History of Sport UNL Exam 1 Spring 2021
AAU
Amateur Athletic Union
"Beer and Whiskey League"
Officially called the American Association, it was an early rival to the National League. It received its nickname by serving alcohol at games (something the National League did not do)
Violent Games
approval of aggression, hostile attribution
Primogeniture
right of inheritance belongs exclusively to the eldest son
"Book of Sports"
1618 order by James I of England which permitted games on Sunday for people who attended the Church of England services; this upset the Puritans, who believed quite the contrary was appropriate; rescinded after many clergy refused to read this order from the pulpit
Walking City
A city in which a majority of people walk to get from one spot to the other, which was the case for every city before 1850.
Kolven
A game introduced to the New York colony by the Dutch. It most closely resembles the modern game of golf.
Strenuous Life
A phrase coined by Theodore Roosevelt to describe his ideal of a vigorous, athletic new approach to life at the turn of the century
Puritans
A religious group who wanted to purify the Church of England. They came to America for religious freedom and settled Massachusetts Bay.
Lawful Sport
Activities allowed by Puritan society which were designed to refresh the mind and body of the participant while being completely disassociated from Britain's Festive Culture
Needful Recreation
Activities deemed to be appropriate in Pennsylvania. Similar to Puritan Lawful sport, needful recreation was allowed if it benefited the individual through exercise or providing food.
Tavern Pastimes
Alcohol, gambling, betting, which was sometimes a requirement of an establishment. Sporting events such as billiards, horse-racing, cockfighting
Reserve Clause
Allowed clubs to reserve the rights of players for their careers. It left players with very little power when negotiating contracts and controlling their futures
Playground Movement
Also designed to keep children out of trouble it began in Chicago in 1903 and was responsible for the jump of cities with supervised playgrounds from 41 to 504 in a little more than a decade
Barn Ball
An early incarnation of baseball that included bouncing a ball off the side of a barn and allowing another participant to hit it with a stick
Seperate Spheres
As part of the Victorian middle class, seperation of sexes. Public was the domain of men and the private sphere(home, family) was the domain of women.
Alexander Joy Cartwright
Bank Clerk and volunteer firefighter who helped form the Knickerbocker baseball club and devised the game's first rules
Leonard Jerome
Builds Jerome park, no alcohol, no fixed races, shortens the races • Yearly stakes races- Belmont Stakes 1870s Horse Races
Paper Chases
Called "hare and hound" races in England they were essentially cross-country races in which torn up paper would mark the courses
4 Folkways
Chesapeake, New England, Backcountry, and Middle Colonies
"King" Kelly
Colorful player who started his career in Chicago but was famously sold to Boston for $10,000 in 1887
Mills Commission
Committee that decided Abner Doubleday was the inventor of baseball based on the testimony of one man
Knickerbockers
Earliest organized baseball club, more of a social aspect for gentlemen
Oliver Cromwell
English general and statesman who led the parliamentary army in the English Civil War (1599-1658)
New York Athletic Club
First all athletic club founded in 1860s
William Cammeyer
First to charge admission for baseball games. --Enclose his baseball field in Brooklyn, 1862, with a fence and charged admission, in 1876 he was president of Brooklyn mutuals who voted to make the league a charter member and set a fixed rate of 50cents/game
Folk Games
Foot races, quibits, skittles, etc..
Henry Chadwick
Former British cricket player who embraced the game of baseball and became a sportswriter for the New York Clipper writing about the game. He was credited with inventing the batting average and box score and eventually became known as "Father Baseball"
Harry Wright
Former cricket player who switched to baseball and was one of the best of the early players. he was the player-manager of the Cincinnati Red Stockings
James Gordon Bennett
Founder of the New York Herald in 1835. He initiated features found in modern newspapers, including a financial page, editorial commentary, and public-affairs reporting
Toli
Game of stickball played by Native Americans most closely resembling lacrosse
Britain's Festive Culture
Games played in conjunction with the gathering of large groups of people in British society celebrating religious or pagan holidays or simply celebrating life
Sporting Spectacles
Games set up by fraternities to showcase their sports and their best competitors. Victorians were against them because of the competitiveness and the gambling and money paid to the participants went against their basic beliefs.
John Cox Stevens
Heir to a steamboat fortune, Stevens used his wealth to stage and promote sporting events (particularly races) involving horses, yachts and people.
Royal Sports
Jousting and tennis
Moses Fleetwood Walker
Known as the last black player to compete in the major leagues before the color barrier set in during the late 1880s
Sabbatarian Laws
Laws passed in the colonies to restrict recreation on the Sabbath
Victorian Counterculture
Made up mainly of working-class men from the new industrial economy of the 19th century who were no longer taking pride in their work. Immigrants also made up a large part of this group along with members of the upper class. They were rebelling against the restrain of the Victorian middle class in many ways including competitive sports.
Southern Gentry
Men, who weren't firstborn(as they were the ones to inherit their father's land) took a chance on the "new world" Many of those men emulated their fathers by building large mansions in Virginia and other Southern Colonies. Also known as the "landed gentry"
Enlightenment
Movement away from religion and superstition and an embrace of science and reason, began in Europe
Middle Class Victorianism
Named for the longest-serving monarch in British history (Victoria) it was a time period in which there was a belief that there was commonality between the middle class of the western industrialized world. The common themes included evangelical Protestantism, self-restraint and hard work
N4A
National Association of Amateur Athletes of America
New York Clipper
Newspaper that covered all sports in the New York area but it especially is credited with promoting baseball in its formative years
One Old Cat
Next incarnation of the game that replaced the barn with a base
Town Ball
Once three more bases were added the game was first called Four Old Cat and eventually this. It most closely resembles the modern game of baseball and the name derived from towns fielding teams to play the game.
Cap Anson
One of the earliest superstar players of baseball. He played first base for the White Sox for 22 seasons finishing with a career average of .333 and 3,418 hits
YMCA (Young Men's Christian Association)
One place the Strenuous Life could be practiced was at the YMCA. Focused more on Christian part of its name, but became more synonymous with exercise and sports.
Public Schools Athletic League (PSAL)
Organized in NYC by Luther Gulick to put on competitions between schools and also to keep youth (immigrant youth) out of trouble after school
John Montgomery Ward
Played for NY Giants, only man in major league w/ 100 wins and 2000 hits, lawyer and educated man, part of Baseball Brotherhood (union of payers)
Rough and Tumble
Popular violent sport with no rules in the backcountry usually contested when there was a real or perceived slight to one's manhood. Goal was to gauge out the eyes of your opponent
William Hulbert
President of the Chicago White Stockings who formed the National League in 1876
Quakers
Protestant reformers who believe in the equality of all people
Rational Recreation
Recreation that was deemed appropriate by the Victorian middle class including reading newspapers, books, and playing musical instruments. Some sports were allowed but always under the umbrella of non-competitiveness
2nd Great Awakening
Religious movement that led to social reforms- 18th century that was more wide-spread and longer-lasting than the movement of the previous century
College Crew
Rowing culture first started by Harvard and Yale in 1852 competing- races were called regattas
"Muscular Christianity"
Second half of the 19th Century movement that stressed a balance of physical and spiritual exercise. Writer Thomas Wentworth Higgenson was a leading proponent of the movement.
Pageant of Misrule
Someone unmarried makes fun of the upper class and the married
Players League
Started by Ward and the Brothers to get new rights for them, did well at first but three leagues was too many, ended by the end of the 1890 season
Elysian Fields
Steven's property in Hoboken, NJ that was donated for use as cricket fields and the New York Yacht Club
Sporting Fraternity
Subcultures created by the counterculture for those who were interested in specific sports. It was also a place where men can find a surrogate brotherhood
Caledonian Clubs
The Roman name for Scotland and these clubs revolved around racing and track and field. They sprang up in America in the 1850s by Scottish immigrants and were responsible for setting up races all over the country
National League
The first professional baseball league, begun in 1876 with eight teams
Positive Sports Ideology
The idea that sports and athletics is a positive alternative to the more negative aspects of city life
Quarter Horses
Top horse breed in the US, known for Quarter races, great sprinters
Turner Societies
Turners are members of German-American gymnastic clubs
Luther Halsey Gulick
Was an instructor at the YMCA's headquarters in Springfield, MA, and believed in the importance of balancing physical and mental conditioning.
1st Great Awakening
a religious revival of going to the old standards of Puritanism (back to the bible movement)
AG Spalding
better known for manufacturing sporting goods, this man helped organize professional baseball
"Race of the Century"
considered by many the first major sporting event that received national attention and promotion in newspapers - it pitted a northern horse Eclipse vs. southern horse Sir Henry in a sectional battle at Union race track on Long Island
Cincinnati Red Stockings
first salaried baseball team
"Nouveau Riche"
newly rich
self-restraint
the ability to control yourself?
Republicanism
the belief that everything done by the colonist should be separate from Europe. should be based on the consent of the people