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The
Hartford
Dark
Blues
by David Arcidiacono
printer friendly version
1876 Hartford Dark Blues. Back row: Tommy
Bond, Candy Cummings. Middle row: Tom Carey, Everett Mills,
Bob Ferguson, Bill Harbidge, Tom York. Front row: Dick Higham,
Jack Burdock, Jack Remsen, Doug Allison. |
Robert Ferguson (1845-1894) was
tough, as Hartford would come to
find out. In the summer of 1873
Nat Hicks, catcher for the New
York Mutuals, foolishly argued
with Ferguson during a game in
which Old Fergy was acting as
umpire. After a few moments of
name-calling and insults, Ferguson,
whose no-nonsense umpiring
philosophy was, make em play ball
and keep their mouths shut,1
grabbed a bat and ended the dispute
with one swing, fracturing Hickss
arm in the process.
Hartford came to know Bob
Ferguson in 1875 when he signed
a contract to manage and play
third base for the citys entry in the
National Association (1871-1875),
Americas first professional baseball
league. The Hartford Dark
Blues had entered the league the
previous year under the auspices
of Ben Douglas Jr. This was the
24-year-old Middletown natives
second attempt at running a professional
team in Connecticut. His
first had failed miserably in 1872
when the Middletown Mansfields
couldnt survive a full season in
the National Association. Finding
it impossible to draw sufficient
support in a city of only 11,000
residents, Douglas was forced to
disband the team in mid-August
with empty coffers and a dismal
5-19 record.
Aware that the National Association
still desired a club between New
York and Boston so visiting teams could layover midway, Douglas
was convinced that Hartford was
the answer. Early in 1874, he gathered
many of Hartfords most
prominent businessmen, including
Morgan Bulkeley, to sell them on
the benefits of professional baseball
in Hartford. They responded
enthusiastically, pledging $5,000
toward the new ballclub. Douglas
was named corresponding secretary
for the club, an important and
time-consuming job in the days
before formalized league schedules
and telephones. Gershom Hubbell
was elected president. Hubbells
baseball experience included running
the amateur Charter Oaks,
Hartfords first organized club,
which he founded in 1862. The
Charter Oaks were state champions
from 1865-1867, before
ceasing operations in 1870.
The Dark Blues, whose uniform
stockings were just that, finished
next to last in their first professional
season. Worse than their failure on
the diamond, the players mortified
Hartfords more genteel residents
with their lack of decorum off the
field. Much of the blame for the
teams embarrassing conduct fell
on captain and center fielder,
Lipman Pike. In these early days
of baseball, the team captains
responsibilities were similar to that
of todays manager. Pike took a
laissez-faire approach to managing,
convening few practices and, as
the Hartford Post reported in July
1874, allowing his men to cling to
their love for strong drink, for a
round of pleasure at the hours
when they should be abed.
Intent on remedying the shameful
situation, the Dark Blues turned to
Ferguson, the most authoritarian
captain in the game. In addition
to being an excellent fielder and
solid hitter, Ferguson was an
upstanding citizen. At a time when
not many ballplayers could say the
same, he was a teetotaler and
scrupulously honest. However, he
was also a domineering, dictatorial
captain with a violent streak.
Al Spalding, the premier pitcher of
the era, who went on to found the
sporting goods empire that continues
to bear his name, described
Fergusons leadership in his memoirs,
Americas National Game: He
was no master of the arts of
finesse. He had no tact. He knew
nothing of the subtle science of
handling men by strategy rather
than by force.
Ferguson surely improved discipline
on the Dark Blues ballclub
in his first season in Hartford, but
his overbearing ways proved
divisive and the team quickly
gained a reputation for bickering,
or growling in the 19th-century
vernacular. When the team was
losing, or even winning, he found
it difficult to keep his temper in
check. As the Chicago Tribune
reported, if anyone on the
Hartford nine committed an error,
Ferguson [would] swear until
everything looks blue. He was
particularly rough on second baseman
Jack Burdock, who on more
than one occasion heard his
captain publicly threaten to ram
his fist down Burdocks throat.
Some players tolerated their
captains tyrannical leadership.
Others, however, refused to comply.
Whenever they found themselves
the subject of Fergusons bullying,
shortstop Tom Carey and center
fielder Jack Remsen did not hesitate
to yell back. Burdock and
pitcher Arthur Cummings, on the
other hand, often sulked; they
sometimes feigned sickness and
played half-heartedly, or not at all.
Despite a talented squad and a
record of 54 wins and 28 losses, the
Dark Blues lack of unity confined
them to second place behind
Spaldings Boston Red Stockings.
(These particular Red Stockings
were the forerunners of the Braves
who played in Boston through the
1952 season before moving to
Milwaukee and then Atlanta.)
In 1876 Hartford became the
smallest of eight cities invited to
join a new, more financially stable
professional baseball league. The
National League (the same National
League in which todays New York
Mets play) was organized to
address the myriad economic and
gambling problems that led to the
demise of the National Association
after the 1875 season. Morgan
Bulkeley, who had become president
of the Dark Blues in 1875
after Hubbell retired from the post,
was named the leagues first
president. Hartford harbored high
hopes of taking the reform leagues
inaugural pennant. Al Spalding,
now a member of the Chicago
White Stockings, later to become
the Chicago Cubs, told the Chicago
Tribune that Hartford would no
doubt share some of the laurels,
and it would really astonish some
Chicagoans could they hear the
manner in which this club is
extolled in Hartford
The support given the club by the people
of Hartford is of the most liberal
character considering the size of
the city, and is from the very best
class of people.
The Dark Blues debuted in the
National League on April 27 in
Brooklyn against the New York
Mutuals. Through four
innings, they played like
the championship
contender they
were supposed
to be, as star
pitcher Tommy
Bond limited
the Mutuals
to one hit and
Hartford built a 3-0
lead. Things went awry in
the fifth, however, as the Dark
Blues committed four successive
errors and the Mutuals waltzed to
an 8-3 victory.
The club righted itself with nine
consecutive victories before the
powerful White Stockings arrived
in town to play a three-game series
at the Hartford Base Ball Grounds,
the Dark Blues state-of-the-art
ballpark located at the corner
of Hendricxsen Avenue and
Wyllys Street, adjacent to the
still-standing Church of the Good
Shepherd. An 800-seat pavilion
behind home plate provided a covered
seating area for stockholders
and season ticket holders. On
top of the pavilion was a
tower with a domed roof and
seating for the scorers,
a telegraph operator, and one
reporter from each city paper.
Underneath were spacious
clubrooms for each team.
Tiered general admission
bleachers stretched down
the foul lines, and there was plenty of room for patrons
carriages to be parked deep in the
outfield, as was the custom. An
eight-foot fence surrounded the
entire grounds, which held
approximately 9,000 fans. Gambling
and the sale of liquor were strictly
prohibited.
Against the favored White
Stockings, whom the Hartford
Times labeled dignified, pompous,
[and] conceited, Hartford took
two of the three games. These
wins moved the Dark Blues into
sole possession of second place,
just two victories behind Chicago.
Until 1882, wins, not winning percentage,
determined the league
standings. This was an important
distinction since in these sometimes
disorganized early days of
baseball, teams often played an
uneven number of games.
Despite their success on the diamond,
the Dark Blues struggled
financially as a depressed economy
shrank attendance. Searching for ways to increase revenue, Morgan
Bulkeley engaged in a fierce battle
with Hartfords telegraph operators,
who during home games
posted inning-by-inning scores on
bulletin boards outside their
offices. Believing this practice was
keeping paying customers away
from the actual games, Bulkeley
banned Western Union operators
from the grounds. The telegraph
company refused to comply, however,
and sent in an employee
whose job was to record the result
of each inning on a piece of paper
and toss it over the fence to the
operator stationed outside. When
Bulkeley saw this, he commanded
the young boy who was acting as a
runner between the telegraph
companys inside man and the
telegraph operator outside the
park to disregard the note.
Ignoring the command, not the
note, the boy took off on a dead
run. Bulkeley ordered the police to
seize him, but the young lad eluded
the slow-footed officers, frustrating
the team president.
Back on the field, Hartford hosted
three games against the hapless
Cincinnati Red Stockings, losers of twelve straight. Ferguson took
this
opportunity to rest Tommy Bond
and give his diminutive backup,
Arthur Cummings, some work. In
his National League debut,
Cummings stifled Cincinnati on a
three-hitter as Hartford won 6-0.
This masterful performance
prompted Ferguson to proclaim,
God never gave him any size, but
he is the Candy.2 The nickname
Candy, which meant "best" in
19th-century slang, stuck for the
rest of Cummingss life. Candy
Cummings was later enshrined in
the National Baseball Hall of Fame,
mostly to honor his claim as the
inventor of the curveball.
Even when his team was playing
well, Fergusons temper continued
to get the better of his judgment,
leading him to holler at his players
frequently during games. These
public rebukes fueled a simmering
dissension that was just waiting for
something to ignite it. The trigger
came in the form of an 8-2 loss in
the second game of the Cincinnati
series. This humiliating defeat at
the hands of a club that would finish
the season with just 9 wins
outraged the Hartford Times:
| There is something rotten in
the Hartford club
These
players are paid big salaries
and they have no business to
let petty jealousies and bickerings
interfere with their play. If
one of them gets his nose out
of joint over some real or
imaginary grievance, he shows
his spite by mugging on the
ball field. One complains
because Captain Ferguson
talks too much and refuses to
play his game; another
declares he wont back up
Cummings; and somebody else,
likely enough, is miffed because
the hands of the South
Church clock are not clapped
every time he makes a passable
catch. The men are hired
to play ballnot to play baby
[Emphasis in the original.] |
Although Boston Red Stockings
manager Harry Wright had heard
that hardly two men in the
Hartford nine are on speaking
terms with all the others, the club
momentarily got past its growling
to take the final game from
Cincinnati. Over the next two
weeks they reeled off six victories
in a row thanks mainly to the
spectacular pitching of Tommy
Bond, who threw three shutouts
and two one-hitters during this
stretch. Realizing the immense
value of Bond, Hartford quickly
dropped the idea of signing a new
pitcher and contracted him for the
1877 season. When word of
Bonds new contract hit the
streets, the joy in Hartford was
palpable.
As Hartford departed on a long
western tour, the Cincinnati debacle
was a distant memory. After
stops in Louisville and Cincinnati,
the club arrived in Chicago
(Chicago and St. Louis were the
furthermost western cities in the National League until 1958 when
the Brooklyn Dodgers and New
York Giants moved to Los Angeles
and San Francisco, respectively)
having won 12 of its last 13 games.
The first game between the two
pennant contenders was on
Independence Day, which in 1876
was celebrated with extra fervor
since it marked the nations centennial.
A raucous crowd of
12,000 was on hand, some having
purchased grandstand seats at
three times the standard 50-cent
charge. The rowdy throng loudly
cheered the White Stockings
arrival, but some fans went overboard,
igniting firecrackers and
even firing pistols. The game itself
featured no offensive fireworks as
Tommy Bond and Al Spalding
both tossed shutouts through six
innings. In the seventh, Hartford
pushed across the games only
runs, scoring three times off
Spalding with the help of two critical
Chicago errors.
Back in Hartford, 1,000 people had
gathered at the Dark Blues headquarters
awaiting word from
Chicago. The scores were received three innings at a time.
The first two bulletins,
covering six innings,
showed all zeros. The
final dispatch ignited
a grand celebration.
After sending a congratulatory
note to
Ferguson, a giddy
Morgan Bulkeley provided
a sumptuous
spread in the clubrooms
and ordered a
load of fireworks. Later
in the evening, Hartford celebrated
the Dark Blues victory and the
nations hundredth birthday with
a grand display of pyrotechnics
launched from the clubs headquarters
and the Hartford Times
office.
Two days later, with 2,000
supporters assembled outside the
Dark Blues headquarters, weakhitting
Jack Remsen led off the
second game in Chicago with a
rare home run, giving Hartford a
lead they would never relinquish.
Tommy Bonds curveballs were
especially effective on this day,
even fooling the umpire, who often called them strikes even when
they broke well out of the strike zone.
The final score was 6-2.
The Dark Blues were now just a single
victory from sweeping the mighty
White Stockings and taking a share of
first place. To prevent this, Chicagos
captain Al Spalding sent versatile first
baseman Cal McVey to the pitchers box
to stop the surging Hartford nine.
McVey came through against Hartford
just as he had earlier in the year,
holding them scoreless for the first
seven innings as Chicago cruised to an
easy 9-3 victory.
Despite the loss, the Dark Blues
remained upbeat as they traveled to St.
Louis, poised to continue their winning
ways. Rumors, backed by the flow
of gambling money, were rampant that
the Browns, hoping to keep the
pennant away from Chicago, would
lie down for Hartford. This hardly
proved to be true, however, as St. Louis
swept the series behind the fabulous
pitching of George Washington Bradley
who hurled three shutouts, one of
which was the National Leagues first
no-hitter.
The three losses to St. Louis quickly
erased the benefit of the hard-earned
victories in Chicago. When they
returned home, the Dark Blues werent
in first place as the Hartford Courant had
predicted during the road trip. In fact,
they werent even alone in second
place, as St. Louis had drawn even. The
excitement that had enveloped the city
three weeks earlier had completely
evaporated. In a startling display of
apathy, only 200 people bothered to
attend the Dark Blues first home game
in nearly five weeks.
As Hartford continued to fall off
Chicagos pace, more trouble arose. In a 13-4 loss to the Boston
Red Stockings
on August 19, Tommy Bond struggled
while Bob Ferguson committed several
errors at third base. After the game, the
Hartford Courant reported that the star
pitcher had accused his manager of
crooked work.
Bonds allegation was shocking. A
charge of throwing games was serious
business, especially when leveled
against Ferguson, who had a spotless
reputation when it came to gambling.
In Americas National Game Spalding said
of him, Robert Ferguson was
a man
of sterling integrity and splendid
courage. He knew all about the iniquitous
practices which had become
attached to the game as barnacles to a
ship, and he was sincerely desirous of
eradicating them... Could it have been
possible to eliminate gambling by physical
demonstrations, Robert Ferguson
would have cleared the Base Ball
atmosphere of one of its most unsanitary
conditions at that time....
Ferguson wrote to the Hartford Times,
denying all charges, pronouncing each
and every one false in every particular
and saying they were made with a
malicious purpose. A day later, in the
same newspaper, Bond recanted his
statement, saying his charges were
entirely unfounded, and made in a
moment of excitement, and I cheerfully
acknowledge the wrong I have done
both to the club and its manager, and
make this the only reparation in
my power.
Despite the casual retraction, the ill will
between the two men lingered until
finally Bond informed Bulkeley that he
wouldnt play with Hartford so long as
Ferguson was captain. Forced to choose
between the two adversaries, Bulkeley
annulled the remaining portion of
Bonds 1876 contract and released him from his 1877 commitment.
Incredibly,
less than three weeks after the initial
charge, all connections between the
Hartfords and their brilliant pitcher
were severed.
On the field, Ferguson quickly deployed
Candy Cummings in the pitchers box.
Despite pitching well enough to keep
Hartford on the margin of the race for
the pennant, he couldnt prevent the
White Stockings from taking the championship
with a 7-6 victory over
Hartford on September 26. Hartford
closed the season with a nine-game
winning streak that gave them second
place over St. Louis. Several Hartford
players produced excellent individual
statistics. In his abbreviated season,
Bond amassed 45 complete games,
31 wins, and a 1.68 earned run average
(ERA). Cummings posted 16 victories, a
1.67 ERA, and 5 shutouts. Right fielder
Richard Higham put together a
24-game hitting streak while batting
.327 and tying for the league lead with
21 doubles.
These personal accomplishments
notwithstanding, lack of team harmony
was the root cause of the Dark Blues
failure to capture the pennant. With
Fergusons constant badgering and the
resulting backlash from his men,
Hartfords record suffered. Still, if the
Dark Blues could have just managed to
beat a part-time pitcher named Cal
McVey, the National League pennant
would have landed in Hartford. The
strong Iowan, who started only six
games for Chicago, won all four of his
starts against Hartford. These victories
provided the winning margin for the
White Stockings who finished just five
victories ahead of the Hartfords.
The 1876 season was the Dark Blues
last in Hartford. In hopes of better gate
receipts, Morgan Bulkeley moved his club to Brooklyn for the 1877
season,
forever removing Hartfords status
as a major league baseball city. The
clubs finances were no better in its
new location and the club was
dropped from the National League
at the end of the season. Bulkeley
himself soon severed his ties with
baseball. In 1879 he became head
of Aetna (which his father had
founded); a political career
followed. He was elected mayor
of Hartford, served four years
as a controversial governor of
Connecticut, and was a U.S.
senator from 1905 to 1911. He
died at age 84 in 1922. Robert
Ferguson also managed the team
in 1877. After the Dark Blues were
disbanded he played for Chicago,
Troy (New York), and Philadelphia,
ending his career in 1883. He died
in 1894 at age 49.
Since the Dark Blues departure
after the 1876 season, only minor
league clubs have called Hartford
home, none since 1952. Only an
active imagination, aided by a tour
of the site of the old Hartford Base
Ball Grounds, can rekindle the
citys brief major league days. The
ballpark no longer exists, of
course. In fact, even the corner of
Wyllys Street and Hendricxsen
Avenue has disappeared as both
streets have been reconfigured.
But nestled against the grounds of
the Church of the Good Shepherd
and its grand companion building,
the Caldwell Colt Memorial Parish
House, is a beautiful expanse of
green lawn that was once the Dark
Blues home. Standing in the shadow
of these two grand monuments
to Hartfords past evokes memories
of an era when baseball was young
and Hartford was a major player in
its development. One can picture opposing batters vainly flailing
at
the curveballs tossed by Bond and
Cummings, the hurrahing of
Hartford resident Mark Twain who
often attended games, and captain
Bob Ferguson booming out his
usual admonition, Have a care,
boys! and threatening to exact
physical punishment if they did
not. Despite the interceding
decades, one can almost see the
players dark blue stockings and
hear the growling that once filled
those hallowed grounds.
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In
recent years theres been a
move afoot to revive the actual
game of oldtime baseball,
especially in greater Hartford
which has become a hotbed of
vintage baseball. During the
July 4th weekend the city will
play host to the third annual
Hartford Vintage Base Ball
Invitationalwhich this year is
held in conjunction with the
Riverfest Celebration. Teams
from five states with oldtime
monikers like Hartford Senators,
Providence Grays, and New York
Mutuals will compete at
Bushnell Park for the Capital
City Cup. Theyll reenact how
the game was played in the 19th
centurythe biggest difference
being that players in baseballs
earliest incarnation caught the
ball bare-handed. For more
information visit www.hartfordvintagebaseball.com.
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1. Jonathan Fraser Light, The Cultural
Encyclopedia of Baseball (Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 1997).
2. Joseph M. Overfield, William Arthur
Cummings (Candy), in Baseballs First Stars, edited
by Frederick Ivor-Campbell, Robert L. Tiemann, and Mark Rucker.
(Cleveland: Society for American Baseball Research, 1996), p. 43.
David Arcidiacono, a member of the Society for American Baseball
Research (SABR), lives in East Hampton, Connecticut. This article
is adapted from his new book, Grace, Grit, and Growling: The
Hartford Dark Blues Base Ball Club, 1874-1877, which can be
obtained from the author at Darcidiacono@snet.net or online at the
Vintage Base Ball Factory Web site, www.vbbf.com.
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