Chicago Aces: The First 75 Years
By John Freyer and Mark Rucker
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Chicago Aces - John Freyer
One
1876–1899
Just before the Civil War, in the years of 1859 and 1860, baseball was taking root in Chicago. In 1859, the first recorded game of baseball was played in the city. The Atlantic and Excelsior clubs faced off in a 31 to 17 affair, won by the Excelsior team. The winning pitcher was a Mr. J. Malcolm—the loser, A.L. Adams. Little did they know at the time that they would be regarded as the first known pitchers in Chicago’s long history of baseball.
Chicago is steeped in baseball history. It had had one of the first professional teams, the White Stockings of 1870, who are now the Cubs. The National League was formed here in 1876, by Chicago businessman William Hulbert. Charles Comiskey and Clark Griffith of Chicago played a significant role in the development of the American League. Sixteen-inch softball was invented here in the 1890s, by tying a string around a boxing glove, so men could play baseball inside in bad weather. It was then known as Indoor Baseball.
Sixteen inch softball is Chicago’s indigenous sport. No other city in the country plays the Chicago Game.
After the Civil War, the Excelsior club of Chicago was considered the best in the newly developed North-Western Association, which included the Atlantic club of Chicago, along with teams from Detroit, Dubuque, Freeport, and Bloomington, to name a few. A gentleman named Kennedy was the Ace of the 1866 staff that won the Championship of the first association tournament in Rockford, defeating the Empire club of Freeport, 26-24. In 1867, Kennedy gave way to a chap named McNally who became the Ace—until the demise of the Excelsiors after the 1868 season.
In 1869, businessmen in Chicago began to pool their money to draw top players from the East to Chicago, emulating what the Champions of 1869, the Cincinnati Red Stockings, did to put together a team that went 69-0.
In 1870, Chicago introduced the White Stocking club, featuring top of the line pitcher Ed Pinkham, who had pitched for the Brooklyn Eckford club in 1869. The White Stockings were one of the top teams that year, registering a 65-8 record.
In 1871, the National Association was born, the first all professional league. The White Stockings grabbed the services of George Zettlein (He of the Big Feet) from the Brooklyn Atlantics, who had failed to join the new association, because they felt their amateur status was more profitable. The White Stockings were among the elite teams. They lost their home, Lakefront Park, and their uniforms and equipment in the Great Chicago Fire in October, while leading the league. They lost the Championship to the Philadelphia Athletics in a one-game playoff, 4-1. It has been written that the men were homeless and weak from the ordeal of losing all that they had in the Fire.
The team reorganized in 1874, with Zettlein and Jimmy Devlin in the box until 1876, when Hall of Famer Albert Spalding came along and won the inaugural National League Championship. Bringing us up to the outstanding pitchers of the dynastic White Stocking teams of the 1880s . . .
ALBERT GOODWILL AL
SPALDING
CAREER 1871–1877 CHICAGO 1876–1877
e9781439615355_i0002.jpgSpalding was the ace pitcher and manager for the first champions of the National League, the 1876 Chicago White Stockings. That season Spalding posted a 46-12 record with a minute 1.75 ERA, pitching a whopping 528 innings. Spalding had a long successful career before the development of the National League. Spalding started pitching at the age of 15 for the Rockford Forest City team in 1866. In 1867, the 16-year-old Spalding was on the mound when the Forest Citys upset the touring Washington Nationals. It was the only loss for the Nationals on the first barnstorming tour of the United States by an organized baseball team. His plaque at the Baseball Hall of Fame proclaims him Organizational genius of baseball’s pioneer days.
He was an exceptional pitcher with his straight armed underhand delivery. Spalding was even an accomplished hitter, often hitting in the middle of the lineup as a pitcher. In 1871, he was proclaimed Champion Pitcher of the World
for the Boston Red Stockings of the old National Association, that predates and was replaced by the National League in 1876. In 1875, Spalding had a 57-5 record for the champion Red Stockings. The arm strain of years as a workhorse took its toll on Spalding. He pitched four games in 1877. He retired at the age of 28, to concentrate on his young sporting goods company, Spalding Sporting Goods, which still exists today. A.G. Spalding and Brothers dominated the sporting good industry in the late 1800s, much like a monopoly. His success as a player enabled him to negotiate full team contracts, and his motto was, Everything is possible to him who dares.
Spalding was the White Stockings team President from 1882 to 1891, during the dynastic years of the White Stockings of the 1880s. He was also the P.T Barnum of baseball, sending his White Stockings on a world tour after the 1888 season, visiting such places as Australia, Hawaii, Egypt, Italy, and England. Spalding was inducted to the Hall of Fame in 1939.
LAWRENCE LARRY
CORCORAN
CAREER 1880–1887 CHICAGO 1880-1885
e9781439615355_i0003.jpgLarry Corcoran was the most dominant pitcher of the 1880s, before he blew his arm out in 1885 from overuse. Corcoran led the league in victories in 1881 (31) and ERA in 1882 (1.95). He also led the league in strikeouts with 268 in 1880. In his five full seasons with the White Stockings (1880–1884), Corcoran earned 170 wins en route