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October 2009
Version 1.1
Ballplaying in Civil War Camps:
An Overview of an Enriched Data Base
In
the current decade, two books have appeared on the role of base ball in the
Civil War (Millen 2001; Kirsch 2003). Neither
author lists all the references inspected, but close reading suggests that
fewer than 50 references were then known.
The
Protoball collection of references to Civil War
ballplaying now includes 152 finds.
This paper abstracts the evidence now in hand. Brief Protoball descriptions of these
references [a 45-page Word document] are available from Larry McCray at Lmccray@mit.edu, and will be proofed and uploaded
to the Protoball website in the coming months.
We welcome suggestions as to how to enrich this short abstract, and
suggest that you look for trends that we’ve missed.
[1] The Northerners Played a
About
10% of the references to ballplaying involved Confederate troops, and this
includes their play while held in northern prisons.
It
is plausible that this underestimates ballplaying as a southern pastime. For one thing, rebel force levels were only about
2/3 of those in the north. It is also
true that some very productive sources or data – celebratory regimental
histories and newspaper stories – appeared less commonly in the south than in
the victorious north.
[2] The Northeasterners Played a Lot
More: Teams from
Leaving
aside about 25 accounts for which the ballplayers’ home state was not
mentioned, we have about 150 accounts of play in Union Army units [some
accounts mention play among two or more units].
Of these, 100 accounts involved units from
Note: NY, MA, and NJ were populous
states, and had larger forces. It should
be possible for us to convert these figures to a per capita basis.
[3] Ballplaying May Have Peaked in
April 1863
Reports
of ballplaying are found as follows:
|
Year |
No. Cases |
|
1861 |
18 |
|
1862 |
31 |
|
1863 |
82 |
|
1864 |
47 |
|
1865 |
14 |
New
troops were avidly recruited in 1864, especially in the north, and it is
notable that reports of ballplaying did not expand then. The apparent decline in 1864 seems unexpected,
especially with troop levels rising.
If
the War was a key to the spread of base ball throughout the
[4] The Seasonality of CW
Ballplaying is Clear: Many Games Occurred in the Winter Camps
While
there are a handful of accounts of ballplaying near the heat of battle, the
fighting months are conspicuously spare in reports of game. In fact, the number of games from May through
September is under one-third of the games known in March and April during the
war years.
Both
sides quit fighting in about November of each year, and then they settled in at
winter camps. Camps tended to break some
time in April, which lagged the return of warm weather in the South; the
impassibility of muddy roads and, possibly, the shortage of free-range forage
for horses, may have been factors in the timing of the resumption of
hostilities. One can imagine gatherings
of young men growing tired of camp routines and turning to ballplaying to
celebrate good weather. In the month of
April 1863 alone, we find 31 accounts of ballplaying, predominantly in Union
camps in northern
|
Month |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
|
Cases |
11 |
9 |
25 |
61 |
23 |
12 |
6 |
3 |
6 |
5 |
10 |
11 |
While
we have a handful of reports of ballplaying near the battle lines, note that
overall incidence was low in the war-fighting months generally.
As
for the actual game sites, nearly 70 accounts were of games played in the
[5] The General Importance of
War-Camp Base Ball is Somewhat Strengthened
Spalding
and others underscored the importance of ballplaying by soldiers during the
war, but his accounts, and most later accounts too, argued the case by citing selected
examples, and some doubted that the game actually played a large role. After all, there were millions of often-bored
soldiers, and anecdotal accounts of many minor pastimes were to be expected.
With
150 accounts in hand, some of them reporting several games, the case for base
ball as a major diversion is strengthened.
It seems likely than many more accounts will surface as diverse writings
become amenable to systematic search.
Still, 150 accounts for a war lasting nearly 50 months is not an
overwhelming count.
[6] The Ballgame of Choice Was Base
Ball, By a Large Margin
As
is common in origins research, it is sometimes difficult to determine what game
was being played in a diary or autobiographical account of ballplaying in the
military during the War. In part, this
is because the writer uses a general phrase like “playing ball,” or “a game of
ball,” which give no clue to the playing rules employed, and little assurance
that the game was not more like handball or football or field hockey than like
a baserunning game. And in fact, over 40
or our references were generic.
However,
in nearly 100 cases it seems clear that the game that was played was a safe
haven game:
|
Game |
Cases |
|
Base Ball [incl. MA game] |
70 |
|
Wicket |
9 |
|
Cricket |
7 |
|
Town Ball |
5 |
|
“Base” |
1 |
|
Bat-ball |
1 |
|
Cat |
1 |
|
Longball |
1 |
Because
New Englanders called their round-ball-based game “base ball,” we cannot easily
distinguish their wartime games from those that followed the
Games
of wicket were reported for men from MA, WI, IL, and the
Cricket
was played by a
Data
on games played by Confederate soldiers are sparse. “Base ball” [outside Union prison camps] is
mentioned in only three accounts, but only one is contemporary [and 1861
newspaper article]. The others are retrospective
accounts, one by a chaplain writing in 1887 and one by a LA soldier who had
also played base ball in
Town
ball was played by soldiers from
[7] Base Ball Appears
to Have Been a Leading
The
advent of electronic searches allows us to form impressions of how base ball
stacked up against other pastimes. Many
regimental histories are now available electronically, as are long-forgotten
diaries and journals.
Thus,
searches for “play,” “played,” “playing,” and “games” gives some idea of the
relative frequency of assorted diversions [they also help us to establish the
relative popularity of wicket and cricket and town ball, which prior
baseball-oriented researchers may not have been interested in].
My
subjective impression is that ballplaying was reported more often than all
other forms of recreation. Second was
card-playing, often for monetary stakes.
Quoits, foot-races, and occasionally football were found too, but less
frequently, and shinty/bandy even rarer.
[Singing, emphasized in one well-loved account of soldiers’ lives, was
rarely encountered, but such pastimes may not be caught by our “play” and
“game” searches.]
[8] Diaries and Regimental Histories
Are Giving the Best Yield
It
seems arguable that, after a lengthy period of stasis, we may now be entering a
time in which the borders of uncertainty about soldierly ballplaying may recede
as more sources are digitized.
For
our current data base:
|
Type of
Source |
Finds |
|
Diary |
38 |
|
Regimental History |
33 |
|
Newspaper |
28 |
|
Letter |
20 |
|
Book |
17 |
|
Drawing/Photo |
3 |
|
Military Report |
1 |
|
Trophy Ball |
1 |
New Finds: We are especially indebted to Michael Aubrecht [23
refs], Jeff Kittel [10 refs], the
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