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The History
Buff,17509 Bearpath Trail, Eden Prairie, MN 55347 or Palm Beach,
Florida, 33480 |
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- Abner
Doubleday
- Union
General and Early Baseball Pioneer
- Signature
with Rank on Slip of Paper
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- Abner Doubleday(1819-1893). American Union Civil War General and early baseball
pioneer.Doubleday was at Fort Sumter when the first shot was
fired and he is claimed to have aimed the first gun at the Confederates.
Whether that is true or not Doubleday went on to fight in many
campaigns including Gettysburg where he assumed a command of
I Corps when general John Reynolds was killed.General Meade then
immediately replaced Doubleday with a more junior commander-
a real snub to Doubleday.Therefore, throughout the remainder
of his military career he was at odds with General George Meade
who apparently had little regard for his leadership skills.AD's
nickname in the Union army was "48 hours."
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- For many years Doubleday was credited
with having been the 'inventor' of modern baseball. According
to legend he developed the game in the fields near Cooperstown,
NY. Part of this credit derived from an eyewitness account through
a letter from one of his friends that detailed how Abner Doubleday
was the first to lay out the diamond shape of the playing field,
etc. Based upon this rather tenuous information and other early
recountings, some of which may have been apocryphal, Doubleday
was given the imprimatur of "The Inventor of Baseball"
even though the history of the game apparently had not been subjected
to rigorous examination when that occurred. Some believe that
various early baseball entrepreneurs wanted to dissociate the
game from anything English and they used Doubleday to that end.
Subsequent historical review by several different groups casts
doubt on whether Doubleday should in fact be credited with 'inventing'
baseball or even, as a matter of fact, whether he actually contributed
anything of substance to the game. Rather, baseball historians
now believe that Alexander Cartwright had more
to do with codifying the rules of play, organizing early teams,
etc, etc. than any other single individual. And there is Henry
Chadwick the noted jounalist who introduced the box score
and various statistical benchmarks such as the batting average
so he is considered a major contributor to the evolution of the
game. But , as so often is the case, the exact truth concerning
who contributed what to American baseball in utero will
probably never be known. One thing is perfectly clear now and
that is baseball in our country evolved from the English game
of 'rounders', a stick and ball game that was played throughout
the north in the early 1800's. Of course, stick and ball games
go back to much earlier civilizations-to whit, English cricket.
It is therefore not unreasonable to assume that there were many
contributors to shaping what eventually became modern baseball
and most of those contributors will be forever anonymous. Most
historians now believe that a game the beginning history of which
dates back hundreds of years or more and which evolved from the
play of amateurs in the streets and the fields undoubtedly had
many fathers including possibly both Doubleday and Cartwright
at least to some degree. It is therefore fatuous to credit one
person versus another with this or that regarding the origins
of modern baseball. Suffice it to say that both Abner Doubleday
(Doubleday Field at Cooperstown) and Alexander Cartwright
will always be linked to the beginnings of the American game
of baseball as we now know it as will others unnamed. And, most
probably, the historical debate about who contributed what to
the game will not end soon.
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- This offering is a slip of paper cut from
a larger document that is signed in ink as A,. Doubleday,
Major Genl. Vol.,U.S. Army, n.p.,n.d.. The paper is affixed
to a 3 in x 5 in card. There are a few odd numbers on the paper
that appear to have been some type of stamp but they do not affect
the signature.The signature is in overall excellent condition.The
signature is accompanied by an image of Doubleday for framing.It
should be noted that examples of Doubleday's writing are sought
after by both baseball collectors as well as Civil War Buffs
and his letters have sold for or do sell for thousands of dollars.
He is one of a handful of Americans who have attained historical
prominence in more than one field in a lifetime.His autograph
is sold with a nice image or photo for framing.
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- Also included in this lot is a beautiful
FDC commemerating the 100th anniversary of the game of baseball.
The FDC is postmarked june 12, 1939.
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- Price:$975.00
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