By Katie Ringsmuth
“We have observed several parties of youngsters playing base, a
certain game of ball….Let us go forth awhile and get better air in our lungs. Let
us leave our close rooms….the game of ball is glorious.”
—Walt Whitman
Baseball players in Anchorage,
July 4, 1915 (UAA-hmc-0778-5-14)
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April 1, 2013 is Opening Day, the start of a new baseball season. It’s
hard for a historian not to love baseball, for our national pastime is steeped
in tradition. In the PBS documentary Baseball,
Ken Burns showed us that baseball not only commemorates history, but has also
shaped it. As the Game’s popularity soared around the turn of the 20th century,
the shared act of being a spectator of the sport helped teach newly arrived
immigrants how to be Americans. Commencing the decade characterized as ‘the age
of anxiety,’ the heavily favored Chicago White Sox, including “Shoeless” Joe
Jackson, allegedly threw the 1919 World Series for money. The disgraced “Black
Sox” marred forever baseball’s innocence (say it ain’t so, Joe) and set a tone
of disillusionment felt by so many Americans in a post-war world. The Game’s
greatest moment came when Jackie Robinson donned a Brooklyn Dodger uniform in
1947, breaking Major League Baseball’s color barrier. In the 1980s, another
Dodger phenomenon—Fernando Valenzuela—participated in the revolution that
opened the Game to Latino players. By the 1990s, it was the Japanese
phenomenon, Ichiro Suzuki who served as a link between East and West. Today’s
team rosters consist of players linked to Europe, Africa, North, Central and
South America, Asia, the Pacific Islands, and Australia. Indeed, as Burns put
it, “the story of the Game is the story of America.”
Likewise, baseball has left a legacy here in Alaska. Historian and
baseball fan, Terrence Cole, notes that the formation of baseball associations
was fairly common in Alaska. In 1908, for example, 1,500 people watched the
opening day double-header of the Nome Baseball Association. In his article
“Baseball Above and Below Zero: The National Pastime in Alaska,” Cole describes
Alaska’s rugged brand of baseball, played on the rocky diamonds in Southeast
Alaska, to the ball field on the frozen tundra at Nome, “one of the most unique
parks in the world.” Cole admits that in order to sell papers, local
journalists “slightly exaggerated” accounts of the game played under
“blistering rays” in front of “crowds of wild fans,” but correctly argues that
Alaska’s long-summer nights have nevertheless proven to be a spawning ground
for major league ballplayers. Today, the semi-pro Alaska Baseball League attracts
players from colleges throughout the nation, and according to Lew Freedman,
author of Diamonds in the Rough: Baseball
Stories from Alaska, some of the best Major Leaguers played under the
midnight sun: Tom Seaver, Mark McGwire, Dave Winfield, Randy Johnson, Barry
Bonds (asterisk and all), even Satchel Paige played in a four game exhibition
series at Mulcahy Stadium in 1965.
The intersection of baseball and Alaska also reflects the historic
start of the city of Anchorage. Early this spring I redecorated my sons’ room
using baseball motifs with an Alaskan twist. On visiting Alaska’s Digital
Archives I discovered two photographs taken by famed artist Sydney Laurence of
a baseball game in Anchorage on July 4, 1915. At least one hundred spectators
lined an area from first base to third. Behind the perfect diamond and the
spacious outfield stood tent city, and behind that, the seemingly impenetrable
Alaska wilderness. In a second photo, a team of nine, a coach down on one knee,
pose in pinstriped uniforms; a small anchor appears to be sewn on their left
shirt pockets. The team is ethnically diverse, as are the fans situated behind
the young ballplayers. There are women there, too. A few more tents occupy a
lower hillside, while newly cut tree stumps serve as stadium bleachers.
Baseball game in Anchorage,
July 4, 1915 (AMRC-b79-1-83)
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When I look at these photos I see an all-American town. I see a tent
city, carved from the wilderness, founded by dissimilar people filled with similar
hopes and dreams. I hope that when my boys look at these photos now hanging on
their bedroom wall, they see the traces of past, but also continuity, for
Anchorage remains as multicultural as baseball itself. It is still a city
filled with hopes and dreams. And this is a tradition worth passing on to the
next generation. So, with the lengthening light and the melting snow, let
springtime bring to us the national pastime. Let’s get out and, “Play Ball…”
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