Place: Jefferson Street Grounds;
Philadelphia, PA
Event: First Game in National
League History
Approximately
3,000 fans show up for what turned out to be the very first National
League game, after the weather led to rain-outs elsewhere. The Boston
Red Stockings (later to become the Atlanta Braves) beat the
Philadelphia Athletic Base Ball Club (the future Philadelphia
Athletics) by a score of 6-5.
Jefferson
Street Grounds had been home to differing versions of ball since
1864, but was only established for use by professional teams in 1871,
when the Philadelphia Athletics of the National Association played
there. The Athletics won the NA pennant that same year, and would
join the newly-formed NL in '76. Poor performance in the inaugural
year, as well as their refusal to make Western road trips (in this
case, “West” meant Louisville, Cincinnati, and St Louis), led to
their expulsion from the NL at the end of their first year.
Former
Cincinnati Red Stockings SS George Wright was the first batter. He
and Boston entrepreneur Henry Ditson formed Wright and Ditson
Sporting Goods in 1871. Interestingly, the first run was scored not
on a hit, but on an errant throw by Philadelphia third baseman Ezra
Sutton, though the two teams combined for twenty-six errors. This
wasn't all that uncommon in the early days of the game, as field
conditions were often less than ideal.
The
winning pitcher, righty Joe Josephs, was playing under an alias that
day; his real name was Joe Borden, and he had tossed a no-hitter in
the National Association for Philadelphia against Chicago on July
28th, 1875. “Joe Josephs” was one of several aliases
that Borden was known to use. He was sometimes referred to in
contemporary newspapers as “Josephus the Phenomenal”, though his
career, while solid, would be over soon after.
The
honor of the first hit in NL history went to CF Jim O'Rourke, the
only player on either roster to appear as an active player in the
20th century. “Orator Jim”, as he was sometimes
called, was much more than a baseball player. He graduated from Yale
Law School in 1887, and was a practicing lawyer between seasons. At a
time when the average ballplayer was seen as unrefined, ignorant, and
boorish, O'Rourke stood out as articulate and erudite. Though he
certainly didn't need to rely on baseball to earn a living, it seems
he had a hard time removing himself from the game, permanently. Even
after retiring as a major-league player in 1893, he would remain in
the minors for years to come.
From
The Times (Philadelphia, PA); April 24th, 1876:
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