Before the Color Line: The Rondout Seniors, the Excelsior Club, and Interracial Baseball in 1867
This article was written by Daniel Torres
This article was published in Spring 2026 Baseball Research Journal
This article analyzes a series of interracial baseball contests played in Rondout, New York, in August 1867 between the Black Rondout Seniors and the white Excelsior Club. Reported in The Ball Players’ Chronicle, the principal clearinghouse for organized baseball match results during the 1860s, the games were treated as legitimate club contests and accompanied by full box scores listing players, officials, and game details in the same statistical format used to record contests between white clubs. By correlating these box scores with local obituaries and contemporaneous interviews, this study identifies individual Black players—including Civil War veterans—who participated in the games and situates them within a sustained Black baseball culture in Rondout and Kingston.2 The article further places the contests within the broader development of organized baseball and examines their timing in relation to the National Association of Base Ball Players’ December 1867 vote to exclude clubs “composed of one or more colored persons.”3 It argues that interracial baseball could function as routine local practice before being curtailed by national policy, and that such contests complicate narratives that treat early integration primarily as symbolic or protest-driven.
INTRODUCTION
The history of baseball integration is most often framed through twentieth-century milestones, culminating in Jackie Robinson’s debut in 1947.4 This narrative can obscure how racial boundaries shifted during baseball’s early decades. In the years immediately following the Civil War, organized play operated under local governance, was shaped by community norms, and unevenly regulated.5 Interracial contests such as those examined here unfolded during a period when Reconstruction proceeded unevenly across the North, and debates over citizenship, suffrage, and public participation remained unresolved.6 This article does not suggest that interracial baseball ceased after 1867, but that the consolidation of organized baseball narrowed the range of play that could be formally recognized.
By “organized baseball,” this article refers to club-based play governed by shared rules, scheduled matches, and standardized reporting, as distinct from informal or ad hoc matches. Under this framework, some of the earliest interracial baseball contests appear not as symbolic challenges to racial exclusion, but as ordinary expressions of baseball culture before racial boundaries were formally codified at the national level.
RONDOUT–KINGSTON AFTER THE CIVIL WAR
As an independent Hudson River port until its 1872 consolidation with the Village of Kingston, Rondout functioned as a distinct civic and sporting community during the period under study.7 Rondout shared the economic and social characteristics common to upriver Hudson Valley ports, whose waterfront infrastructure and transport networks supported the commercial expansion of New York City. These communities drew residents from a range of cultural and ethnic backgrounds, shaped by migration, river commerce, and seasonal labor. Where appropriate, this article refers to the interconnected area as “Rondout–Kingston.” For clarity, Rondout and Kingston are treated here as a single, interconnected baseball environment unless municipal distinction clarifies the operation of baseball or civic life.
In the mid-1860s, the villages of Rondout and Kingston in Ulster County, New York, together sustained a population of approximately fourteen thousand residents, within which several local newspapers, voluntary associations, and organized baseball clubs formed part of everyday public life.8
The local economy revolved around the waterfront—wharves, shipyards, brickyards, coal and ice houses, and freight traffic—drawing a mix of permanent working-class residents and transient or seasonal laborers. Kingston remained economically intertwined through tradesmen, clerks, and craftsmen whose livelihoods depended on river commerce. As a result, residents mixed socially and moved frequently between workplaces, taverns, voluntary associations, and sporting clubs.
Yet this associational culture coexisted with only a partial commitment to racial equality. In 1867, New York’s constitutional convention debated ending the property qualification for Black male suffrage, but when the question reached voters in 1869, the electorate chose to retain the discriminatory requirement. Ulster County voters opposed the amendment by a clear margin, underscoring the persistence of local resistance to Black political equality when interracial interaction occurred in everyday community life.9
Thus, the sporting contests in Rondout emerged within a civic environment in which interracial interaction could exist in certain social and recreational settings even as political equality remained constrained. In Northern communities such as Rondout–Kingston, postwar reforms left significant discretion to states and localities, producing uneven outcomes across different domains of public life. Baseball clubs, like other voluntary associations, operated within this space—neither fully insulated from racial politics nor wholly governed by them.
INTERRACIAL BASEBALL AS ORDINARY LOCAL PRACTICE
Scholarship on early interracial baseball has most often centered on the Philadelphia Pythians, whose contests against white opponents in 1869 are widely cited as the earliest documented examples of integrated club play.10 Those games were urban, highly visible, and closely tied to contemporary debates over race, citizenship, and access to organized sport, and they have rightly occupied a central place in baseball history. As a result, scholarship on early interracial baseball has tended to emphasize these kinds of encounters, often overlooking everyday local play preserved in quieter—but no less consequential—documentary traces. The games played in Rondout in 1867 illustrate a different mode of interracial baseball: contests reported without editorial commentary, embedded within an established local club network, and treated as regular features of community-based play, not as explicitly political or symbolic acts.
That same issue of The Ball Players’ Chronicle also described another match played in the village in which the defeated party refused to surrender the ball, prompting several members to immediately leave the club. The paper frequently included this kind of detail, noting not only disputes over conduct or officiating but also patterns in the behavior of players and spectators, and using the loss of discipline or spirit to explain how games unraveled rather than relying on the score alone. By treating interracial contests and intramural disputes within the same local setting through a shared narrative lens, the Chronicle framed both as regular features of community baseball. In doing so, it provides a window into the everyday mechanics of early interracial play—its governance, reporting practices, social norms.
When the Chronicle departed from purely statistical reporting, it did so to address matters of conduct, discipline, or the breakdown of competitive order—not to frame racial composition as noteworthy in its own right.
EARLY BLACK BASEBALL IN KINGSTON AND RONDOUT BEFORE FORMAL CLUBS
Biographical reconstruction offers the clearest means of assessing how interracial baseball functioned as part of ordinary civic life rather than as isolated spectacle. The Rondout Seniors did not emerge in isolation. Black participation in baseball in Kingston and Rondout both predated the formal organization of clubs in the mid-nineteenth century and extended beyond the brief surviving documentary record of the Seniors’ season. Although the existing sources are fragmentary and do not permit precise reconstruction, they point toward continuity rather than novelty.
The life of Henry C. Rosecranse Jr. offers a rare window into this longer trajectory. Born in Kingston between 1808 and 1810 to an enslaved mother, Rosecranse was legally free under New York’s gradual emancipation laws but bound to serve his mother’s enslaver into early adulthood.12 He spent the majority of his life in the city, and by the mid-nineteenth century had become a well-known barber, property owner, and civic presence—occupations that placed him at the center of Rondout–Kingston’s social and commercial life. Surviving accounts of early baseball are seldom preserved in the voices of individuals who had experienced slavery or bound labor, making Rosecranse’s recollections exceptional within the documentary record.
In an 1881 interview published in the Kingston Daily Freeman, Rosecranse recalled playing bat-and-ball games in his youth that he described as closely resembling modern baseball. When asked directly whether the game he remembered was “base ball as now played,” he replied, “Something like it,” acknowledging differences in equipment while emphasizing the familiarity of the activity itself. He situated this play within the context of communal gatherings and holidays—particularly Pinkster, a regional Afro-Dutch spring festival observed by enslaved and free Black communities in the Hudson Valley that combined music, dance, food, and athletic contests and served as a recurring site of communal and recreational life.12 Significantly, Rosecranse’s recollections were presented without editorial qualification or surprise, suggesting that Black participation in such games was not regarded as anomalous by late-nineteenth-century Rondout–Kingston readers.
Rosecranse’s recollections place Black participation in Rondout–Kingston’s baseball culture decades before the organization of formal clubs in the 1860s, even as the surviving record makes it difficult to trace individual games or teams from this earlier period. His testimony—rare both for its early date and for the perspective from which it was offered—suggests that baseball was interwoven into the everyday social fabric of Rondout–Kingston’s Black community, connected with work, commerce, and civic life rather than confined to isolated, one-off, or novelty events.
RONDOUT–KINGSTON AS A REGIONAL BASEBALL HUB
The organization of the Rondout Seniors following the Civil War coincided with a broader institutionalization of club baseball throughout the region, as clubs adopted standardized rules, schedules, and reporting practices.
By the mid-nineteenth century, bat-and-ball play had become a familiar feature of life in the Hudson River ports of Rondout and Kingston. An 1858 account of town ball played in Rondout–Kingston points to an established local tradition of informal ball play prior to the formalization of club baseball, even as such contests fell outside the structures of organized association play.13 Match reports for the Eclipse Club of Kingston subsequently appeared in Wilkes’ Spirit of the Times between 1860 and 1865, situating the city within the national baseball press during the sport’s formative decade.14
From these reports, it is clear that baseball had taken hold in the region. Dockworkers, tradesmen, and clerks gathered on open fields to play what was increasingly described as the “national game,” supported by the area’s role as a commercial port and industrial center that fostered dense, mobile populations and organized recreation. Further evidence of the area’s growing baseball significance appeared as early as September 1865, when reports in the New York Clipper and the New York Times described a Silver Ball Contest held in the Rondout–Kingston area, featuring clubs from Brooklyn, Albany, and the Hudson Valley, including the Mutual of New York, then among the nation’s premier clubs.15 The successful staging of the contest indicated that the local baseball community possessed the organizational capacity, facilities, and sporting culture necessary to host leading clubs, thereby legitimizing Rondout–Kingston’s place within the broader landscape of organized baseball. This evidence places Rondout–Kingston among the fully integrated participants in the mid-nineteenth-century baseball world rather than as a peripheral or derivative locale.
By 1867, The Ball Players’ Chronicle listed a concentration of organized clubs in the Rondout–Kingston area, including the Excelsior, Eagle, Union, Pacific, Lincoln, and Senior Clubs of Rondout, and the Star and Active Clubs of Kingston.16 Within this pattern of regular interclub play, interracial competition could occur as part of established norms of organization or reporting.
METHOD AND LIMITS OF THE RECORD
This study employs a cross-referential approach combining national sports journalism with local newspaper sources and later nineteenth-century recollections. It treats box scores not merely as records of play but as evidence of institutional legitimacy and narrative inclusion within organized baseball. Primary evidence consists of match reports and box scores published in The Ball Players’ Chronicle, which were analyzed for player names, dates, and match structure to assess the character and legitimacy of competition.
Names appearing in the box scores were correlated with contemporaneous and retrospective newspaper accounts, most notably obituaries published in the Kingston Daily Freeman. The obituary of Dennis S. Johnson, published on January 11, 1928, proved particularly significant in confirming Civil War service, age, and long-term residence. Oral-history-style recollections preserved in later nineteenth-century interviews, such as those of Henry C. Rosecranse Jr., were used cautiously to identify earlier patterns of Black baseball participation in Rondout–Kingston prior to formal club organization.
This approach emphasizes corroboration across independent sources while remaining attentive to gaps, silences, and limitations within the surviving documentary record. The absence of controversy in the surviving record does not imply racial equality, but reflects the conventions of nineteenth-century sports reporting and the locally governed character of organized baseball prior to formal exclusion.
With these evidentiary constraints in mind, the following section examines the August 1867 matches between the Rondout Seniors and the Excelsior Club as they appear in contemporary baseball reporting, particularly the standardized statistical conventions of The Ball Players’ Chronicle, and within the local record.
THE RONDOUT SENIORS AND THE EXCELSIOR MATCHES
In August 1867, the Rondout Seniors played two matches against the white Excelsior Club of Rondout, on August 20 and August 30. Both contests were reported together in the September 5, 1867 issue of The Ball Players’ Chronicle. The Excelsiors were recorded as victors in both games.
The Chronicle presented the games in its customary statistical register. Each match was accompanied by a full box score listing players by surname, runs, and outs, and identifying umpires and credited fly catches—precisely the same format used to report contests between established white clubs. The paper offered no extended description of play beyond the statistical summary, relying instead on its standard reporting conventions to record the results.
Although the Chronicle refers in passing to the “colored Senior Club,” the designation did not alter the form or substance of the report. The contests were recorded without editorial commentary or competitive qualification and were indistinguishable in structure from other results published from across the organized baseball world. That these games appeared in the sport’s principal national clearinghouse for match results in 1867 demonstrates that interracial play could be accommodated within organized baseball’s formal reporting and record-keeping systems prior to the National Association of Base Ball Players’ December 1867 vote to exclude clubs “composed of one or more colored persons.”
IDENTIFYING THE PLAYERS: THE JOHNSON BROTHERS
The box score published in The Ball Players’ Chronicle for the August 30, 1867, match lists “D. Johnson” third in the Seniors’ batting order and credits him with one run scored. Correlation with contemporaneous local records identifies this player as Dennis S. Johnson, whose later life situates his participation in organized baseball within the ordinary civic life of Rondout–Kingston’s Black community. Johnson died in 1928 at the age of eighty-two, placing him at approximately twenty-one years old at the time of the 1867 game.
Local records situate Johnson within a long-standing, locally rooted Black household in Rondout headed by his father, a fish monger, underscoring that his participation in organized baseball emerged from an established community context rather than a transient or exceptional social position. Johnson’s brother, John H. Johnson—approximately twenty years old in 1867—also appears to have participated as the “J. Johnson” credited with one run scored in the box score; a surviving grave marker records his service in the 20th United States Colored Troops.17
Dennis Johnson’s historical significance lies less in his on-field statistics than in the sustained public life he later led. By the early twentieth century, he appears repeatedly in the local press as a figure of trust and leadership, serving on committees organizing political “smoke talks” for Black voters, delivering addresses on behalf of the Franklin Street A.M.E. Zion Church, acting as master of ceremonies at public commemorations, and holding the office of secretary of the church’s board of trustees. He also appears in pension records as a Civil War veteran receiving federal support, further anchoring him within the postwar civic order.18
Founded in the mid-nineteenth century, the Franklin Street A.M.E. Zion Church served as a central institution for worship, mutual aid, political organization, and public memory within Kingston’s Black population.19 Johnson’s overlapping participation in organized baseball, electoral politics, veterans’ culture, and church leadership illustrates the interconnected civic networks within which early Black baseball in Rondout–Kingston operated.
CIVIL WAR VETERANS AND POSTWAR BASEBALL CULTURE
The presence of Civil War veterans among the Rondout Seniors reflects broader patterns in postwar baseball culture. During the war, baseball was widely played in Union camps and garrisons, where it functioned as a structured form of recreation and a means of maintaining discipline and morale. Veterans carried the game back into civilian life, contributing to the rapid expansion of organized baseball during the late 1860s.20
Military service did not erase racial hierarchy, but it did produce shared routines—drilling, scheduled recreation, and organized sport—that accustomed soldiers to baseball as a regulated activity governed by rules and officials. For veterans returning to civilian life, these experiences shaped expectations about how the game was played and how order was maintained, even as broader questions of citizenship and political equality remained unsettled. In this context, interracial baseball in places such as Rondout may have appeared unremarkable precisely because it echoed wartime practices that emphasized structure and conduct rather than social integration. In Rondout–Kingston, where several identified players were veterans or came of age in the immediate postwar years, these habits of organized play and disciplined recreation carried directly into civilian club baseball.
TIMING AND THE CLOSING OF THE COLOR LINE
The timing of the Rondout matches is especially significant. In December 1867, delegates of the National Association of Base Ball Players convened in Philadelphia and adopted a resolution barring any club “composed of one or more colored persons.” Prior to this vote, the National Association exercised limited and uneven authority, functioning primarily as a coordinating body rather than a governing league with direct enforcement power. While the exclusion applied only to member clubs and did not immediately end interracial contests, it nonetheless marked the establishment of a national color line that foreclosed the future development, visibility, and legitimacy of such play, even where it had previously functioned as routine local practice. In this sense, the vote represented organized baseball’s first formal, national act of racial exclusion and a shift from uneven, locally governed practices toward explicit institutional regulation.
These contests also predate by nearly two years the frequently cited September 1869 interracial games between the Philadelphia Pythians and the white Olympics. That the Rondout matches were reported in The Ball Players’ Chronicle as routine club contests—without qualification or commentary—underscores a basic but often overlooked point. Before formal exclusion was imposed, interracial play was neither invisible nor unimaginable within organized baseball. Rather, it operated within a locally governed space that was subsequently narrowed through a combination of national policy, evolving organizational norms, and shifting political and racial currents.
Contemporary explanations for the National Association of Base Ball Players’ December 1867 exclusion vote emphasized concerns that interracial participation would introduce political tension or social discomfort into organized baseball. Proceedings and later commentary suggest that Black clubs were widely understood to have little chance of admission, and that at least one prospective application was withdrawn—or never formally submitted—accordingly.21 The resolution was framed as a measure intended to preserve harmony within the Association rather than as a response to any specific incident or disruption.
Read against the Rondout evidence, this rationale sits uneasily alongside contemporary practice. In August 1867, just months before the exclusion vote, interracial club contests were played in Rondout, reported in The Ball Players’ Chronicle, and recorded without editorial comment or controversy. The absence of alarm in the national baseball press suggests that the Association was not responding to a widely recognized crisis within organized baseball. The December 1867 vote, then, appears less as a response to conflict than as a prospective eligibility rule whose significance becomes clearer in light of the Rondout contests.
CONCLUSION
The August 1867 interracial contests in Rondout complicate prevailing narratives of early baseball integration that emphasize exceptional, highly visible urban encounters or explicitly political challenges to segregation. Documented in The Ball Players’ Chronicle and anchored to identifiable participants such as Dennis S. Johnson and John H. Johnson, the Rondout games were organized club contests reported in the same statistical and narrative terms as matches between white clubs. Rather than appearing as symbolic or confrontational acts, interracial play here functioned as a feature of local baseball practice.
This local evidence shifts the unit of analysis from isolated “firsts” to the ordinary operation of community-based clubs in the years immediately following the Civil War. In Northern communities, where organized baseball remained locally governed and only loosely regulated, interracial participation could occur unevenly without a uniform system of governance. The absence of editorial comment in contemporary coverage does not imply racial equality, but it does indicate that interracial competition could proceed without registering as exceptional within the conventions of organized baseball reporting.
Viewed from this perspective, the December 1867 resolution of the National Association of Base Ball Players barring clubs “composed of one or more colored persons” appears not to reflect longstanding custom, but rather an institutional response that narrowed an already existing range of local practices. The Rondout contests suggest that racial exclusion in organized baseball followed participation rather than preceding it, and that the sport’s early racial order was constructed by institutional decision, not inherited custom.
DANIEL TORRES is a baseball historian specializing in nineteenth-century baseball in the Hudson River corridor. His work explores the early development of baseball in the Hudson Valley, with particular attention to interracial play and print culture. He founded the Ulster County Vintage Base Ball Association, which operates 1864-rules clubs and stages free public games and historical programming across the region.
Notes
1. “Excelsior v. Rondout,” The Ball Players’ Chronicle (New York), September 5, 1867.
2. “Dennis S. Johnson obituary,” Kingston Daily Freeman, January 11, 1928.
3. Proceedings of the National Association of Base Ball Players, December 19, 1867.
4. Jules Tygiel, Baseball’s Great Experiment: Jackie Robinson and His Legacy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1983).
5. John Thorn, Baseball in the Garden of Eden: The Secret History of the Early Game (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2011).
6. Eric Foner, Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution, 1863–1877 (New York: Harper & Row, 1988).
7. Stuart M. Blumin, The Urban Threshold: Growth and Change in a Nineteenth-Century American Community (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1976).
8. New York State Census, 1865, Ulster County, Rondout, 77.
9. J.F. Cleveland, comp., Tribune Almanac and Political Register (New York: Tribune Association, 1870), 56.
10. Michael E. Lomax, Black Baseball Entrepreneurs, 1860–1901: Operating by Any Means Necessary (Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 2003), 29–30; Adrian Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game: Baseball, Latinos, and the Color Line (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007).
11. “A Colored Resident: Henry Rosecranse Columbus, Jr. Some Incidents in the Life of an Old Resident of Kingston — Born a Slave He Lives to Become Wealthy and an Example of His Race,” Kingston Daily Freeman, August 19, 1881.
12. James Eights, “Pinkster Festivities in Albany Sixty Years Ago,” in Joel Munsell, ed., Collections on the History of Albany, vol. 2 (Albany: J. Munsell, 1865).
13. “Lively Sport,” Putnam County Courier (Carmel, NY), April 13, 1858.
14. “Out-Door Sports: Base Ball: Eclipse vs. Ulster,” Wilkes’ Spirit of the Times 3, no. 9 (November 3, 1860), 133; “Base Ball,” Saugerties Telegraph, August 18, 1865, 2.
15. “The Silver Ball Contest at Kingston, N.Y.,” New York Clipper, September 30, 1865, 2; “The National Game: The Silver Ball Contests at Kingston—Mutuals vs. Actives of New-York, and Knickerbockers, of Albany vs. Resolutes, of Brooklyn,” New York Times, September 24, 1865.
16. Ball Players’ Chronicle, August 1, 1867, August 22, September 5, October 3, and October 24, 1867.
17. Gravestone of John H. Johnson, Mount Zion Cemetery, Kingston, New York.
18. “Welcomed by Mayor,” Kingston Daily Freeman, May 14, 1903; “Odds and Ends,” Kingston Daily Freeman, May 24, 1904; “Colored Folks Will Celebrate,” Kingston Daily Freeman, February 8, 1909; “Zion Church Resolutions,” Kingston Daily Freeman, October 11, 1912; “Dennis S. Johnson obituary,” Kingston Daily Freeman, January 11, 1928.
19. “A.M.E. Zion Church of Kingston,” National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form, March 3, 2021, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior.
20. George B. Kirsch, Baseball in Blue and Gray: The National Pastime During the Civil War (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003).
21. “Papers of the Pythian Base Ball Club of Philadelphia, 1866–1871,” Leon Gardiner Collection, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.


