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| Florissant, Missouri baseball team, ca. 1930's |
"We rejoice to see the national game coming
into such high favor with our young men."
- St. Louis Republic, July 9, 1860
Vintage base ball is amateur baseball played by the
rules and customs of any earlier period. Players dress in period uniforms and enact rules and use language reminiscent
of 1860s-era America. We use the word "enact" because games are not "re-enactments," but are recreational and completely
unscripted. We invite you to visit the national organization's web site, www.vbba.org, to read more.
The Union Base Ball Club of St. Louis is one of several dozen clubs in North America that play by the 38 rules adopted
in the early 1860's by the “National Association of Base-Ball Players.” In all, over 125 museums, historical societies
and independent groups re-create several different eras and variations of old ball games.
Each re-creation is slightly different, but all predate modern ballpark traditions such as the singing of the National
Anthem (which did not routinely occur until World War II), the ceremonial first pitch, the seventh inning stretch, and a chorus
of “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” (which was not written until 1908). As a spectator at a vintage base ball game
you are given the opportunity to witness modern baseball’s humble roots.
The 1862-rules game played by the Unions is known as “New York rules” base ball, having been established
in 1845 by a gentlemen’s club from New York City. The Knickerbocker Club created the game because town ball was tiresome
(one way to put the runner out is to throw the ball at him) and cricket requires a considerable amount of time and space,
two things city-dwellers often lacked. The game continued to evolve and grow, having spread to New Jersey and throughout Long
Island in its infancy and to most industrial cities (including St. Louis) by 1860. Modern baseball is a descendant of this
game.
In the early 1860's, “base ball” was normally spelled with two words, although the hyphenated variation was
coming into its own. A nine-inning game was an innovation, having been adopted a few years earlier by eastern clubs. Games
were as likely to be played after work on a Wednesday as a Saturday, but never on a Sunday. Players were all amateurs and
their motivation was sport, relaxation, camaraderie and fraternity. The rules suggest that the competition was more good-natured
than cutthroat.
The MIDI file of "Yankee Doodle" is used by permission of Benjamin Robert Tubb
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