Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts

Saturday, August 14, 2021

Abraham Lincoln Played "Fives" Across the Street From His Springfield Law Office.

Serious Lincoln fans may have heard a reference to the “alley by the journal office” but not know about it. Abraham Lincoln was known to be a sportsman for most of his life in an age when organized sports were hard to find. As a young man, Lincoln was a wrestler with extraordinary strength who was inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame. 

He was known to roll “Ten Pins” (bowling) [1], play Billiards (not Pool) [2], and Chess [3] but admitted that he never excelled at any of them. Mr. Lincoln engaged in these games for exercise and amusement, both physically and mentally. He routinely regaled those present with jokes, western anecdotes, and stories during play, which made him popular with opponents and teammates alike.
This is Abraham Lincoln's handball. It was found in a dresser drawer when Lincoln's Springfield house was being restored in the 1950s. Today the handball is in the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C.
Likewise, you may have heard that he was a handball player, as have I, but details have always been hard to find. The game of handball was much better suited to Lincoln. At 6 feet 4 inches tall, his long legs and gangly arms served the Rail Splitter well. Muscles honed while wielding an ax as a youth were kept tight and toned as an adult. Lincoln milked his own cows and chopped his own wood even though he was a successful, affluent lawyer with little time to spare.

In the years before Lincoln was elected president, he was a successful Springfield lawyer. He often played handball in an alley by the Illinois State Journal newspaper office to ease his stress. The paper occupied a three-story building at 116 N. Sixth Street. The building next door immediately south was a three-story building that housed a store operated by John Carmody. The next building south was known as the Logan Building, owned by Judge Stephen T. Logan.

The large vacant lot between these two buildings was the site of the storied impromptu handball court used by lawyer Lincoln and his friends. The brick walls of the Carmody store and Logan building formed the front and back walls of the handball court, and the other two sides were enclosed by wood fences standing 6 to 8 feet high. The fences also had wooden bench seats for visitors watching the matches or for players waiting their turn to take on the winner.


The term handball didn’t exist in Lincoln’s day. Lincoln and his contemporaries called the game 'FIVES.' When Mr. Lincoln went into town, he frequently joined the boys to play handball. In the Springfield version, players choose sides to square off against one another. The game was begun by one of the boys bouncing the ball against the wall of the Logan building. As it bounced back, and opponent struck it in the same manner so that the ball kept going back and forth against the wall until someone missed the rebound. ‘Old Abe’ was often the winner, for his long arms and long legs were perfect for reaching and returning the ball from any angle his adversary could send it. The game required two, four, or six players, spread equally on each side. The three players who lost paid 10¢ ($3.25 today) each, making the winnings 30¢ a game. So as you can imagine, the games got pretty serious.

Court clerk Thomas W.S. Kidd spoke of Mr. Lincoln’s love of the game: “In 1859, Zimri A. Enos, Esq., Hon. Chas. A. Keyes, E. L. Baker, Esq., then editor of the Journal, William A. Turney, Esq., Clerk of the Supreme Court, and several others, in connection with Mr. Lincoln, had the fives 'court (alley),' then an open one, lying between what was known as the United States Court Building, on the northeast corner of the public square, and the building owned by a friend, Mr. John Carmody, on the alley north of it, on Sixth street, enclosed with a high board fence, leaving a dead wall at either end. In this ‘alley’ could be found Mr. Lincoln, with the gentlemen named and others, as vigorously engaged in the sport as though life depended upon it. He would play until nearly exhausted and then take a seat on the rough board benches arranged along the sides for the accommodation of friends and the tired players.”

In May of 1860, the most noteworthy game of 'fives' in our country’s history took place on this court. The Republican National Convention, held in a wood frame building known as the “Wigwam,” had kicked off in nearby Chicago on May 16th. The Whig party had imploded, the Free Soilers were migrating, and the anti-Catholic populists from the Know-Nothing party were flocking to the Republican Party with its anti-slavery message. Even though this promised to be a raucous convention, the eventual GOP nominee, “Abraham Lincoln,” decided to stay home as presidential candidates did not attend their National Convention. 

Most Lincoln scholars agree that Lincoln played handball all three days of the convention (May 16-18) to relieve stress while waiting for news to arrive by telegraph at the Illinois State Journal newspaper offices. On the last day of the GOP convention, Friday, May 18, 1865, Lincoln rose bright and early and headed downtown (1/2 mile from home to office). Although nervous and anxious, Lincoln greeted neighbors and friends on the streets and on the square around the Illinois Capitol Building.

At 8:30 am, Lincoln nervously visited the second-floor office of lawyer James C. Conkling located at 119 S. Fifth Street. Mr. Conkling had just returned from Chicago, and Lincoln was anxious to hear any news from the convention. Conkling told Lincoln to relax, assuring him that he was sure to be nominated that day. Lincoln, however, was not so confident and told Conkling, “Well, Conkling, I guess I’ll go back to my office and practice law.” But here is where the narrative takes a mysterious turn.

Lincoln did not arrive back at his law office until just before 10 a.m. We know this from accounts of the many well-wishers, friends, and supporters who were waiting for the arrival of their candidate on the corner of Sixth and Adams on the square. Shortly after 10 o'clock, Edward L Baker, one of the editors of the Illinois State Journal, appeared at the office of Lincoln and Herndon with two bulletins in his hand. The first one announcing that the delegates were filing back into the Wigwam; the second, that the names of the candidates for president had been presented to the chairman of the convention.

The initial news was not good. When voting for the nomination began, William H. Seward led on the first ballot with 173 1/2 votes. Lincoln was a distant second tallying 102 votes. There were 465 delegates at the convention, making 233 votes necessary for the nomination. Simon Cameron received 50, Salmon P. Chase got 49, and Edwin Bates had 48. Witnesses claimed that, upon hearing the news, Mr. Lincoln threw himself upon a horsehair couch in the office without expressing any opinion on the news. By all accounts, Lincoln was very guarded in all of his statements that morning.

After a few minutes, Lincoln arose from the chair and said: “The dispatches appear to be coming to the Journal office… Let us go over there.” When the Lincoln entourage arrived at the foot of the stairway leading to the telegraph office on the north side of the public square, Lincoln said: “Let’s go up; it must be about time for the second ballot.” The results of the second ballot were coming across the ticker tape as Lincoln entered the room. The telegraph operator handed the news to Mr. Lincoln. Most of the Pennsylvania delegation jumped over to Lincoln on the second ballot, putting him in a near-tie with Seward (184 for Seward and 181 for Lincoln). Although silent, witnesses remember a look of satisfaction appearing on Lincoln’s face.

News soon arrived that many additional delegates switched to Lincoln on the third ballot, and he won the party’s nomination. Lincoln was nominated and would be elected the nation’s 16th president. He appointed Seward Secretary of State, Cameron Secretary of War, Chase Secretary of the Treasury, and Bates Attorney General.

But where was Lincoln from 8:30 am to 10 am? His longtime friend and bodyguard Ward Hill Lamon was the first to say that Lincoln was playing handball during that period. Henry Wirt Butler confirmed that he was engaged in a game with the candidate at Mr. Lincoln’s request while awaiting news from the convention. When young Mr. Butler was born, Lincoln was a practicing attorney in Springfield, living at the home of Mr. Butler’s parents. He had just finished reading the Life of William Wirt and suggested that the baby be named after the former U.S. Attorney General. When the boy whom Lincoln had named grew to be a young man, he became a favorite of the Great Emancipator’s and read law for some time in his office. It should be noted that Wirt was barely 20 years old, and Lincoln was 51 at the time of the game.

Lincoln’s friend, Dr. Preston H Bailhache, recalled a game of 'fives' played on a court built by Patrick Stanley in an alley at the rear of his grocery in the Second Ward. “I have sat and laughed many happy hours away watching a game of 'fives' between Lincoln on one side and Hon. Chas. A. Keyes on the other. Mr. Keyes is quite a short man, but muscular, wiry, and active as a cat, while his now more distinguished antagonist, as all now know, was tall and a little awkward, but which with much practice and skill in the movement of the ball, together with his good judgment, gave him the greatest advantage. In a very hotly contested game, when both sides were ‘up a stump’ — a term used by the players to indicate an even game — and while the contestants were vigorously watching every movement, Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Turney collided with such force that it came very near preventing his nomination to the Presidency, and giving Springfield a sensation by his death and burial. Both were badly hurt, but not so badly as to discourage either from being found in the ‘alley’ the next day.”

Another eyewitness was the unofficial gatekeeper of the 'Fives' Court, William Donnelly, a nephew of John Carmody. Years later, Donnelly offered this account to a reporter, “I worked in the Carmody store and usually had charge of the ball court. I smoothed the wall and leveled the ground. I made the balls. Old stockings were rolled out and wound into balls, and covered with buckskin. Mr. Lincoln was not a good player. He learned the game when he was too old. But he liked to play and did tolerably well. I remember when he was nominated as though it were yesterday. It was the last day of the convention, and he was plainly nervous and restless.”

Donnelly continued: “He played 'fives' a good deal during every day of the convention, evidently to relieve the over-strained mind. I was standing down in front of the Carmody store when Edward L. Baker, Charlie Zane (Judge), and one or two others brought word from the telegraph office that he was nominated. It was the bulletin showing the result of the third and last ballot. I naturally followed the crowd upstairs to the editorial room on the second floor. The stairway was in the alley outside the building. The telegram was read and then handed to Mr. Lincoln, who read it out aloud again. After a lot of handshaking, we returned to the street below. Mr. Lincoln appeared anxious to getaway. When he came to the entrance of the ball court, the players gathered around, congratulated him, and pledged him their support.”

The account continued: “He thanked them, looked at the telegram he had in his hand, and said: there’s a little woman over on Eighth Street that will be glad to hear the news; if you’ll excuse me, I’ll go and tell her. He then left for home. I can see him now as he went away. He leaned forward and walked mighty fast. The boy that went with him had to run almost to keep up with him. Mr. Lincoln never came back to the court or played handball after the day he was nominated. I did not vote for Mr. Lincoln in 1860. There were only three Irishmen who did. They were called Irish Republicans and were regarded as curiosities.”

John Carmody recalled another 'fives' game: “An incident occurred during one of those games, which I have retained clearly in my memory. I had a nephew named Patrick Johnson, who was very expert in the game. He struck the ball in such a manner that it hit Mr. Lincoln in the ear. I ran to sympathize with him and asked if he was hurt. He said he was not, and as he said it, he reached both of his hands toward the sky. Straining my neck to look up into his face, for he was several inches taller than I was, I said to him, ‘Lincoln, if you are going to heaven, take us both.’”

For years a myth circulated that Abraham Lincoln was playing 'fives' when he was notified that he had received the nomination for President. Obviously, that legend must be filed alongside the myth that Lincoln wrote the Gettysburg Address on the back of an envelope on the train ride to Gettysburg. Neither story is wholly true, but there is a grain of truth in each. Lincoln was playing 'fives' when the delegates in Chicago were voting, and he edited the Gettysburg Address on the train.

Historians confirm that Abraham Lincoln never returned to that handball court after that day. Years later, President Lincoln spoke about his athletic prowess on the night of his reelection as President in 1864: “For such an awkward fellow, I am pretty sure-footed. It used to take a pretty dextrous man to throw me.”

In October of 2004, the Smithsonian Institution displayed Abraham Lincoln’s handball as part of their exhibit “Sports: Breaking Records, Breaking Barriers.” It’s small (about the size of a tennis ball), dirty and well worn and really, really old. The ball has “No. 2” stamped on the side, but it is unclear if the stamp was on the ball when Lincoln handled it or if it was stamped on the side for reference years later. It came from the Lincoln Home in Springfield, where Lincoln lived from 1844 until 1861.

The ball was found in a dresser drawer when Lincoln's Springfield house was being restored in the 1950s. Smithsonian officials say the descendants of one of the men who played 'fives' with Lincoln donated it to the Lincoln Home. A contemporary newspaper article verified that the ball was indeed one of those used by Lincoln to play 'fives' in the alley. 

There is one footnote about that handball you won’t find in the Smithsonian’s official literature. On May 18, 1860, when Lincoln was having a friendly neighborhood game of “fives” to calm his nerves, just a few blocks from the Wigwam, on the second night of the convention, the McVicker’s Theatre just a few short blocks away was opening "Our American Cousin" — the play Lincoln would be watching at Ford’s Theater his last night on Earth.
McVicker’s Theatre, Madison Street, West of State Street, Chicago, Illinois. (1857-1871)


Although Assassin John Wilkes Booth was not in the production, he would appear at the McVicker’s four times in different productions between 1862 and 1863 while Mr. Lincoln was in the White House. Ironically, the McVicker's Theatre was the first place where actor Harry Hawk began theater work as a call boy or stagehand. Hawk was the actor on stage alone when Lincoln was shot and likely uttered the last words Mr. Lincoln ever heard. Who knew a well-worn piece of leather sports equipment could have so many connections? 

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.



[1] Abraham Lincoln was the first prominent American to spend time playing "ten pins." As German immigrants settled in America, bowling became a major part of their festivals and picnic gatherings. Chicago and New York were the first cities where the sport took root, and at that point, it was primarily an outdoor sport. The first indoor wooden lanes were built in the 1840s in Manhattan, and the sport soon became a fad in New York.



[2] One day in October of 1858, Lincoln met Frederick L. Fake by chance at the Hardy House at First and Wright Streets in La Salle, Illinois, while detained a few hours for tile lack of transportation. Three games of billiards were played to the keen amusement of the large crowd which soon gathered. Lincoln proposed the game and refused Fake's offer of a spot (i.e., handicap) of "forty points in the hundred," Lincoln divested himself of coat, waist-coat, collar, and necktie, rolling his shirt sleeves to shoulders. When shooting, he very carefully squared himself. The game was played on a billiards table (larger than a "pool" table with no pockets). Lincoln talked and told stories, perhaps several of them, much to the delight of the large crowd in the little room as he played. Fake apparently won the first game. Because Lincoln refused the offer of a 50 point spot (in a game to 100) for the second game, saying he had not played his best game, etc., they divided the expense at the finish. Much story-telling went on by Lincoln, particularly of what he did not know of billiards, making everybody happy with a performance long to be remembered. 

What a marvelous account! It shows Lincoln proposing the game, rejecting offers of a handicap, and partially disrobing as he prepares to play. It describes his technique in approaching a shot, the type of table, who paid, and it acknowledges Lincoln's story-telling as social discourse during the game itself. Parts of this account may be suspect.

NOTE: The 1857 and 1866 Springfield, Illinois, business directories listed the St. Nicholas Hotel (opened in 1855) at Fourth and Jefferson streets as the home of a billiard saloon.


[3] Abraham Lincoln played chess. One of his chess sets is displayed in the Smithsonian.

3a) A contemporary report said Lincoln played a very fair game, but not a first-rate one. While playing chess, Mr. Lincoln seems to be continually thinking of something else. Those who have played him say he plays as if it were a mechanical pastime to occupy his hands while his mind is busy with some other subject.   He plays what chess players call a "safe game."  Rarely attacking, he is content to let his opponent attack while he concentrates all his energies in the defense — awaiting the opportunity of dashing in at a weak point or the expenditure of his adversary's strength. He was the model of a chess general.

3b) An old friend of Mr. Lincoln once related to me another of his stories which shows not a little of his character. This gentleman was conversing with the President at a time during the War when things looked very dark. On taking leave, he asked the President what he should say to their friends in Kentucky—what cheering news he could give them of him. Mr. Lincoln replied:

"That reminds me of a man who prided himself greatly on his game of chess, having seldom been beaten. He heard of a machine called the "Automaton Chess Player," which was beating everyone who played against it. So he went to try his skill with the machine. He lost the first game, same with the second, and the third games. Then, rising in astonishment from his seat, he walked around the machine and looked at it for a few minutes. Then, stopping and pointing at it, he exclaimed, 'There is a man in there.'"

"Tell my friends," said Mr. Lincoln, "there is a man in here!" 

NOTE: The chess automaton, the Turk, aka the Mechanical Turk or Automaton Chess Player, was a fake chess-playing machine constructed in the late 18th century. From 1770 until its destruction by fire in 1854, it was exhibited by various owners as an automaton, though it was eventually revealed to be an elaborate hoax. Constructed and unveiled in 1770 by Wolfgang von Kempelen, the mechanism appeared to be able to play a strong game of chess against a human opponent, as well as perform the "Knight's Tour," a puzzle that requires the player to move a knight to occupy every square of a chessboard exactly once. The Turk was, in fact, a mechanical illusion that allowed a human chess master hiding inside to operate the machine. With a skilled operator, the Turk won most of the games played during its demonstrations around Europe and the Americas for nearly 84 years.
A copper engraving of the Turk, showing the open cabinets and working parts.






ADDITIONAL READING: Observations on the automaton chess player. 1819.

Monday, April 26, 2021

Great Heart; World Record High Jumping Horse at Fort Sheridan, Illinois, in 1923.

One of the greatest high jumping horses of all times, "Great Heart" made an appearance at Fort Sheridan in the 1920s.

This champion horse has escaped the local history books, but fortunately, this photograph survived to document the event.

At the beginning of the 20th century, horse high jumps were an integral part of horse shows. In the Chicago area, there were a number of horse shows held each year at Fort Sheridan, Onwentsia Club in Lake Forest, Soldier Field, Chicago Riding Club, South Shore Country Club, and so on.

In 1910, the world's record high jump was reportedly set by a horse named 'Confidense' who cleared 8 feet and 1/2 inch at an event in Ontario, Canada.

In 1922, Charles Weeghman's (pre-Wrigley Field), chestnut gelding, Strongheart, won the high jump at the International Horse Show in Chicago, clearing the bars at 5 feet 6 inches. That same year, at the South Shore Country Club's horse show, Great Heart cleared the bar at 7 feet 6 inches to win the high jump championship but failed in his attempt to beat the world record.

Chicago coal baron and founder of Peabody Coal, Francis S. Peabody (1858-1922) had purchased Great Heart as a young colt, and after Peabody's death in 1922, his son Stuyvesant "Jack" Peabody continued to train the horse. Great Heart had an affinity for jumping, especially bars set at 6 feet and above.

Great Heart was entered into the South Shore Country Club's horse show in 1923 with the intent of breaking the world record. On June 8, 1923, Great Heart cleared the mark, becoming the world's greatest high jumper with the bars set at 8 feet and 3 inches.
On June 9, 1923, Great Heart cleared the hurdles at 8 feet 13/16 inches at the South Shore Country Club Horse Show, Chicago.

















Great Heart clearing an obstacle set at 8 feet 3 inches at Fort Sheridan, ridden by Fred Vesey in 1923.




Great Heart was retired to the Peabody farm (presumably Stuyvesant "Jack" Peabody's rural farm in Lemont, Illinois) soon after winning the world's champion title. In 1924, the family honored the horse by choosing "Great Heart" as the trade name for the fine grade of coal being mined at Peabody's Mine 30 in Kenvir, Kentucky.

One source claims the world champion high jumping horse is Huaso, a horse ridden by Chilean Captain Alberto Larraguibel, who set the high-jump world record on February 5, 1949, by jumping 8 feet and 1 inch—two inches less than Great Heart's jump of 1923.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.

Wednesday, December 2, 2020

The History of Thillens Stadium, Little League Baseball Park in the West Rogers Park Neighborhood of West Ridge Community of Chicago.

The "North Town Currency Stadium" at 6404 North Kedzie Avenue was founded in 1938 by Mel Thillens, Sr., owner of the Thillens Checashers business at 2351 West Devon Avenue, just east of Western Avenue. Thillens idea was to have a baseball park that anyone could use, rent-free. Well. . . It cost Mel Thillens $6 million to build the park to his satisfaction.
Thillens Stadium was initially named North Town Currency Stadium.






Thillens Stadium was north of the Lincolnwood diner and past the CTA bus terminus turn-around for the 155 bus route. Next came the parking lot for the Stadium, which was small, perhaps only 30 cars and another 20 cars along the eastern fence on Kedzie Avenue.
3200 Devon Avenue, Lincolnwood, IL. Sandwich and homemade ice cream shop.



On the EAST side of the North Shore Canal, at the northwest corner of Devon and Kedzie Avenues, was the 'Lincolnwood Dairy" at 3200 Devon Avenue, Lincolnwood, IL. Sandwich and homemade ice cream shop. Then came the 'Lincolnwood Coffee Grill and Fountain Shop.' The location is in Chicago Today.











 
Tessville, Illinois,
was renamed "The Village of Lincolnwood" in 1936. 

BORDER CHANGE
The Lincolnwood border was moved west from Kedzie Avenue's west side to McCormick Boulevard's west side in 1940.

In 1940, the ballpark erected lights for night use. In the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, both Little League games and men's 16-inch softball games were televised from the park by WGN-TV (Channel 9), with Jack Brickhouse announcing.
Entrance to the overflow parking lot on Kedzie Avenue, north of the Stadium at Arthur Avenue.


North of the 2nd baseball diamond was a large, free, gravel parking lot on the east side of the North Shore Canal. 

During a Little League telecast in the 1950s, the centerfield camera, now a staple of all baseball telecasts, was first used. Brickhouse said, "One of our cameramen, Chuck Seatsema, told me that the centerfield scoreboard was only a couple hundred feet away. He felt that if he put a camera out there, we'd get a nice shot of the little catcher giving signs and the little batter's face over the pitcher's shoulder."
"The Bases Are Loaded."
Thillens Stadium, Devon & Kedzie, Chicago, Illinois. 1953 
[runtime: 00:27:09]







An area landmark was the giant baseball named Thillens on a large pole in the front of the ballpark. Initially, the ball spun on the pole. The Thillens baseball sign began as a globe spinning on top of the "Boys' World" clothing store at  2516 West Devon Avenue, at Maplewood, which used to be the Cine Theatre from 1937 to 1953. Mel Thillens bought the globe when Boys' World closed in the 1950s, and Mel had a parade moving the globe west on Devon Avenue to Kedzie Avenue. 

The Thillens family took great pride in the spit-and-polish glamour associated with Thillens Stadium. The landscaping, cleaning, and painting all contributed to the sense that you were in a shrine, spending $100,000 a season for expenses and over $100,000 yearly maintenance to keep the place up.
Mel Thillens Sr. and Jr. in front of their currency exchange on Devon Avenue, 1977.


The centerfield scoreboard contained a 6-by-8-foot picture of the Thillens armored truck. Starting in 1974, if any player hit the truck on the sign, they would win a $5,000 savings bond. Only three talented little leaguers hit the armored truck at the top of the scoreboard, hitting a baseball 300 feet.

Amazingly, all three batters accomplished the feat on the same date: September 2. Al Pulikowski of Villa Park and Art Eggert of Elk Grove hit it in 1984, only 52 batters apart. Five years later, Patrick Patterson of Des Plaines became the third winner, hitting the truck on September 2, 1989.
Mel Thillens, Sr. died on December 20, 1993, but his family continued to operate the field, and a non-profit charitable foundation supported it. Over time, the foundation could not afford expenses, and in March 2005, Thillens Stadium closed. 

The city of Chicago and the Chicago Cubs combined to invest $1.5 million in repairs, and the Stadium reopened its doors in June 2006. The larger of the two diamonds, the one on the park's south side, was named "Cubs Field." The park has since been renamed "The Stadium at Devon and Kedzie."
The Stadium at Devon and Kedzie Entrance.


In 2013, the Thillens family requested that their family name be removed from the field. Mel Thillens, Jr. was quoted as saying the field wasn't being maintained, and the Thillens family and business no longer wanted to be associated with it. The Chicago Park District claimed to have maintained Thillens to "continue as a place of historical significance" that "thousands of children enjoy" yearly. They obliged Mr. Thillens' request, removing the name from the field. In June of 2013, the 60+-year-old giant baseball, estimated 12 feet in diameter, was removed because it was deemed unsafe.

RAY RAYNER AND I TALKED FOR MORE THAN 2 HOURS
I met Mel Thillens at his business office of the "Thillens Armored Car Check Cashing Company" on Devon Avenue, just east of Western Avenue. I just walked in and asked to speak with Mr. Thillens in the spring of 1968; I was 8 years old. Mel Thillens stepped out of his office to greet me. He took me into his office. 

I asked him if I could work at Thillens Stadium for the season. Mel asked me a few questions to determine my interest in working at the Stadium. Mel gave me a day and time to meet him at the Stadium. He introduced me to the staff, telling them that I'd be helping them out.

I was allowed to attend any and all games I wanted to for free. When working, I was allowed to eat, drink, and snack for free. As a matter of fact, I don't remember there being any limit to food and drink. Sounds good. Although I didn't get any money, I met some local celebrities, like Ray Rayner, Eddie Feigner and his team, the King and his Court, the Queen and her Court, the Donkey Baseball teams, etc.

I met Ray Rayner at Thillens Stadium in 1968. Ray was on a WGN 16" softball team playing the Playboy Bunnies. The evening game was for a charity. It was standing room only. 

If you know anything about Thillens Stadium, one kid worked the manual scoreboard, placing the number of runs per inning and a total runs count. The Strikes, Balls, and Outs scoreboard lights were worked from an elevated platform, with the game announcer from behind the home plate. I worked the strikes and outs from the announcer's booth.

Ray sat in the announcer's booth when the WGN vs.Playboy Bunnies game ended. We talked for quite some time. Ray told me he would speak of the charity softball game on his show on Monday. I jokingly mentioned that I never heard my name called on the Romper Room Show. Rayner told me he would say my name on his TV show the next day, and I could count on him. 

Sure enough... Ray talked about the charity softball game and how much money was raised, and then he said he met a great kid who worked at Thillens Stadium, Dr. Neil Gale. I was floored. It's too bad there were no recording devices to capture that, but it's one of my life's "claim to fame" moments.

Mel Thillens had my name put up on the sign that same day. I couldn't believe it when Mel gave me the picture he had taken the following day. I'm Facebook friends with two of Mel's daughters.


THE URBAN MYTH OF RAY RAYNER BEING A DRUNKARD - BUSTED!
I watched Ray Rayner test his blood sugar after the softball game mentioned above while sitting next to me in the announcer's booth at Thillens Stadium in 1968. You don't do that unless you're diabetic, so getting drunk EVERY night is just ridiculous. It also besmirches Ray's reputation.

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In 1932, Mel Thillens owned and operated a currency exchange at 2351 West Devon Avenue in Chicago. His clientele mainly consisted of factory workers and government employees in the Works Progress Administration (WPA) program from 1935-1943.
           
To eliminate customers from tracking mud over his new office carpet, he conceived the idea of bringing money to the workers to cash their paychecks. It was the first mobile armored car check-cashing service in the U.S.

Copyright © 2020 Dr. Neil Gale. All rights reserved.


An Early Thillens Checashers Armored Truck.




Saturday, August 8, 2020

The Only Lincoln vs Douglas Base Ball Game Occurred on Tuesday, July 24, 1860, in Chicago.

On April 7, 1858, while Abraham Lincoln was arguing legal cases in Bloomington and planning for his upcoming campaign to challenge Stephen Douglas, a small story appeared in his hometown Illinois State Journal. Buried between stories of a ballooning accident in Louisiana and a glowing report of the Illinois wheat crop was a story announcing that “The National Association of Base Ball Players” had been organized in New York a week earlier. It went on to announce that the group had adopted a constitution and that Judge William H. Van Cott had been elected its first president.
From the “Illinois State Journal,” April 7, 1858.
While many people tend to think of base ball as a purely 20th-century invention, it actually is firmly rooted much earlier in our nation’s history. Although historians disagree about exactly when and where it originated, they agree that by the 1840s there were numerous clubs in major cities playing variations of the game we know today.
From “Harper’s Weekly,” October 15, 1859.

In Illinois, one of the earliest games occurred between two amateur teams from Joliet and Lockport in August 1851. To the southwest, in St. Louis, the first club was organized on August 1, 1859, with more quickly to follow. As enthusiasm for the sport grew, it evolved from pick-up games in open lots to purpose-built fields, and eventually, perhaps as early as 1861, into formal stadiums similar on a reduced scale to what we know today.

Just as important as the physical aspects of the game was the role that base ball began to take on within our culture. Displays of masculinity, athletic prowess, and regional pride were key components of the sport’s growing popularity, but its adaptability to other aspects of daily life further expanded its reach. Nowhere was this truer than in the coming together of base ball and politics. In 2012, author Stacy Pratt McDermott provided a remarkable example of this in an essay entitled Base Balls and Ballots: The National Pastime and Illinois Politics during Abraham Lincoln’s Time. 

In the late 1850s, there were three or four base ball clubs in Chicago. The Excelsior club is the most prominent one and was one of the pioneer clubs. In fact, the Excelsior club was formed in 1857 and played games in 1858. McDermott explained how in the summer of 1860 the players of the Excelsior’s were divided into their support for Lincoln or for Douglas during the 1860 Presidential contest. Rather than debate the merits of their respective candidates or their political platforms, the players decided that the President should be determined on the diamond.

On the afternoon of July 24th, the two teams took the field before an estimated 1,200 fans. The game was tight, but in the end, the Douglas team edged out the Lincoln team by a score of 16-14. [Time-Period Rules]
In the following day’s Chicago Tribune Newspaper:
Chicago Tribune, Wednesday, July 25, 1860.
No evidence exists that either Lincoln or Douglas acknowledged the outcome of this contest. However, it becomes clear that even within the anxious political climate of 1860, base ball had firmly established itself within our culture.

“Four Score and Seven” Magazine
Edited by Neil Gale, Ph.D.

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Base Ball in the 1800s was Considerably Different than Today’s Game.

The discovery of a by-law residing in the city records of Pittsfield gave unequivocal proof that base ball had been played there in 1791, long before Abner Doubleday's supposed invention of the game in Cooperstown, New York, in 1839.
Historians generally accept that American base ball evolved from an English game known as rounders, base, or base ball.

The Knickerbockers began formalizing their rules (eliminating "soaking" or hitting base runners with the base ball and establishing foul territory, etc.) in 1845. Establishing foul territory was a significant step in separating what would become the New York Game from the Massachusetts Game and Town Ball, which was popular in Philadelphia. The Knickerbockers modeled their club after the gentlemen's clubs organized in cricket. They seemingly had more rules and regulations about gentlemanly behavior than the game itself, such as being fined for using inappropriate language.

By the mid to late-1850s, more than two dozen clubs in New York (Manhattan today) and Brooklyn began to play the Knickerbocker of New York style game of base ball. After the 1857 base ball meetings in New York, the National Association of Base Ball Players was formed. The game's popularity, changes in the work schedules of many laborers, and the prospect of charging an admission (first done in July of 1858) lured some working-class clubs into the game, such as the powerful Brooklyn Atlantics, whose primary interest was to win.

There were three or four base ball clubs in Chicago. The Excelsior is the most prominent one and was one of the pioneer clubs. In fact, the Excelsior Club was formed in 1857 and played games in 1858.
On August 17, 1858, the Unions formally challenged the Excelsiors on their grounds at the Prairie Cricket Club, located at Chicago's western city limits on Madison Street between Loomis Street and the South Western Plank Road (now Ogden Avenue), near Bull's Head Tavern and Union Park, using New York rules. 
The ball had been preserved in an 1855-patent-model cylindrical presentation box topped with a handwritten label bearing the initials "B.F.G." and "Prize Ball 1858.Won, October 29, 1858. H.L. 1, Runs 13 — "H.L." means "hands lost," today's "Outs."
The first contest occurred on August 30, with the Excelsiors triumphing 17–11. In a return match on September 13, the Excelsiors won again, 30–17. "Speechmaking, pleasant repartee, merry jokes, and singing" at the Union Park [Field] House followed the contest. The Chicago Press and Tribune editors were glad to note the excellent feeling evinced by each club member on this occasion and trust that our citizens will take more interest in this genuinely healthful and entertaining game. Numerous tents have been erected for the benefit of the ladies. The Madison Street omnibus runs to and from the grounds every half-hour.

The Excelsior base ball grounds were at the corner of May Street and West Lake Street. The Atlantic base ball club grounds were at Washington and Sheldon (Loomis Street) Streets. Other local base ball fields were at Ann Street (Racine Avenue) and Lake Street, 12th Street (Roosevelt Road) and Halsted Street, and the corner of Catherine (15th Street) and Morgan Streets.
Base Ball in 1860.
The Chicago Tribune, May 31, 1868, has an article on the new grounds of the Excelsior Club on State and 22nd streets. It had a high fenced-in area of 475 x 700 "perfectly smooth and level," with an amphitheater for the fans and facilities for the players.

By 1860, the number of teams playing matches vastly increased as new clubs formed in surrounding states such as New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and upstate New York. The New York rules were preferred, virtually eliminating the Massachusetts game and Town Ball.

Fielders were catching a brown ball with no gloves, and pitchers threw underhand in style between slow- and fast-pitch softball. The dimensions of the bases looked familiar, but the field was simply a grassy, open section of the park where several trees stood in play. 
Players are "ballists," fielders are "bagmen," pitchers are "hurlers," hitters are "strikers," left-handed strikers are "wrongsiders," and opponents call each other "Sir." 

There are serious differences from the modern game:
  • Bagmen can make an out by catching a hit ball on one bounce or tagging a runner who advances through first base instead of stopping on the bag.
  • One bagman, the "rover," is apt to stand anywhere, even in foul territory, though he most frequently hovers where modern shortstops play. 
  • The purpose of the hurler is to help the striker put the ball into play so hurlers do not compete with strikers by altering the motion or speed of the ball.
This time period was essential to the development of base ball, which evolved from the English game of rounders in New England in the late 18th century. According to Michael Mandelbaum in his excellent The Meaning of Sports, The Civil War (1861-1865) helped to spread the game all over the country—it was played in military bases and prison camps in both North and Southand in the wake of the war what had been an informal game was transformed into an organized sport. Permanent teams were formed, and regular competitions among them were scheduled. 

In 1869, the Cincinnati Red Stockings became the first entirely professional club. 

Most players were bare-handed until the mid-1880s; however, a few catchers began wearing gloves in the mid-1870s. Cincinnati Reds second baseman Bid McPhee, the last of the bare-handed players, opened the 1896 season on April 16, wearing a glove.
The first professional league in America was formed in 1871, ceasing operation in 1875, which beget the formation of the National League in 1876 and then the American League in 1901.
Extremely rare fingerless style base-ball glove c.1880. Wooden button with metal attachment on the back strap. There have been only a few examples of this rare glove style to be offered publicly as the original fragility, surviving supply, and enormous demand have made this the most desired style in the glove-collecting arena.
Rare tipped finger workman's style base-ball glove c. 1880s. Along with fingerless base ball gloves, this style is considered the pinnacle of early gloves, with less than 5 known survivors. No visible manufacturer markings. Asbestos lining.
THE RULES
The By-Laws of the Independent Base Ball Club embraced the Rules and Regulations adopted by the National Association of Base Ball Players in March of 1858, making them the official rules of Base Ball.

Section 1. The ball. The ball must weigh not less than six nor more than six and one-quarter ounces avoirdupois. It must measure not less than ten nor more than ten and a quarter inches in circumference. It must be composed of India rubber and yarn and covered with leather, and in all match games, shall be furnished by the challenging club and become the property of the winning club as a trophy of victory.

Section 2. The bat. The bat must be round and not exceed two and a half inches in diameter in the thickest part. It must be made of wood and may be of any length to suit the striker.

Section 3. The bases. The bases must be four in number, placed at equal distances from each other, and securely fastened upon the four corners of a square, whose sides are respectively thirty yards. They must be constructed as distinctly seen by the umpire and cover a space equal to one square foot of surface. The first, second, and third bases shall be canvas bags painted white and filled with sand or sawdust; the home base and pitcher's point are marked with a flat circular iron plate, painted or enameled white.

Section 4. Position of the bases. The base from which the ball is struck shall be designated the Home Base and must be directly opposite the second base; the first base must always be that upon the right hand, and the third base that upon the left-hand side of the striker when occupying the position at the home base.

Section 5. The pitcher's position. The pitcher's position shall be designated by a line four yards in length, drawn at right angles to a line from home to the second base, having its center upon that line, at a fixed iron plate placed at a point fifteen yards distant from the home base. The pitcher must deliver the ball as near as possible over the center of said base and to the striker.

Section 6. Delivering the ball. The ball must be pitched, not jerked nor thrown, to the bat. Whenever the pitcher draws back his hand or moves with the apparent purpose or pretension to deliver the ball, he shall give it and must have neither foot in advance of the line when delivering the ball. It shall be declared a balk if he fails in either of these particulars.

Section 7. Balking. When a balk is made by the pitcher, every player running the bases is entitled to one base without being put out.

Section 8. Foul and fair hit balls. If the ball, from a stroke of the bat, is caught behind the range of home and the first base or home and the third base, without having touched the ground or first touches the ground behind those bases, it shall be termed foul and must be so declared by the umpire, unasked. It shall be considered fair if the ball first touches the ground, either upon or in front of the range of those bases.

Section 9. Scoring a run. A player making the home base shall be entitled to score one run.

Section 10. Running on the third strike. If three balls are struck at and missed, and the last one is not caught, either flying or upon the first bounce, it shall be considered fair, and the striker must attempt to make his run.

HOW BATSMEN ARE PUT OUT
The Chicago Salmon Vintage Base Ball Club.
Section 11. Caught a foul ball. The striker is out if a foul ball is caught, either before touching the ground or upon the first bound;

Section 12. Three strikes. Or, if three balls are struck at and missed, and the last is caught either before touching the ground or upon the first bound;

Section 13. Caught a fair ball. Or, if a fair ball is struck, and the ball is caught without having touched the ground or upon the bound;

Section 14. At first base. Or, if a fair ball is struck, and the ball is held by an adversary on the first base before the striker touches that base;

Section 15. Touched with the ball. Or if, at any time, he is touched by the ball while in play in the hands of an adversary, without some part of his person being on a base.

Section 16. Running on fair and foul balls. No ace nor base can be made upon a foul ball, nor when a fair ball has been caught without having touched the ground, and the ball shall, in both instances, be considered dead and not in play until it shall first have been settled in the hands of the pitcher. In either case, the players running the bases shall return to them and shall not be put out in so returning unless the ball has been first pitched to the striker.

Section 17. The batsman's position. The striker must stand on a line drawn through the center of the home base, not exceeding in length three feet from either side thereof, and parallel with the line occupied by the pitcher. He shall be considered the striker until he has made the first base. Players must strike in regular rotation, and after the first inning is played, the turn commences with the player who stands on the list next to the one who lost the third hand.

Section 18. Forced off a base. Players must make their bases in order of striking, and when a fair ball is hit and not caught flying nor on the first bound, the first base must be vacated, as well as the second and third bases, if they are occupied simultaneously. Under these circumstances, players may be put out at any base in the same manner as the striker when running to the first base.

Section 19. Running out of the line of bases. Players running the bases must, as far as possible, keep upon the direct line between bases, and should any player run three feet out of this line to avoid the ball in the hands of an adversary, he shall be declared out.

Section 20. Interfering with a fielder. Any player who intentionally prevents an adversary from catching or fielding the ball shall be declared out.

Section 21. Obstructing baserunners. If the player is prevented from making a base by the intentional obstruction of an adversary, he shall be entitled to that base and not be put out.

Section 22. Illegally stopping the ball. If an adversary stops the ball with his hat or cap or takes it from the hands of a party not engaged in the game, no player can be put out unless the ball shall first have been settled in the hands of the pitcher.

Section 23. Caught fly balls. If a ball, from the stroke of the bat, is held under any other circumstances than as enumerated in Section 22 and without touching the ground more than once, the striker is out.

Section 24. No run was scored. If two hands are already out, no player running home when a ball is struck can make an ace if the striker is out.

Section 25. End of innings. An inning must be concluded when the third hand is put out.

Section 26. The game. The game shall consist of nine innings for each side, when, should the number of runs be equal, the play shall be continued until a majority of runs, upon an equal number of innings, shall be declared, which shall conclude the game.

Section 27. Eligible players. In playing all matches, nine players from each club shall constitute a full field, and they must have been regular members of the club which they represent and of no other club for thirty days before the match. No change or substitution shall be made after the game has commenced unless there is a reason for illness or injury. The position of players and choice of innings shall be determined by captains previously appointed for that purpose by the respective clubs.

Section 28. Duties of the umpire. The umpire shall observe the regulations respecting the ball, bats, bases, and pitchers. He shall keep a record of the game in a book prepared for the purpose; he shall be the judge of fair and unfair play and shall determine all disputes and differences which may occur during the game; he shall take special care to declare all foul balls and balks immediately upon their occurrence, unasked, and in a distinct and audible manner.

Section 29. Selection of umpire/scorers. In all matches, the umpire shall be selected by the captains of the respective sides. It shall perform all the duties enumerated in Section 28, except recording the game, which shall be done by two scorers, one of whom shall be appointed by each of the contending clubs.

Section 30. Betting prohibited. No person engaged in a match as umpire, scorer, or player shall be directly or indirectly interested in any bet upon the game. Neither umpire, scorer, nor player shall be changed during a match, unless with the consent of both parties, except for a violation of this law, except as provided in Section 27, and then the umpire may dismiss any transgressor.

Section 31. Suspending and completing the game. The umpire in the match shall determine when play shall be suspended. If the game cannot be concluded, it shall be decided by the last even innings, provided five innings have been played, and the party having the greatest number of runs shall be declared the winner.

Section 32. Special ground rules. Clubs may adopt such rules respecting balls knocked beyond or outside of the bounds of the field, as the circumstances of the ground may demand, and these rules shall govern all matches played upon the ground, provided that they are distinctly made known to every player and umpire previous to the commencement of the game.

Section 33. Interfering with participants. No person shall be permitted to approach or speak with the umpire, scorers, or players or in any manner to interrupt or interfere during the game's progress unless by special request of the umpire.

Section 34. Eligible umpires and scorers. No person shall be permitted to act as umpire or scorer in any match unless he shall be a member of a Base Ball Club governed by these rules.

Section 35. Forfeited game. Whenever a match has been determined between two clubs, play shall be called at the exact time appointed, and should either party fail to produce their players within fifteen minutes thereafter, the party so failing shall admit a defeat.

Section 36. Ineligible players. No person who may be in arrears to any club he may have belonged to previous to the one he is then a member of shall not be competent to play in a match unless such arrears are paid.

Section 37. Calling strikes. Should a striker stand at the bat without striking at good balls repeatedly pitched to him to delay the game or give an advantage to a player, the umpire, after warning him, shall call one strike, and if he persists in such action, two and three strikes. When three strikes are called, he shall be subject to the same rules as if he had struck at the three balls.
The Chicago Salmon Vintage Base Ball Club and the Chicago House of David Echoes shake hands after their game.
BASE BALL TERMINOLOGY
3 Hands Dead---------------Side Retired
Aces, Tally-------------------Runs
Bat------------------------------Ash, Hickory, Timber
Catcher-----------------------Catcher
Club Nine--------------------Team
Corker-------------------------hard hit ball
Daisy Cutter-----------------grounder that does not bounce
Foul Tip-----------------------Foul Ball
Home Base------------------Home Plate
Match--------------------------Game
Nines--------------------------Team
Pitcher------------------------Pitcher
Player Dead-----------------Out
Put Some Steam On!-----Run!
Rover-------------------------Shortstop
Spectators------------------Fans
Striker------------------------Batter
Umpire-----------------------Umpire


Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.