Looks like spring is on the way. And, although I no longer follow it closely, that means baseball. I've been meaning for some time to write a bit about early baseball in my town of Chippewa Falls, and was pleased to find an Old Timers reminiscence in a 1905 newspaper that basically did my work for me. It discusses the purported arrival of the game in 1867. After a few preliminaries it begins:
Some prominent names on that list. Coleman has a street named after him, Stillson a school. Taylor ran the ferry across the river and was the fire chief.
The comment was made that most of these men were former soldiers, and that they played without mitts or masks; with a somewhat larger ball that was thrown underhand. The playing field was improvised, just an open space between Bridge and Bay streets.
The first game was refereed by a visiting agent for the Chicago Times who supposedly gave it a big write up in his paper and left with a long list of new subscribers. The Chippewa team played regularly, almost every afternoon in fact. But of course a challenger was not long in arriving:
We need to read between the lines a bit here. It seems as if the local boys played a spirited style of baseball in all senses. Old Mose Hebert has turned up a few times in my historical writings. He ran one of the first and most patronized saloons in town.
In some fashion the Eau Claire team tried to get their Chippewa rivals drunk past their usual levels. Alas, to no avail. And it turned out to be the Eau Claire nine that came up on the short end of the score, and with the bigger headaches the next day!
That seems to have been the high point of the 1867 season. Soon afterwards:
Baseball has been played every year since then, although these days it has a fair bit of competition from soccer and other sports. A complete history of it would be a major undertaking and probably of limited interest. But one final snippet.
I spend some time studying old maps. On a "Birdseye View" from 1906 - one year after this historical rambling - you can see what I think was the first official ball field in town. Its on the south side of town and is labeled "Athletic Park"
I can't say how early it went back, but I can report that a ball field was still there in the early 1990's when my son was playing. It was seldom used, there being newer and better facilities around, and was tucked in behind the City Shops and yard waste dump. The field is now gone, with the last remnant - a disused concessions stand - finally being removed just a few years ago.