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'''<font face = arial light> <font color = maroon> <font size = 3>Unfinished History</font></font> </font>''' | |||
[[Image:basebnew$recreation-grounds-1868.jpg]] | [[Image:basebnew$recreation-grounds-1868.jpg]] | ||
''' | '''"Recreation Grounds" at today's Folsom & Cesar Chavez built by the Hatton Bros. in 1868''' | ||
'''1860s'''--Sandlot baseball originated in what is now the greater Civic Center area in the 1860s. First California team organized in Dan's Oyster saloon on Montgomery St.. They elected officers, held regular meetings, went on drinking together, | ''Photo: Private Collection, San Francisco, CA '' | ||
'''1860s'''--Sandlot baseball originated in what is now the greater Civic Center area in the 1860s. First California team organized in Dan's Oyster saloon on Montgomery St.. They elected officers, held regular meetings, went on drinking together, "but never did get around to playing a game." | |||
'''Feb. 22, 1860'''--California's first official ballgame played in San Francisco. | '''Feb. 22, 1860'''--California's first official ballgame played in San Francisco. | ||
'''1869'''--Cincinnati Red Stockings arrive on first transcontinental commercial rail run, win all games played in San Francisco. | In 1924, Anita Day Hubbard wrote an epic series of articles in the [http://www.archive.org/stream/citieswithincity19242sanf#page/n9/mode/2up ''SF Call Bulletin''] on the history of the city and the Mission which contain a staggering amount of historical detail, including these detailed paragraphs on baseball: | ||
[[Image:Eagles-vs-red-rovers.jpg]] | |||
[[Image:1868-recreation-grounds-opens.jpg]] | |||
'''1869'''--Cincinnati Red Stockings arrive on first transcontinental commercial rail run, win all games played in San Francisco. They were the baseball team of the day. In September 1869, at Folsom and 25th, they proceeded to blow out our Eagles 35-4 on the 25th. The Eagles dusted off and… lost again. Even more badly, 58-4. | |||
[[Image:Team photo of early ancestor of the San Francisco Seals 1875-77 AAD-3337.jpg]] | |||
'''Team photo of early ancestor of the San Francisco Seals c. 1875.''' | |||
''Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library'' | |||
Check out [http://burritojustice.com/2010/02/17/the-mission-has-always-been-the-home-of-baseball/ Burrito Justice] for a lengthy and map-rich account of early baseball in the Mission District, including remarkable efforts to identify where the original diamond of Recreation Grounds would be today. | |||
[[Candlestick Aerial View 1950 | Prev. Document]] [[Baseball 1886-1903 | Next Document]] | |||
[[ | [[category:baseball]] [[category:1860s]] [[category:Mission]] [[category:Bernal Heights]] |
Unfinished History
"Recreation Grounds" at today's Folsom & Cesar Chavez built by the Hatton Bros. in 1868
Photo: Private Collection, San Francisco, CA
1860s--Sandlot baseball originated in what is now the greater Civic Center area in the 1860s. First California team organized in Dan's Oyster saloon on Montgomery St.. They elected officers, held regular meetings, went on drinking together, "but never did get around to playing a game."
Feb. 22, 1860--California's first official ballgame played in San Francisco.
In 1924, Anita Day Hubbard wrote an epic series of articles in the SF Call Bulletin on the history of the city and the Mission which contain a staggering amount of historical detail, including these detailed paragraphs on baseball:
1869--Cincinnati Red Stockings arrive on first transcontinental commercial rail run, win all games played in San Francisco. They were the baseball team of the day. In September 1869, at Folsom and 25th, they proceeded to blow out our Eagles 35-4 on the 25th. The Eagles dusted off and… lost again. Even more badly, 58-4.
Team photo of early ancestor of the San Francisco Seals c. 1875.
Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library
Check out Burrito Justice for a lengthy and map-rich account of early baseball in the Mission District, including remarkable efforts to identify where the original diamond of Recreation Grounds would be today.