We explain the history of baseball, its background, origin and flourishing. Also, how the “Big Leagues” were born.
What is the history of baseball?
Baseball is one of the most popular and practiced sports in the West, especially on the American continent, and is, along with soccer and tennis, among the most broadcast on international television. This Olympic discipline has uncertain origins, although its modern variant originated in the United States in the 19th century.
There is documentary evidence that, from the very beginning of human civilization, the idea of playing hitting a ball with a stick has been present. This, of course, does not mean that baseball was too, but it does mean that Its history dates back thousands of years before the Christian era: in ancient Egyptian, Mesopotamian or Persian societies, there were similar rituals that were part of religious ceremonies.
Presumably these practices were emulated by the Saracen peoples of the time. In later centuries they were reinserted into the West thanks to the Muslim invasions, who between the 12th and 15th centuries were in close contact with Europe.
Thanks to this influence, similar games emerged such as Jai Alai (or fronton), cricket and, possibly, previous variants of baseball, such as the English “Stooll Ball” or “Bat and ball” of the 17th century, which was soon imitated in the American colonies. It is estimated that this is how “Rounders” was born in English America, a sport quite close to baseball that was practiced in what would later become the United States for almost 100 years.
The first formal references to baseball as a sport emerged in 18th century England in numerous publications aimed at children and young people, which were later imitated in Germany, possibly because the sport was already played there. In fact, it was in that European country in 1796 that the first collected rules of baseball were published.
However, It was in the United States where sport gained great importance. The first mention of baseball in this country is a reference from the diary of soldier George Ewing, in 1778, where he states that “he played base”; or the prohibition of playing “…games called Wicket, Cricket, Base Ball, Football, Cat, Fives or any other ball game” in the town of Pittsfield, Massachusetts, in 1791, to protect the windows of the Meeting House.
Modern baseball was also born there, when the surveyor and military man Abner Doubleday designed the typical diagonal layout of this sport in 1839 for the first time in the city of Cooperstown, where today the Major League Hall of Fame and sports museum is located. Or at least that is what certain versions claim.
More formally, however, Modern baseball was born with the publication in 1845 of the rules of the game just as the New York Knickerbockers Base Ball Club team played it, the first in history. This publication was the work of Alexander Cartwright, who had headed the team since 1842, and it brought together the first 20 rules of the game from which the variant of the sport that we play today was born.
Those were, in turn, the rules of the first official modern baseball game in history, June 19, 1846 when the Knickerbockers faced the New York Club, on the so-called “Champs Elysées” in Hoboken, New Jersey. At that time, the sport had begun to be called “New York Game”, that is, the New York game, until, after the Civil War, it was renamed baseballthat is, baseball.
With the flourishing of the sport and players' clubs throughout the United States, the first Players Association was also born, whose last meeting was in 1871, to begin in its place the National Association of Professional Baseball Players, considered the first league of players from around the world, made up of 23 different teams.
However, the lack of budget and travel difficulties ended up sinking that league, paving the way for the National Professional Baseball League that emerged in 1876 and still exists today. It is important to note that players of color were not accepted, for whom separate leagues were created, the so-called “Black Leagues”, which existed until 1960.
The so-called “Great Leagues” expanded from then on and gained international renown, causing numerous similar variants to emerge in Latin American countries such as Mexico (whose first game was played in 1847), Panama (1850), Cuba (1878), Venezuela ( 1890) or Puerto Rico (1896).
Thus, throughout the 20th century Baseball began to be played internationally in the Baseball World Cup (founded in 1938) and the Summer Olympic Games (among which it would finally be accepted in 1992), among many other championships and tournaments dedicated to this sport.
Continue with: History of athletics
References
- “Baseball” on Wikipedia.
- “History of baseball” on Wikipedia.
- “Baseball” at the National Institute of Physical Education of Costa Rica.
- “El Bésbol” in Junta de Galicia (Spain).
- “History of baseball” in the Costa Rican Baseball Federation.