Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Memorial Day 2019 and Morven Preview Part II


Photo by Mark Granieri 

On Memorial Day, the Neshanock once again converged on Newtown, Pennsylvania to take on the hometown Newton Strakes, a local team assembled for just this one game.  Although this year's version of the Strakes was reportedly new to vintage base ball, they were definitely well acquainted with how to play the game, combining good hitting and stout defense.  Flemington won the toss and elected to strike second, sending Newtown to the line where they promptly tallied four times.  The Neshanock got two back in their half of the inning, but Newtown added four more runs over the next six innings while holding Flemington to just one.  Leading 8-3 heading to the top of the eighth, the Strakes put together another four running inning for an insurmountable 12-3 lead, although the Neshanock added four tallies in the last two innings for a final score of 12-7.


Photo by Mark Granieri 

While Newtown did very well at the striker's line, what really stood out was their defense, playing errorless ball throughout.  Most vintage teams struggle to get through a game without an error, for a local team to do so is a major accomplishment.  Flemington was once again led on offense by Danny "Lefty" Gallagher with another clear score, reaching base all three times he was up.  Tom "Thumbs" Hoepfner, Mark "Gaslight" Granieri, Gregg "Burner" Wiseburn, Scott "Snuffy" Hengst and "Jersey" Jim Nunn all contributed two hits to the Neshanock attack.  Flemington also had some good efforts in the field with Chris "Low Ball" Lowry making a fine bound out catch at second while Matt Nunn made two good plays in right field both in the same inning.  With the loss, the Neshanock are 3-1 on the season heading into next Saturday's visit to Woodbridge, New Jersey to take on another local team.  Hopefully, they won't be as proficient as the Strakes.


Photo by Mark Granieri

We are only about a week away from the opening of "New Jersey Baseball: From the Cradle to the Major Leagues, 1855 to 1915," a new exhibit at the Morven Museum & Garden in Princeton.  Obviously, the Civil War is part of that period and while the war's influence on baseball has probably been exaggerated, one thing is certain, New Jersey troops played their share of baseball.  The only requirements for a baseball game were players, space, bats, and balls, all of which were readily available.  To tell this part of the story, the exhibit will focus on a game played in April of 1863 between the officers and senior non-commissioned officers of the 11th New Jersey regiment.  The game has special relevance to Memorial Day, a holiday that was created to honor the Union dead. Visitors to the exhibit will see a scorecard from the game as well as original photographs (carte-de-vistes) of almost all of the participants.  The scorecard comes from Thomas Marbaker's History of the 11th New Jersey Volunteers (courtesy of Longstreet House) while the pictures are available courtesy of John Kuhl, one of the great collectors of New Jersey Civil War material and a true gentleman if there ever was one.


Photo by Mark Granieri

The game was played between teams led by Captains Luther Martin and Dorastus Logan.  It isn't known how the sides were chosen, but clearly the talent was not evenly divided since Martin's team took an 18-5 lead after two innings on the way to a one-sided 40-15 win.  What is noteworthy however is not the game itself, but rather what happened to the players a few months later in a small village in southern Pennsylvania called Gettysburg.  It would have been hard for the 11th New Jersey to be in a worse place than on the Emmitsburg Road on July 2nd when the regiment came under Confederate attack from two different directions  In a matter of moments, the two senior officers were wounded and carried from the field.  Next up was Captain Martin, the regiment's senior captain, but he was quickly wounded and while limping to the rear hit a second time and killed.  At about the same time, his opposing captain in the April baseball game, Captain Logan was also fatally shot.  In the space of just about 12 minutes, the 11th New Jersey went through three commanding officers and by the time the day's fighting was over, almost every officer above the rank of lieutenant had been killed or wounded.


11th New Jersey Monument on the Emmitsburg Road at Gettysburg

Without a doubt Martin's and Logan's deaths at a young age are tragic, but the full extent of their sacrifice can be more fully understood and appreciated by looking at the impact their deaths had on their widows and the small children they left behind.  Fortunately, both the widows and their children were not without financial support because the Federal government provided a $20 per month pension to widows plus $2 a month for every child under the age of 16.  Since the average working man in Newark in 1860 made about $300 a year, the amounts are not as low as we might think.  Both widows started receiving their pensions promptly.  Logan's widow, Catharine, lived in Morristown and had two children, one of whom was over 16 and not eligible for the pension.  Little information seems to have survived about her later life, but Mrs. Logan lived until 1911, almost 50 years after her husband's death at Gettysburg.


Dorastus Logan's Grave Marker 

 Martin, who had been the publisher of the Plainfield Gazette, left a widow (Isabella) and four young children, ages six, four, three and six months living in Elizabeth.  Most likely, he never saw his youngest son William who was born in February of 1863.  Like Catharine Logan, Isabella Martin received her pension, but even with the money she apparently couldn't keep her family together since 10 years later in 1873, the three youngest were in the Soldier's Children's Home in Trenton.  These unfortunate youngsters were just three of the 1600 orphans and half orphans left by New Jersey's deceased soldiers.  Growing up without a father, who they probably scarcely remembered, in an institution, not a home, the Martin children shared more than a little in their father's sacrifice. By 1910, Isabella, who would live until 1913, was an inmate in the Baptist Home for the Aged in Newark, suggesting her life continued to be difficult long after that fateful July day in Gettysburg.


Luther Martin's Grave Marker 

Why did Thomas Marbaker include the scorecard of a relatively insignificant baseball game in his regimental history?  He never said, but it clearly was not because it was such a memorable game from a competitive standpoint.  We don't know the date or the weather, but it is reasonable to believe it was a nice day since as soldiers they had spent enough time outside in bad weather that they wouldn't choose to do so in off duty hours.  Most likely it was one of those early spring days that are full of hope and promise regardless of the circumstances.  While there was probably plenty of apprehension about the upcoming spring campaign, there was also hope that this time, they would win a decisive victory and end the war.  In the meantime, what better way to spend the day than playing this "new" game that had become increasingly popular throughout the state.  Some 25 years later when Marbaker sat down to write the regiment's story, it is understandable he wanted to remember them at a time of hope and happiness and used baseball as a means to do so. Similarly, seeing these exhibit items at Morven can help us use baseball to remember them, their families and their sacrifices. It is in Lincoln's words "altogether fitting and proper that we should do this."



Monday, May 20, 2019

Neshanock Take the Town

Many thanks to official blog photographer Mark "Gaslight" Granieri for also taking on the role of blogger to report on the Neshanock's visit to Nutley this past Saturday.


Bat Toss for Choice of Batting First or Second

After two weekends of rainouts, Flemington took the field against the Nutley Colonels at Yanticaw Park in Nutley, NJ. The Colonels are one of five “town” teams on the Neshanock schedule this year. These local clubs usually only assemble once or twice a year for a town event or a benefit. In this case, the Colonels were playing for the Kingsland Manor built in the 1700s.




Base Ball at Yanticaw Park


This is the fifth year for the event and the Colonels brought high hopes after falling to the Neshanock last year by just one run. The Nutley squad was led by “Skipper” who brought a team that included such names as “Baccala”, “Tuna”, “Little Tuna”, “Bomber” and “PopPop”. But the Neshanock were ready and came away with a 16-6 victory. Nutley did provide a scare in the 8th inning by loading the bases several times and sending 4 runs across the plate.



Nutley Colonels 


The Neshanock were led by Danny “Lefty” Gallagher and Tom “Thumbs” Hoepfner who each collected 5 hits apiece. “Lefty’s” bat was particularly explosive as he walloped two triples and a home run. The mound was handled ably by Rene “Mango” Marrero with Dave “Illinois” Harris closing out the last two innings. The Neshanock scored 5 in first, 3 in the second and never looked back.


"Batty" Returns 


One highlight of the game was the execution of a fair/foul hit by Joe “Mick” Murray. In Nineteenth Century Base Ball, a ball is fair or foul depending upon where it first strikes the field, not like the modern game where the ball has to travel fair past first or third base. Another highlight was the return of the Flemington Neshanock bat rack. “The Rack" had been rumored to be lost to the cold winter, the victim of a shortage of firewood.  Next up for the Neshanock is another town team, the Newtown Strakes, on Memorial Day in Newtown, PA.


Flemington Gives Three Cheers and a Tiger In Honor of a Worthy Opponent

Sunday, May 5, 2019

Morven Preview - Part I

After a promising start, the 2019 Neshanock season has reverted to the all too familiar pattern of last year - rain, rain, and more rain.  Not only was last week's visit to Elkton, Maryland washed out, rain canceled today's scheduled doubleheader at New Jersey's historic Ringwood Manor State Park. Flemington is off next weekend, but wind and weather permitting will get back on the field in Nutley on Saturday, May 18th.  It is not clear when Ringwood, the site of today's aborted games, had its first organized baseball club, but it was no later than 1874. In June of that year, the Hewitt Club of Ringwood took part in a historic moment in New Jersey baseball history, the rebirth of the Olympic Club of Paterson.  Founded in 1864, the Olympic Club quickly became the city's top team and enjoyed some noteworthy success including an 1866 upset win over the Irvington Club the same year that upstart club burst on to the national scene.  Playing primarily lower level amateur clubs, the Olympics enjoyed further success but disbanded in 1869 when baseball fell into disfavor in Paterson supposedly because of its supposed negative impact on business.  On that June day in 1874, however, the Olympic Club came together again to play and defeat the Hewitt Club giving added motivation to those interested in re-organizing the Olympic.


Mike "King" Kelly and Jim McCormick as members of the 1886 National League champion Chicago White Stockings 

Not long after that, a group of 50 interested supporters of baseball in Paterson met to make the rebirth a reality and they were willing to back their interest with more than good intentions.  Recognizing the players would lose time from their "shops" to practice and play, the organizers agreed to make good their lost wages.  Drawing on an informal system of junior teams for talent, the rejuvenated Olympics became a highly successful semi-pro team and gave a dramatic illustration of how New Jersey could and would develop major league players.  Four young Paterson residents, Jim McCormick, Mike Kelly, Edward Nolan, and William Purcell took full advantage of the opportunity to play for the reorganized and revitalized Olympic Club.  By 1880 all of them were on major league rosters at a time when there were only about 100 such positions.  McCormick and Kelly had the most success and will be a focal point of the new exhibit on New Jersey baseball opening at Morven Museum & Garden in Princeton on June7th. (https://morvenmuseum.squarespace.com/new-jersey-baseball).



Playing three games for the Olympic Club against the professional Columbus Buckeyes (and former Olympic teammate, Edward "The Only" Nolan) in September of 1876 gave Kelly and McCormick the kind of visibility that got them started on their journey to the major leagues.
New York Clipper September 30, 1876

McCormick, a right-handed pitcher, reached the major leagues in 1878 and was a workhorse over an 11-year career, with a 265-214 overall record and a lifetime 2.43 ERA while pitching almost 4,300 innings.  At the time pitchers, were expected to pitch almost every day and McCormick was no exception throwing over 500 innings five times including a mind-boggling 657 innings in 1880.  Visitors to the exhibit will have the opportunity to see a scorecard of a memorable game from the 1880 season, a year McCormick went 45-28 with a 1.85 ERA.  The scorecard, however, is not from one of his wins, but rather a loss.  On June 14, 1880, McCormick dropped a 1-0 decision to Lee Richmond of the Worcester Club.  Although McCormick only allowed three hits and a single run, Richmond was even better, perfect in fact, pitching the first perfect game in major league history.



Towards the end of his career, McCormick was part of two Chicago White Stocking pennant-winning teams where he rejoined former Olympic teammate, Mike Kelly, by then better known as "King" Kelly.  Whether or not he was the king of all baseball, Kelly was certainly baseball royalty, hitting .307 over a 16-year career on his way to the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown.  But Kelly was more than just a great ball player.  Described as baseball's first matinee idol, the Paterson product received rock star adulation especially after he moved to Boston in 1887.  Some examples of that popularity will be part of the Morven exhibit including the sheet music from the song "Slide Kelly, Slide, and a picture of the same name that supposedly supplanted the famous picture of Custer's Last Stand in Irish bars throughout Boston.  These are just a few examples of the major league section of the exhibit which will also inform visitors about other great nineteenth-century New Jersey players including Mike Tiernan, Weston Fisler, and  Hardy Richardson who was known as the Babe Ruth of the 1880s.  Also part of the exhibit is the story of the state's one major league team - the 1915 Newark Peppers.  Stay tuned for more previews of an exhibit I hope visitors will find both interesting and informative.