This Week in SABR: September 6, 2013
Welcome to “This Week in SABR!” Here’s what we’ve been up to as of September 6, 2013:
Save the date: 2014 SABR Ivor-Campbell 19th Century Conference
SABR members, mark your calendar!
The sixth annual Frederick Ivor-Campbell 19th Century Base Ball Conference will be held Friday and Saturday, April 11-12, 2014, at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, New York.
Conference registration materials and details will be available in the Nineteenth Century Committee’s upcoming winter newsletter and on the SABR website around January 1, 2014. For more informaction, contact Peter Mancuso.
For past coverage of the Ivor-Campbell 19th Century Conference, visit SABR.org/ivor-campbell19c.
Take a private tour of early baseball graves on October 18 at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn
His death at 21 shocked the baseball world. He never signed a contract. He is not a member of the baseball Hall of Fame.
But in the early 1860s, Jim Creighton revolutionized the game of baseball. He threw the first fastball, making the pitcher a weapon and transforming the game itself from a hitting contest into today’s sublime battle for control of the strike zone. His baseball-themed grave monument was from its earliest days — and still is — a place of pilgrimage for ballplayers and lovers of the game.
Today, Jim needs us. Over the years, the marble pedestal and “lemon peel” baseball that once crowned Creighton’s grave have disappeared. Green-Wood Cemetery has established a fund to recarve this missing piece and restore the monument to its original state. To date, enough money has been raised that we are optimistic that with a little help from SABR’s Casey Stengel Chapter in New York City and friends, we can reach our goal of completing the work – and inviting donors back for the unveiling — in 2014.
On October 18, 2013, exactly a century and a year after Jim Creighton’s death, Green-Wood will offer a unique tour for SABR members and their friends.
Green-Wood historian Jeff Richman and author Tom Gilbert will lead a tour of the graves of Creighton, Henry Chadwick, James Whyte Davis, Charles Ebbets and other early baseball heroes. They will give graveside talks on topics such as the “Mystery of Jim Creighton’s Demise,” “Baseball’s Baffling Paternity Case,” and “What Happened at Charles Ebbets’s Funeral That May Have Doomed the Brooklyn Dodgers.”
Guests will also be treated to a rare look inside Green-Wood’s archives, including a letter on early Dodgers stationery signed by Charles Ebbets, and a note signed by President Theodore Roosevelt, who dubbed Henry Chadwick “The Father of Baseball,” as well as other signatures of early baseball greats.
The tour is limited to 60 participants (warning: this event is expected to sell out quickly).
Through September 23, ticket sales will be limited to SABR members only. After that date, any remaining tickets will be available for purchase by the general public.
Guests will ride in comfort in Green-Wood’s trolley. The tour will take place at 5:00 p.m. on Friday, October 18, 2013. Along with a bit of baseball time travel, guests will enjoy stunning fall foliage, breathtaking views of the Manhattan skyline, and the sunset over New York Harbor. Afterward, please join us for — what else? — beer and hot dogs (the inventor of the hot dog is at Green-Wood!) in the cemetery’s Historic Chapel.
Tickets to the tour are $125, of which all but $25 is tax-deductible. Additional contributions are gratefully accepted.
To reserve your place on the tour and to donate to the Jim Creighton Monument Restoration Fund, click here.
Print edition of expanded The National Pastime is now available for purchase
The National Pastime, SABR’s annual convention journal, is now larger than ever — and while all SABR members can download the expanded e-edition for free in PDF, EPUB (iPad/Nook) or Kindle formats, you can now also purchase it in paperback form for $19.95 by clicking on the link below:
http://www.createspace.com/4413177
The expanded edition, which at 252 pages is more than twice the size of the souvenir print edition offered to SABR 43 attendees in Philadelphia, tells a comprehensive story of baseball in Philadelphia and the Delaware Valley — the site of the 2013 SABR convention. SABR’s Connie Mack Chapter received well over 50 submissions in response to the call for papers, in addition to suggestions for reprints. The full electronic edition is over 160,000 words reflecting the strength and scope of the articles received.
In addition to the e-edition and print edition, you can also read articles from the full TNP online by clicking on the link below:
http://sabr.org/research/2013-national-pastime
Starting this year, the print edition of the TNP — which does not include the extra articles in the expanded e-edition — is being offered as a souvenir to SABR members attending the annual convention as part of our expanded Publications program led by editor Cecilia Tan. By publishing larger versions of the TNP online and in e-book format, more SABR members will have a chance to have their work published and SABR members will have the opportunity to read more top-level articles every summer.
Since 2009, The National Pastime has served as SABR’s convention-focused publication. Published annually, this research journal provides in-depth articles focused on the respective geographic region where the national convention is taking place in a given year.
For more coverage of SABR 43, visit SABR.org/convention.
Apply for a Fall 2013 internship with SABR
The Society for American Baseball Research is seeking Fall 2013 interns to work in our office in Phoenix, Arizona.
An internship with SABR will involve responsibilities across a variety of disciplines, possibly including:
- Working on-site at a local SABR conference, such as the SABR Arizona Fall League Conference
- Working with our Membership Director or Director of Operations on organizational duties, membership renewal drives, customer service
- Working with our Web Editor to help publish and/or produce content for our website at SABR.org
Interested candidates should be able to demonstrate basic office-related computer skills. HTML knowledge is a plus.
A working knowledge of baseball — and an awareness of the game’s general history and basic statistics — is required.
The internship is an unpaid educational opportunity, covering 15-20 hours per week (flexible schedule), at the SABR office in Phoenix, Arizona. The internship will be for a fixed period of time and is designed to provide the intern with skills and training that may be applicable to working in a nonprofit research environment or in other research-based organizations. No housing assistance will be provided. Internships may count toward college credit.
Please send a resume and cover letter in PDF form to mappleman@sabr.org or jpomrenke@sabr.org by 5:00 p.m. MST Friday, September 13, 2013.
Call for papers: 2014 NINE Spring Training Conference
The 21st annual NINE Spring Training Conference invites original, unpublished papers that study all aspects of baseball, with particular emphasis on history and social policy implications. Abstracts only, not to exceed 300 words, should be submitted by December 3, 2013, to tstrecker@bsu.edu.
Authors will be notified as quickly as possible whether their papers have been accepted. Authors are required to register for the conference and present their work in person.
The 21st annual NINE Spring Training Conference on the Historical and Sociological Impact of Baseball will be held Wednesday, March 12-Saturday, March 15, 2014, at the Fiesta Resort Conference Center, 2100 South Priest Drive, Tempe, Arizona.
The keynote speaker is George Gmelch, professor of anthropology at the University of San Francisco and Union College, and the author of a dozen books, including In the Ballpark, Inside Pitch: Life in Professional Baseball, and Baseball without Borders.
The 2014 SABR Seymour Medal will also be presented at the NINE Conference.
Conference registration forms are available online on the NINE website at http://nine.iweb.bsu.edu/registration.htm.
Sign up now for 2014 baseball tour of Cuba
The 12th annual Cubaball Tour, organized and operated by SABR member Kit Krieger, is scheduled for January 17-25, 2014. The 9-day and 8-night program will feature 5 or 6 National Series games in various ballparks in western Cuba with the locales awaiting the publication of the Cuban schedule. In addition to attending games, tour participants will visit a baseball academy, visit the baseball monuments in Havana’s Cristobal Colon cemetery and La Tropical Stadium, home of the Cuban Winter League teams from 1930-1946.
Cubaballistas saw Yasiel Puig in Cienfuegos, Kendry Morales with the Industriales and Alexei Ramierez with Pinar del Rio. They meet with players past and present, highlighted by a memorable visit with 102-year old Connie Marrero.
The tour package includes:
- 8 nights accommodation at historic 4- to 5-star hotels in Havana and 3- to 4-star hotels in outlying cities, with daily breakfast, as determined by the baseball schedule
- The final itinerary will be set upon release of the 2013/14 Cuban National Series baseball schedule
- Best seats for all National Series games
- All activities, speakers, meetings and admissions as specified in the itinerary
- Expert Cuban and English-speaking tour guide
- Deluxe air-conditioned motor coach
- Airport transfers as available
The registration window is a short one and the tour is limited to 25 people.
Visit www.prime-travel.com, call (604) 880-4512 or send an e-mail at ejkrieger@shaw.ca for more information or special travel requirements needed. More than 100 SABR members have enjoyed the Cubaball experience since 2001 and rank it among the most memorable baseball and travel experiences of their lives.
3 new biographies published by the SABR BioProject
Three new biographies were posted as part of the SABR Baseball Biography Project, which brings us to a total of 2,542 published biographies. Here are the new bios:
- Jackie Mattson Baumgart, by Jim Nitz
- Johnny Broaca, by Jack Zerby
- Tim Raines, by Norm King
All new biographies can be found here: http://sabr.org/bioproj/recent
You can find the SABR BioProject at SABR.org/BioProject.
Bios on more than just ballplayers: The ambitious goal of the SABR Baseball Biography Project is to publish a full-life biography of every major league player in history. But SABR members write about a lot more than just ballplayers. In addition, we have pages for Ballparks, Broadcasters, Executives, Managers, Scouts, Spouses, Umpires and a lot more on the BioProject website. You can browse all of these categories at http://sabr.org/bioproj/browse. So if you’ve ever thought, “Hey, that person (or ballpark) should get the full BioProject treatment” — write the story and we’ll publish it!
Check out the Baseball Ballparks Project: The SABR Baseball Biography Project has been accepting/publishing “biographies” of Ballparks for a few years, and we have 39 of them on our website at http://sabr.org/bioproj/parks. However, this thing just got real. Ballparks are now its very own PROJECT — the Baseball Ballparks Project, our first official spin-off. The project leader is Scott Ferkovich, who is now in charge of recruiting ballparks articles and publicizing them. Learn more by clicking here.
Get involved! If you’d like to help contribute to the SABR BioProject, visit our BioProject Resources page or read the FAQs section to get started. We’re also looking to expand the BioProject to include all “encyclopedic” articles on baseball-related subjects from past SABR publications or committee newsletters. If you come across an article you think should be included in the SABR “baseball repository” at the BioProject, send a copy or link to markarmour04@gmail.com or jpomrenke@sabr.org.
In Memoriam: Ralph Berger
- Ralph Berger, 85, of Huntingdon Valley, Pennsylvania, passed away on August 30, 2013. Ralph was a SABR member since 2000 and contributed dozens of biographies to the SABR BioProject, including stories on Hall of Famers Luke Appling, Lou Boudreau, Jim Bunning and more. Ralph was a writer, poet, teacher, public administrator, an avid baseball historian, and a historian of the World Wars. Beloved husband of Reina (nee Rappaport). Graveside services were held Tuesday, September 3 at Shalom Memorial Park in Huntingdon Valley. Contributions in his memory may be made to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.
ICYMI: Highlights from last week’s This Week in SABR
We’ve heard your feedback: Some of you have said you look forward to “This Week in SABR” every Friday, but sometimes there are just too many compelling articles and announcements to read every week. We’re not complaining — hey, keep up the great work! — but we know the feeling. So in an effort to make the length of this newsletter more manageable to read, we’ll summarize some of the repeating/recurring announcements in a special “In Case You Missed It (ICYMI)” section of “This Week in SABR”.
Here are some major headlines from recent weeks that we don’t want you to miss:
- Watch SABR Panels from 2013 All-Star FanFest online now
- The SABR Bookshelf: Summer 2013
- New sabermetric component, SABR Defensive Index, revealed for Rawlings Gold Glove Award
- Full coverage of SABR 43 in Philadelphia at SABR.org/convention
- SABR Digital Library: Inventing Baseball: The 100 Greatest Games of the 19th Century
- Seeking nominations for the 2014 SABR Analytics Conference Research Awards
- All e-books in SABR Digital Library now available for free to members
- Save the date! 2013 SABR Arizona Fall League Conference is October 31-November 2
All previous editions of This Week in SABR can be found here: http://sabr.org/content/this-week-in-sabr-archives.
Welcome, new members!
We’d like to welcome all of our new SABR members who have joined this week. You can find all Members-Only resources at members.sabr.org and the New Member Handbook can be downloaded here.
Please give these new members a warm welcome and help them make the most of their membership by giving them the opportunity to get involved in their local chapter or a research committee.
Name | Hometown |
---|---|
Michael Craig | Gilbert, AZ |
Joseph Fraioli | Bellerose, NY |
Research committee newsletters
There were no new SABR research committee newsletters published this week.
Find all SABR research committee newsletters at SABR.org/research.
Chapter meeting news
There were no new chapter meeting recaps published this week.
Visit SABR.org/chapters for more information on SABR regional chapters.
SABR Events Calendar
Here is a list of upcoming SABR events:
- September 7: Halsey Hall Chapter Hot Stove Saturday Morning (Richfield, MN)
- September 7: Talkin’ Baseball: Tom Dunkel (Columbia, MD)
- September 8: SABR Board of Directors conference call
- September 9: Larry Dierker Chapter meeting (Houston, TX)
- September 10: Hanlan’s Point Chapter meeting (St. Catharines, ON)
- September 11: Bob Davids Chapter Hot Stove Dinner (Arlington, VA)
- September 12: Jeff Laing book signing (Santa Fe, NM)
- September 16: Bob Broeg St. Louis Chapter meeting (St. Louis, MO)
- September 17: Bob Davids Chapter Maryland Hot Stove dinner (Silver Spring, MD)
- September 17: Barbara Gregorich: “When Women Played Baseball: The Story of Margaret, Nellie, and Rose” (Orland Park, IL)
- September 18: Rocky Mountain Chapter monthly lunch (Denver, CO)
- September 19: Bergino: New York Giants Preservation Society meeting (New York, NY)
- September 19: Dr. Larry Hogan: “Baseball’s legendary clubhouse men” (Montclair, NJ)
All SABR meetings and events are open to the public. Feel free to bring a baseball-loving friend … and make many new ones! Check out the SABR Events Calendar at SABR.org/events.
Around the Web
Here are some recent articles published by and about SABR members:
- Baseball Prospectus announces multi-year partnership with MLB Advanced Media (Baseball Prospectus)
- Baseball Hall of Fame restructures Frick Award selection process (BaseballHall.org)
- Dave Cameron: On context, or evaluating hitters and pitchers differently (FanGraphs)
- Ben Lindbergh: Most fans think their teams can’t hit rookie pitchers; is that true? (Baseball Prospectus)
- David Block: The story of William Bray’s diary and baseball in 1755 (Our Game)
- Stacy Pratt McDermott: Baseball and Illinois politics during Abraham Lincoln’s time (The National Pastime Museum)
- Keith Olbermann: A generation of babied pitchers? (ESPN)
- Dustin Palmateer: A closer look at college pitch counts and injuries (Baseball Prospectus)
- September roster expansion not always a hit with baseball people (Kansas City Star)
- Ray Grebey, negotiator in 1981 baseball strike, dies at 85 (New York Times)
- Rob Neyer: Warren Spahn’s finishing kick (The National Pastime Museum)
- Tyler Kepner: Cardinals’ Allen Craig offers a reason to believe in clutch hitting (New York Times)
- Vince Gennaro: How the extra wild card has affected baseball (MLB Network)
- Marty Appel: Baseball’s centennial ‘Greatest Players Ever’ poll in 1969 (The National Pastime Museum)
Read these articles and more at SABR.org/latest.
This Week in SABR is compiled by Jacob Pomrenke, and sent out to all SABR members on Fridays. All previous editions of This Week in SABR can be found here: http://sabr.org/content/this-week-in-sabr-archives. If you would like us to include an upcoming event, article or any other information in “This Week in SABR”, e-mail jpomrenke@sabr.org.
Find exclusive Members’ Only resources and information here: http://members.sabr.org
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Originally published: September 6, 2013. Last Updated: April 3, 2020.