The Gas and Flame Men: Baseball and the Chemical Warfare Service during World War I

The Gas and Flame Men: Baseball and the Chemical Warfare Service during World War I

by Jim Leeke

Narrated by Barry Abrams

Unabridged — 6 hours, 16 minutes

The Gas and Flame Men: Baseball and the Chemical Warfare Service during World War I

The Gas and Flame Men: Baseball and the Chemical Warfare Service during World War I

by Jim Leeke

Narrated by Barry Abrams

Unabridged — 6 hours, 16 minutes

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Overview

The Gas and Flame Men is the first full account of Major League ballplayers who served in the Chemical Warfare Service during World War I. Four players, two club executives, and a manager served in the small and hastily formed branch, six of them as gas officers. Remarkably, five of the seven-Christy Mathewson, Branch Rickey, Ty Cobb, George Sisler, and Eppa "Jeptha" Rixey-are now enshrined in the National Baseball Hall of Fame at Cooperstown, New York. The son of a sixth Hall of Famer, player and manager Ned Hanlon, was a young officer killed in action in France with the First Gas Regiment. Prominent chemical soldiers also included veteran Major League catcher and future manager George "Gabby" Street and Boston Braves president and former Harvard football coach Percy D. Haughton.



The Gas and Flame Men explores how these famous baseball men, along with an eclectic mix of polo players, collegiate baseball and football stars, professors, architects, and prominent social figures all came together in the Chemical Warfare Service. Jim Leeke examines their service and its long-term effects on their physical and mental health-and on Major League Baseball and the world of sports. The Gas and Flame Men also addresses historical inaccuracies and misperceptions surrounding Christy Mathewson's early death from tuberculosis, long attributed to wartime gas exposure.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

01/22/2024

Historian Leeke (The Best Team Over There) offers a meticulous and informative account of the Chemical Warfare Service, an army unit hastily formed when the U.S. entered WWI to catch up to the conflict’s extensive reliance on new weapons like flamethrowers and poison gas. Conscripting chemists and engineers to design the weapons, the government also widely advertised the need for men of daring to serve as the unit’s foot soldiers. This recruitment effort (in what was most likely an intentional effort to spruce up chemical warfare’s negative image) drew in a handful of prominent athletes, including Major League Baseball players Christy Mathewson, Ty Cobb, and Branch Rickey. With a strong focus on the backstories and careers of the Major Leaguers, Leeke follows the unit through a period of research and development at American University in Washington, D.C.—where weapons were tested on animals, some of them reportedly kidnapped local pets—and their deployment in France, where the soldiers laboriously and stealthily carried heavy projectors and mortars close enough to German lines to launch cannisters of gas into their trenches. While the narrative is somewhat waylaid by an unpersuasive closing argument that Mathewson’s death from tuberculosis was not connected to gas exposure, the end result is nonetheless an enjoyable and distinctive blend of war story and sports chronicle. It will appeal especially to baseball history buffs. (Feb.)

From the Publisher

Christy Mathewson, Ty Cobb, Eppa Rixey, and Branch Rickey—all members of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Gas and Flame Men during the Great War. Jim Leeke knows the connection between baseball and the war better than anybody. He’ll keep you turning pages as he tells their stories, and more.”—Jan Finkel, 2012 recipient of SABR’s Bob Davids Award


“Jim Leeke scores again with The Gas and Flame Men, delivering a fascinating account of America’s World War I response to German chemical warfare and the important part a group of Major League Baseball stars and other key sports figures played in it.”—Rick Huhn, author of The Chalmers Race: Ty Cobb, Napoleon Lajoie, and the Controversial 1910 Batting Title That Became a National Obsession


“To steal a baseball term, The Gas and Flame Men is an out-of-the-park grand slam. No one knows more than Jim Leeke about the intersection of America’s national pastime and the Great War. A wonderful story you won’t want to put down.”—Mitchell Yockelson, author of Forty-Seven Days: How Pershing’s Warriors Came of Age to Defeat the German Army in World War I

Product Details

BN ID: 2940191649306
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 05/14/2024
Edition description: Unabridged
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