Reading's Big League Exhibition Games
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About this ebook
Brian C. Engelhardt
Brian C. Engelhardt is a Reading historian and regular contributor to the Historical Review of Berks County, as well as publications from the Society of American Baseball Research. He has gathered photographs from the Baseball Hall of Fame, the Berks County Historical Society, the Reading Fightin' Phils, and other private collections.
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Reading's Big League Exhibition Games - Brian C. Engelhardt
Fightins).
INTRODUCTION
The Phillies played here. The Red Sox played here. The Indians played here. But the Whites, the Colts, the Robins, and the Beaneaters also played here. They played the Reading Phillies, the Reading Red Sox, and the Reading Indians. But they also played the Actives, the Marines, the Keystones, the Steelies, the Pretzels, the Dutchmen, the Coal Heavers, and the All Scholastics.
Christy Mathewson, Rogers Hornsby, Chief Bender, Shoeless Joe Jackson, Mike Schmidt, Pete Rose, Ernie Banks, and Carl Yastrzemski played here. But so did Candy, Deacon, the Orator, Long Levi, Piano Legs, Turkey Legs, Eagle Eye, Boileryard, Pinky, Pud, and Pie. And, oh yes, the Bambino and the Iron Horse also played here.
Keeping this up would be folly. So I will stop here and let Brian Engelhardt step to the plate and introduce you to the players, the managers, and the recaps in Reading’s Big League Exhibition Games. Even readers with only a casual interest in baseball will enjoy this book. It is a baseball book,
to be sure. But more than that, it is a history book—one that will take its place among the most important such volumes for those who are endeared generally to baseball and specifically to Reading, Pennsylvania. After all, Reading is Baseballtown,
as proclaimed and marketed by the Reading Fightin Phils (former Reading Phillies). This is not an idle boast, as this book helps to validate.
This book chronicles more than a century of seasons, centering on those games in which Reading squads suspended league play or added game days to bring the stars
to town, which provided a treat for the fans and hopefully filled the tills at the box office. The players on both ends of the contests also benefited from the exhibitions. Aspiring amateurs were given the opportunity to rub gloves with established pros. Visiting big-timers
could puff up their egos with the admiration of adoring local yokels, pad their wallets, or perform simply for the love of the game. Barnstormers, pickup all-star nines, and major-league teams ventured down on the farm because of certain obligations. In addition, games were arranged just to entertain the fans, and, in the Reading Keystones’ case in the late 1920s, to ease the pain.
One of those games was on May 12, 1929, when the Keys, an affiliate of the Chicago Cubs, faced the Pittsburgh Pirates. Sure the fans got to see big-league buccos such as Pie Traynor, the Waner boys, and Specs
Meadows, but they were thrilled to watch the Keys’ own Unser Choe
Joe Kelly—the hard hitting Harp from the Pacific coast
—pound three homers and have, as a Reading Times account noted, a perfect day with the willow.
Other Keys stars that day included Rabbit Whitman and Chicken Hawks, who totaled three bingles
between them.
This Keystones franchise was only recently recovering from two of the most dismal seasons in International League history. In 1926, they went 31-129 and set an organized baseball record that still stands by finishing 75 games behind the pennant-winning Toronto Maple Leafs. As a footnote to that season, the Keystones had faced (and lost to) the Maple Leafs in the first-ever game at Toronto’s new Maple Leaf Stadium on April 29 before a crowd of more than 12,700.
The following year, the Keys were improved,
compiling a 43-123 record.
The outlook was not brilliant in Baseballtown in those bleak years. But the fans got over it. The franchise retooled. And when the boys from the bigs showed up for that exhibition game in 1929, the Keystone players were eager to see them. The Reading Times noted: The huge mob of 7,122 customers filled practically every inch of the field, packing the stands, two temporary bleachers in the outfield, and overflowing into the garden. Those spectators not seated under a roof were drenched in the third inning when a pelting shower broke suddenly. The fans took their wetting and liked it. For, they remained to see the sun peek from behind dark clouds and to watch Reading rally to defeat the major leaguers.
Many of the appearances by future Hall of Fame ballplayers and managers were but fleeting moments in Reading’s long and proud baseball history. But they were important to fans through several generations. The intimacy of a minor-league stadium positioned fans close to the field and the fielders. Today, the on-deck circle at First Energy Stadium is an arm’s length from the front row. The pitcher is farther away from the catcher than are fans sitting behind home plate. To the chagrin of some Eastern League suits,
players walk among patrons on their way to the clubhouses. This is baseball in Baseballtown, and it is the way it was meant to be—intimate, accessible, and exciting. You can feel the dirt. You can smell the sweat. You can see the color of the players’ eyes. They call Major League Baseball The Show.
But, truly, the real shows are on America’s minor-league fields.
And then there were those exhibitions! That is what this book is all about. It is a playbill for those times when the majors and minors magically mingled.
For a couple of hours on balmy summer nights, under the evening lights, and sometimes in the chill of October, Reading fans were treated to the best in the game, those who came to town to test local amateurs, pros, semipros, and minor-leaguers. Kids (of all ages, as they say) clambered for autographs, photographs, a handshake, a pat on the back, a foul ball, or just a smile and a nod from a diamond idol. And the folks in the front office were more than happy to tally the take of ticket sales.
These appearances often came full circle. Some players made their professional debuts with minor-league clubs in Reading, went on to illustrious careers in the majors, and came back as major-leaguers to face other aspirants in America’s Classic Ballpark.
A few were reared or resided near that stadium and played school or sandlot ball, only to make it to the top level and then return as hometown heroes.
Alas, gone are the glory days of preseason or even postseason—often very postseason—exhibition games between parent clubs and affiliates. America’s pastime has become a multibillion-dollar business, and the Boys of Summer
have become multimillion-dollar celebrities with no contractual obligations and no desire to pay a visit to the farms where they were nourished and cultivated.
It is sad to note that the last Reading-Philadelphia AA-MLB exhibition game was, technically, in the last century, as the reader will learn about at the end of this splendid book.
—Charles J. Adams III
Charles J. Adams III is the author of Baseball in Reading, Tales from Baseballtown and 35 other books on various subjects. In his 35 years as a Reading radio personality, he has emceed many pregame shows for the Reading Phillies/Fightin Phils and . performed the national anthem before several games and at the team’s winter banquets.
WHO PLAYED THE MAJOR-LEAGUERS WHEN THEY CAME TO READING? Usually the major-leaguers opponent was the local minor-league team. When there was no minor-league team, the major-league team would play local all-stars. Pictured above are the 1875 Reading Actives, a semiprofessional squad that was the home team for most of the exhibition games in the 19th century. In 1883, the Actives became professional, playing in various minor