Former Nebraska State League president umpired the September 13, 1915, contest between his fellow inmates at Leavenworth Prison and the Kansas City Packers when Federal League umpires missed their train.

Pros vs. Cons: Federal Leaguers versus Federal Prisoners at Leavenworth

This article was written by Tim Rives - Bob Rives

This article was published in Spring 2015 Baseball Research Journal


BOB RIVES is retired from business and from Wichita State University where he was an adjunct instructor. He lives in Wichita and is Tim’s father. TIM RIVES has written extensively about baseball history. He is the supervisory archivist and deputy director of the Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum in Abilene, Kansas.

 

Notes

1. Our claim that this was the first game played between a prison team and a major league team is based on a thorough search of online newspaper databases (Proquest, Newspaper Archive, Chronicling America, The New York Times, Washington Post, Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune, Atlanta Constitution, and Los Angeles Times), a discussion thread on SABR-L Archives, and research at the National Baseball Hall of Fame Archives and Manuscript Collection at Cooperstown in 2003. Harold Seymour and Dorothy Jane Mills note the Mutual Welfare League games at Sing Sing between inmates and the New York Yankees and New York Giants began in the 1920s. Harold Seymour, Baseball: The People’s Game (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990), 414. We also consulted the Harold and Dorothy Seymour Papers, 1830–1998, Box 2, Folders 4–5, Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Carl A. Kroch Library, Cornell University.

2. Marc Okkonen, The Federal League of 1914–1915 (The Society for American Baseball Research, 1989), 3; 24–5; The African American and white teams were occasionally combined for big games in the late 1920s. The merger became official in 1933 when the Great Depression reduced prison recreation budgets. “Baseball Ballyhoo,” New Era, May–June, 1933, 8.

3. “Wind and Science,” New Era, September 17, 1915, 4; Paul W. Keve, Prisons and the American Conscience: A History of U.S. Federal Corrections (Carbondale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois University Press, 1991), 58; “Dentists Every Day,” New Era, October 1, 1915, 4.

4. New Era, September 17, 1915, 4.

5. Ibid.

6. Bartholomew R. Burns, “Fielders’ Choice: A Selected History of the Nebraska State League,” Unpublished Honors Thesis, University of Nebraska, 1992, 33, 44; Andrea Faling, Nebraska State Historical Society, email to Tim Rives, May 2, 2001; Albert Felt File; Inmate Case Files; United States Penitentiary-Leavenworth; Records of the Federal Bureau of Prisons, Record Group 129; National Archives at Kansas City. Additional Leavenworth files will be cited by inmate’s name only.

7. “Prison Chatter,” New Era, October 1, 1915, 3.

8. www.baseball-reference.com/teams/KCP/1915.shtml.

9. Irish O’Malley File; William Basore File.

10. Basore File; “Prison Chatter,” New Era, May 7, 1915, 3; “Wind and Science,” New Era, September 17, 1915, 4; “1,500 Convicts Attend Game,” The Leavenworth Post, September 13, 1915, n.p.

11. “Prison Chatter,” New Era, September 17, 1915, 4.

12. Basore File. United States vs. William Basore; Criminal Case Files; US District Court for the District of Kansas, First Division; Records of the US District Courts, Record Group 21; National Archives at Kansas City.

13. Basore File.

14. “Basore, Pitcher, an Enigma,” New Era, May 7, 1915, 4.

15. Basore obituary, Kansas City Star, October 30, 1977, 16B.

16. “Clean Sportsmanship,” New Era, June 27, 1919, 4.

17. “Wind and Science,” New Era, September 17, 1915, 4.

18. “Their Lone Run A Theft,” Kansas City Star, September 14, 1915, 8. William Basore was inmate 9478.

19. “Wind and Science,” New Era, September 17, 1915, 4.

20. Eubanks File; “A Grewsome Bat,” New Era, July 30, 1915, 4.

21. “Wind and Science,” New Era, September 17, 1915, 4.

22. Ibid.; “Their Lone Run a Theft,” Kansas City Star, September 14, 1915, 8.

23. “Wind and Science,” New Era, September 17, 1915, 4.

24. “Their Lone Run a Theft,” Kansas City Star, September 14, 1915, 8.

25. “Wind and Science,” New Era, September 17, 1915, 4.

26. “Their Lone Run a Theft,” Kansas City Star, September 14, 1915, 8.

27. “Wind and Science, New Era, September 17, 1915, 4.

28. “Make It Annual Event,” Leavenworth Times, September 15, 1915, 5.

29. New Era, September 17, 1915, 4; “Prison Chatter,” New Era, September 17, 1915, 3; “It’s a Gala Day at Prison When K.C. Feds Play,” Leavenworth Times, September 14, 1915, 3.

30. “Packers’ Gift,” New Era, October 1, 1915, 4.

31. Ibid.

32. “Baseball Season Ends,” New Era, October 1927, 3; “Booker T’s Win Final Game of Series 2 to 1,” Leavenworth Times, October 7, 1929, 7; “Booker T’s Meet Catholics Sunday,” Kansas City Call, August 19, 1927, 6.

33. “A New Champion,” Leavenworth New Era, April 9, 1915, 4.

34. Geoffrey Ward, Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson (New York: Vintage, Reprint Edition, 2006), 410–3.

35. “Penal Court in US Penitentiary Here is Unique,” Leavenworth Times, May 18, 1913, 2.

36. Wilson File; “11 Men, 4 Women Shed No Tears at Funeral for Baseball Wilson,” St. Paul (Minnesota) Dispatch, May 16, 1924, n.p.

37. United States Penitentiary-Leavenworth was established in 1895, but the inmates did not occupy the current building until 1903.

38. The original United States Disciplinary Barracks was located on the old Fort Leavenworth post about a mile north of the U.S. penitentiary site. It is now about three miles farther north.

39. Keve, 83.

40. Leavenworth New Era, April–June 1946, 87; Leavenworth New Era Annual Issue, 1947, 61; Leavenworth New Era, January-March 1949, 45; Del Crandall: www.baseball-reference.com/players/c/crandde01.shtml.

41. Albert T. Bostelmann, “Adolph John Soldan, 1877–1971,” Concordia Historical Institute Quarterly, Winter 1985, 169-70; Soldan is visible in footage of Monroe’s funeral on YouTube. He is the tall man in the clerical robe at the head of the procession: www.youtube.com/watch?v= 3S3b9RJCfNw.