Thursday, January 23, 2020

A Basketball Digression

Early in Ken Burns' baseball history series, actor Billy Crystal remembered baseball as the game "My father taught me."  Regardless of how it happens, baseball frequently connects multiple generations.  In my case, on the Zinn side of the family, baseball goes back at last two generations since almost a century ago, my grandfather, also John G. Zinn, played first base for the Bordens Milk Company team.  When it came to my mother's family, however, I never really entertained a connection with baseball or any other sport for that matter.  My grandfather, James W. Winder came to this country from Worcester, England in 1891 at the age of 13 and went straight to work.  It seemed unlikely he had time for games, especially those that weren't played in his native country.  It was no small surprise therefore when I found a 1900 newspaper article describing his involvement not in baseball, but basketball, my second favorite sport. Not only was he involved, he was actually the coach of the aptly named Crusaders of Grace Episcopal Church in Trenton.  That basketball was popular in Trenton, less than a decade after its invention, was more than a little surprising to me.


Trenton Evening Times - January 1894

That I was way off base, became clear when I began reading From Cages to Jump Shots: Pro Basketball's Early Years by Robert W. Peterson, better known as the author of Only the Ball Was White, a groundbreaking book about the Negro Leagues.  Basketball it turns out became very popular, very quickly in Trenton, to the point that the first professional basketball team was formed there in late 1896.  Unlike baseball, much is known about basketball's beginnings - including the who (Dr. James Naismith), the where (Springfield, Massachusetts) and the when, December of 1891.  At what is now Springfield College, but was then a YMCA training school, Naismith invented an indoor game with a ball to satisfy an "incorrigible" class of students who had already driven two prior instructors away in despair.  When Naismith introduced basketball to his students it proved to be very popular even though only one basket was made - a 25 foot toss apparently anticipating the three point shot.  Compared to our limited knowledge of early baseball rules, it's interesting to see how the first basketball rules were established, especially that baskets are 10 feet high because the original peach baskets were attached to railings that happened to be - 10 feet high.


Trenton Evening Times - November 1, 1896 - this may be the earliest known newspaper ad for a professional basketball game

Another interesting aspect of basketball history is how the game had a ready made structure in place to facilitate expansion.  Unlike baseball which initially had to rely on direct personal contact, YMCA's throughout the country needed some form of indoor exercise.  It certainly didn't take long for basketball to reach New Jersey as less than six months after the first game, The News (Paterson) announced that "a new game called basket-ball" was to be played for the first time at a local YMCA.  Trenton apparently wasted no time getting into the act and in January of 1894, the city's YMCA team ("the acknowledged champions of New Jersey") defeated the Nanticoke, Pennsylvania, YMCA team for the championship of Pennsylvania and New Jersey in a game that took two nights to play.  The Trenton team continued to enjoy considerable success to the point that in February of 1896, the Trenton Evening Times claimed they were the "champion of the country."  In the process, however, the team had apparently run afoul of the their YMCA sponsors and opened the 1896-97 season in a new home Trenton's Masonic Temple where according to Peterson, they played as professionals.


This picture of the Paterson Armory gives a sense of the cages that were used by professional teams in some cases through the early 1930s.  According to Robert Peterson, they were never part of college basketball.

The team's new home was the social hall on the third floor of the temple where a 12 foot wire mesh cage was erected around the court to keep the ball in bounds which is why basketball players came to be known as "cagers."  Admission to the November 8, 1896 game with the Brooklyn YMCA was 25 cents for a seat with standing room at 15 cents.  Shortly after 8:00, the Trenton team took the floor in "pretty uniforms of red and black" to "tremendous cheers" from the 700 spectators.  Apparently delayed for some reason, the visitors didn't take the floor until about 8:25 and were allowed only five minutes to warm up before the opening jump.  Basketball was evolving rapidly and 1896-97 marked the first season a basket was worth two points and the last time each team had seven players on the floor (two side centres or centers).  There was a center jump after every basket (a rule that didn't change until 1937) and a lot of passing before a shot was taken.  In this contest it took seven minutes before Trenton finally scored on the way to an 8-0 half time lead.  Things didn't get much better for the Brooklyn team in second half and only a late foul shot got them on the board in a 16-1 defeat.  While later accounts claimed the Trenton players were each paid $15, Peterson believes it was no more than $5.


Trenton Evening Times - November 8, 1896

A year later, Trenton and two other New Jersey communities (Camden and Millville) were part of the excessively named National Basketball League, the first professional basketball league.  The six team league was plagued by franchises dropping out, but Trenton stayed the course and won the first championship, one of two they would win in the league's six year existence, Camden also won two.  Clearly during its first decade, basketball became very popular in in Trenton and on a personal note, I can't help wondering if 18 year old James Winder was present at the November 7, 1896 game at the Masonic Lodge.  It's certainly possible since only a few years later he helped coach the "young crusaders" of Grace Church, a team that in 1900 claimed the championship of Trenton, having outscored their opponents by a 226 to 68 mark.  Supposedly the self-proclaimed Trenton champions "would like to hear from any team in the country" including a possible road game since "they do not object to going away from home."  As far as I can tell, no one took up the challenge, but regardless, it's nice to see a family connection to a sport its founder wisely declined to call "Naismith ball," going instead with the eminently more practical basketball.



Monday, January 6, 2020

Flemington Neshanock 2020 Schedule

The remainder of the Neshanock's 2020 schedule has been canceled for obvious reason.  We hope to be back on the field in 2021.  


Photo by Mark Granieri

The Flemington Neshanock are please to announce the 2020 schedule.  Please check our web site (www.neshanock.org) and Facebook page for updates.

Saturday, April 4 - Hoboken Nine at Fosterfields Living Historical Farm, Morristown, NJ - cancelled
Saturday, April 18 - Elizabeth Resolutes at Somerset Patriots Fan Fest - cancelled
Sunday, April 26 - Gettysburg Generals/Elkton Eclipse, at Elkton, Maryland - cancelled
Sunday, May 3 - Monmouth Furnace New Jersey base ball festival, at Allaire State Park - cancelled
Saturday, May 9 - Hoboken Nine at Ringwood Manor State Park - cancelled
Saturday, May 16 - Nutley Colonels at Yanticaw Park, Nutley, NJ - cancelled
Monday, May 25 - Newtown Strakes at Pickering Field, Newtown, PA - cancelled
Saturday, June 6 - Elizabeth Resolutes at Howell Living History Farm, Lambertville, NJ - cancelled
Saturday, June 20 - New Brunswick Liberty at East  Jersey Old Town Village - cancelled
Saturday, June 27 - Monmouth Furnace at Greenway Meadow Park, Princeton, NJ - cancelled
Saturday, July 11 - Enterprise Club of New Bridge, New Bridge Landing, NJ - cancelled
Saturday, July 18 - Sunday, July 19 - National Nineteenth Century Base Ball Festival, Gettysburg, PA - cancelled
Saturday, July 25 - Elizabeth Resolutes at Rahway River Park, Rahway, New Jersey - cancelled
Saturday, August 1 - Elizabeth Resolutes New Jersey base ball festival, Rahway River Park - cancelled
Saturday, August 8-Sunday, August 9, National Silver Ball Tournament, Genesee Country Village - cancelled
Sunday, August 23 - Diamond State Club of Delaware at Newark, Delaware
Saturday, August 29 - Hoboken Nine at Waterloo Village, NJ
Saturday, September 12 - South Orange Villagers at Cameron Field, South Orange, NJ
Saturday, September 26 - New Brunswick Liberty at Dey Farm, Monroe, NJ - cancelled
Sunday, October 4 - Nineteenth Century base ball festival - Darby, PA - cancelled