Outside the Lines of Gilded Age Baseball: Gambling, Umpires, and Racism in 1880s Baseball

Outside the Lines of Gilded Age Baseball: Gambling, Umpires, and Racism in 1880s Baseball

by Rob Bauer
Outside the Lines of Gilded Age Baseball: Gambling, Umpires, and Racism in 1880s Baseball

Outside the Lines of Gilded Age Baseball: Gambling, Umpires, and Racism in 1880s Baseball

by Rob Bauer

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Overview

Fans of baseball history will really enjoy this look at the issues baseball struggled with in its early years.


This is book 2 of 4 in the series on 1880s baseball from Rob Bauer. He is a member of SABR's 19th Century Baseball Research Committee.


Baseball fans realize how badly racism blighted baseball until Jackie Robinson started the process of change. This book helps to explain not only how baseball's color barrier came to be, but the other, more subtle ways that racism appeared in early baseball.


It also examines how gambling threatened baseball in the Gilded Age. Most surprising is its description of the importance of umpires. Although umpires generate little controversy today, in the 1880s they were among the most important issues in baseball. Several times each year brawls erupted over poor umpiring. Twice umpires killed fans in their own self-defense. This book explains how this situation became so serious. Don't miss the chance to learn about these critical aspects of baseball's early years.



Product Details

BN ID: 2940159113436
Publisher: Rob Bauer Books
Publication date: 03/14/2018
Series: Outside the Lines of Gilded Age Baseball , #2
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 757 KB

About the Author

A former college professor, Rob Bauer now brings his knowledge of the past to baseball history. He is a member of the Society for American Baseball Research’s 19th Century Research Committee. In 2019 he gave a presentation at the National Baseball Hall of Fame. He writes a history blog on his website, robbauerbooks.com/blog, where he reviews historical fiction books and blogs about the historical influence of things as diverse as Martin Luther King, Jr., leaded gasoline, fascism, and, of course, baseball.

In addition to his nonfiction baseball research, Rob also writes historical novels balancing creative storytelling and meticulous historical accuracy. One of his books, The Buffalo Soldier, even contains some of his own historical research about 1890s Montana.

When not writing, Rob lives at the beach and tries to maintain the fiction that he’s a runner. To that end, he swears he’ll finish a marathon someday.
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