DirectorySportsBlog Details for "Baseball Iconography"

Baseball Iconography

Baseball Iconography
19th century baseball through the camera\\\'s eye

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Identification: White Stars BBC
2007-09-17 18:27:00
Here's a nice identification project to jump start the baseball iconography blog.The photograph in Carte de Visite format, shows the White Stars Baseball Club from Decorah in 1870.Period ink used to ID the image with the A.D. ( Anno Domini) caption before the year.The only Decorah I know of is in Iowa, but little to none about early baseball activity in the area have been found.I've been unable to find any other information on the web about this club.Feel free to drop us a line if you have anything that can help the project.
More About: Identification
Baseball Tintypes (1)
2006-12-02 15:40:02
I've been asked in multiple occasions to explain what a Tintype photograph is, so I thought this would be an interesting topic to write about now that I'm back from a short 2 week vacation with the family.Let's start with some basic information about tintype photographs before talking about baseball tintypes.Definition: tin·type, also known as a ferrotype photograph, is a negative image produced on a thin piece of black enameled iron plate, viewed as a positive due to the black enamel background.Tintypes were a popular photographic method since 1860 until the 1890's due to their simple making process as well as their low price.Tintypes are part of the solid or hard type photographs group, along Daguerreotypes (glass plate) and Ambrotypes (Copper Plate).Tintypes were made in many sizes, as shown on the list below. (Sizes are aprox)Full Plate: 6.5" x 8.5" (Rarest)Half Plate: 4.5" x 5.5"Quarter Plate: 3.5" x 4.125"Sixth Plate: 2.625" x 3.25"Ninth Plate: 2" x 2.5"Sixteenth Plate: 1....
More About: Baseball , Type , Types , Ball , Base
Identified: 1869 Ripon College First Nine
2006-12-02 15:40:02
Thanks to Valerie Viers, archivist at Ripon Coll ege , we were able to fully identify the players pictured in the Ripon College First Nine CDV.This particular photograph was made at Wyckoff's Photographic Studio in Ripon, Wisconsin.Standing, starting from left to right are Albert J. Miller, the Left Fielder, who was a preparatory student in 1869. Next to him is Benjamin F. Thomas, the Center Fielder who graduated from Ripon College in 1872. Then standing at far right is Albert F. Rust, who was the club's Right Fielder and graduated in 1870.Sitting in the middle row are George Kingsbury, Third Baseman, Henry W. Akin, 2B, and Henry W. Wright, the First Baseman, who was a student in english and optional studies in 1869, just like his clubmate Kingsbury. Akin graduated in 1872.Sitting in front are Mather D. Kimball, Short Stop, Class of 1871, Hal A. Cooper, the Pitcher, who graduated from college in 1872 just like his battery mate, Jess Fox Taintor.In the photograph, which was taken in ...
They were gentlemen: The 1874 Boston Red Stockings
2006-12-02 15:40:02
The New York Herald, July 15th, 1874."The Boston nine, individually is not nearly so strong as at least two other nines, and yet they win more games than any other club. There are several very good reasons for their being constantly at the head of the list.First of all, there is nowhere in their ranks a man against whose character or honesty of purpose one breath of suspicion can be whispered. They are gentlemen. Besides, they have attained, and continually maintain, a higher degree of discipline than any other club, and, above all, they invariably play to win. The latter cannot be said of all the professional nines now contesting for the championship. Indeed to such a low ebb have the morals of so many professionals players descended that no man can now witness a game between many of the clubs and be sure that both sides are striving to win.Gamblers buy up one or more players to lose a game and it is lost. Detecting a player in losing a game is next to an impossibility, for they h...
More About: Men , Stockings , Stock
The Baseball Carte de Visite Project
2006-12-02 15:40:02
The Baseball Carte de Visi te Project is back online.About 22 CDV images and data have been uploaded to an interactive google map.There are still about 40-50 CDV's ready to be uploaded but we are still seeking new scans.For those of you who didn't know about the project, its main objective is to catalog as many baseball cartes de visite as possible with the help of baseball photographica collectors, historians and institutions.More information can be found by following the project's direct link:www.baseballiconography.com/cdvproje ct.htm
More About: Site , Arte
Grand Match at Hoboken
2006-12-02 15:40:02
It's ironic that Harry Wright, one of the fiercest opponents of gambling on base ball, provided one of the first known links between money and the game. In 1863, when Wright was preparing to leave the Knicks, the club hosted a three-game series of benefits for him, Sam Wright Sr. and others. Spectators were charged 25 cents to get in, but for 50 cents they could receive a souvenir stub with a portrait of a player on it.The clubs consisted of nine Brooklyn Excelsiors versus a collection of four New York Gothams, a New York Eagle, one of the champion club of New Jersey and three St. George's Dragonslayers. Wright, the leadoff hitter, paced his team in batting, with three runs in the third game. Though the benefit was not held exclusively for him, it was Harry who received the $29.65 in profits.The third game was billed as St. George's v. Base Ball match, but it was really a mix of 18 cricket and base ball players versus 9 base-ballists.Though the former largely outnumbered the latt...
More About: Hobo , Match , Grand
Base Ball Pitcher
2006-12-02 15:40:02
The following article appeared in the July 28, 1870 issue of the Daily Miners' Journal, a Pottsville, PA newspaper.Base Ball Pitch er.- As the national game is all the go now, a brief description of this important member of the nine will be appreciated: "On receiving the ball he raises it in both hands until is level with his left eye. Striking an attitude, he gazes at it two or three minutes in a contemplative way, and then turns it around once or twice to be sure that it is not an orange or coconut. Assured that he has the genuine article he then winks once at the first baseman, twice at second baseman, and three times at the third baseman, and after a scowl at the short stop and a glance at the home plate, finally delivers the ball with the precision and rapidity of a cannon shot."
More About: Cher , Pitcher
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