the history
of English bat and ball games without avail. Spalding’s zeal to
establish baseball as a purely American game, and his connections within
the commission, compelled the group to recognize the circumstantial
evidence and acknowledge Doubleday as baseball’s founder. |
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