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Cornelius C. Cassidy, 1st Lt 136th NY |
First, it must be noted that base ball was not a new phenomenon that arrived in Nashville after the American Civil War, as it did in many other Southern cities and towns (many returning Rebels had first witnessed the game as prisoners of war in Union camps and many former Union soldiers who had played base ball settled in the South after the war). Base ball was played in Southern cities such as Louisville, Richmond, New Orleans, as well as both Memphis and Nashville prior to the commencement of hostilities in April 1861. Although it is impossible to discern how often base ball was played in Nashville prior to the Civil War, there is evidence that practices and/or unorganized games were held in Edgefield, which was located on the east bank of the Cumberland River directly opposite the city of Nashville. According to the July 25, 1860 issue of the Republican Banner (see image below), "a party" of young men were engaged in the sport of base ball. It is interesting that the editor noted that the "early closing of the stores gives fine opportunity to the young men engaged in mercantile pursuits." One facet of the origins of the national game in the antebellum North is that those who were the first to formally organize base ball clubs tended to be white males in their twenties and thirties who were among the professional class or rather the middle and upper class of society. And these early base ballists only played matches against clubs comprised of ballists of a similar class, race, and age. In time, however, other clubs consisting of various classes, ages, and races appeared but they tended to play among themselves. That facet of amateur base ball held true through the end of the Civil War and into the first couple years of Reconstruction. But that quickly evolved in the post-Civil War era as newspaper accounts document people of all classes, races, and ages engaged in the game. Still, wherever base ball was first organized, even in the immediate post-Civil War years in the South, one typically sees evidence of the national game being first organized by the city and town's elites, before other non-elite clubs were organized shortly thereafter. This pattern that characterized the amateur era of base ball rings true in Tennessee as the national game suddenly appeared and reappeared, as in the case of both Memphis and Nashville, between late 1865 and the Spring of 1867.
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Nashville Republican Banner, July 25, 1860 |
The first evidence of the Rock City Base Ball Club to appear in the historical record is the mention of the organization of the Cumberland Base Ball Club, which would become the premier club in the city in 1866. The April 21, 1866 edition of the Nashville Daily Union notes only the formal structure of the Cumberland Club's officers, but concludes with a mention that a match game is to be played later that day between the Cumberland and Rock City Clubs. Thus, the Rock City Club, for which Nashville was known as the "Rock City" in the 19th century, predated the Cumberland Club. It may be assumed that the Rock City Club was the first to formally organize in the city after the American Civil War. While there appears no follow-up on this match (a survey of newspapers not digitized on Newspapers.com, however, may yield results), later editions of Nashville newspapers reveal that the Rock City and Cumberland Clubs, both organized and fielded by members of the city's professional class, played several games against one another. It may be that these were the only two clubs for much of the spring and early summer of 1866 and it is in keeping with the custom of amateur antebellum that they would play one another until another club comprised of local professionals was organized. Yet the national game evolved much quicker in the South in the post-Civil War era than it had in the North in the antebellum era. What played out between 1865 and 1867 in the South was essentially the evolution of the game from the mid-1840s-1861 in the antebellum North. By 1868, in Tennessee and elsewhere, the "elite" clubs began to play teams comprised of members from the laboring class as well as juveniles. But, even as African Americans organized their own base ball clubs, as early as 1867 in Tennessee, the national game remained very much a segregated game.
Con Cassidy's performance as a Phoenix ballist in 1868, which led to him being awarded a prize belt valued at twenty-five dollars by his teammates for the most runs scored for the club that season, might also be explained by the fact that base ball may not have been new for Cassidy as a member of the Phoenix Club. It is quite possible that if Cassidy did indeed play a season of base ball for the Rock City Club in 1866, then he had acquired a knowledge of the game that translated to his abilities with a bat at the dish in 1868 (I should note here, for the record, that no evidence of Cassidy appears in any 1867 reports/box scores after the Rock City Club disbanded). According to the historical record, the Rock City Club did not do so well against the Cumberland Club who dominated them in a series of matches that played out between April and September 1866. In fact, the April 21 match aside, since no report on its outcome exists, Rock City lost every single match they played against the Cumberland Club by an average of 40.5 runs per game. Available box scores reveal that Cassidy, on average, either led the club or tied in most runs scored per match. Thus Cassidy was a quick and successful learner of the national game.
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Nashville Republican Banner, May 22, 1866 |
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Nashville Union and American, May 23, 1866 |
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Nashville Republican Banner, November 21, 1866 |
In the end, the records reveal that the Rock City ballists played at least ten matches with either a simple final score or complete box score included in newspaper reports for eight of those ten games. Of those eight games, Rock City compiled a 2-6 record. Rock City's only victories came at the expense of two relatively inexperienced teams, the Eureka and Flynn Base Ball Clubs (another pattern of 19th century amateur base ball that holds true is that it often took a club to get a couple matches under their belt before a team of "green" ballists would begin to catch on to the rules and nuances of a barehanded game).
One last question not yet explored in this sketch that circles back around to the first recorded account of base ball being played in Nashville, and, for that matter, the state of Tennessee, is the question "Where did the Rock City Base Ball Club play?"
Considering that they were likely the first base ball club to organize in Nashville in the post-Civil War era, it is not surprising that their club, once organized, would establish their home grounds on the same ground that the earliest practices and/or unorganized matches were played--across the Cumberland River in Edgefield. It was in Edgefield, on "the flats" along the east bank of the Cumberland River, that the garden was prepared by the ballists themselves, and which the Rock City and later Phoenix Clubs of Nashville would call their home grounds. Although the historical record indicates that the first match between the Rock City and Cumberland Clubs scheduled for the afternoon of April 21, 1866 was to be played elsewhere (more in a future post!), it still holds true that the ground on which Nissan Stadium stands today, the home of the Tennessee Titans professional football team, can be claimed to be the site on which base ball was first played in 1860--even if unorganized--in not only Nashville (assuming we have annexed 1860s Edgefield for Nashville--sorry you Edgefieldians!), but also the state of Tennessee.
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Satellite view over looking Nissan Stadium, the site where base ball was first played in Tennessee |
As early as 1866, Nashville newspapers offered clear clues that can help point us directly to the site on which the Rock City (April 1866-May 1867) and Phoenix Clubs (1867-1868) would play base ball. After playing their first match on the home grounds of the Cumberland, Rock City and Cumberland played both the second and third matches in their rivalry in Edgefield, on the Rock City Club's home grounds. The May 22, 1866 edition of the Republican Banner is the first to note that the game was played near the Suspension Bridge, a significant clue as Nashville in 1866 had only three bridges over the Cumberland River; two of which were railroad bridges and the third, a suspension bridge. A quick survey of maps of Nashville in 1866, as well as skimming histories of Nashville, reveals that the suspension bridge was located to the east of the capitol building and connected the city with Edgefield. Moreover, the third match report that appeared in the June 22, 1866 edition of the Republican Banner (see image below) adds further clarity in confirming the location of the field by noting that the two clubs played on "the flats on the right of the Suspension Bridge." If one was standing on the Nashville bank of the Cumberland River, looking across the river and to the right of the suspension bridge at Edgefield, today, one would be looking at Nissan Stadium or possibly its parking lot. This is the site of the Edgefield Base Ball grounds where the Rock City and Phoenix Clubs played their home matches and it is the site of where base ball originated in the state of Tennessee in 1860.
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Nashville Republican Banner, May 22, 1866 |
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Nashville Republican Banner, June 22, 1866 |
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A view of the bridge from Nashville looking eastward towards Edgefield, TSLA |
In 1850, a suspension bridge was designed by architect Adolphus Heiman, which was to be 700 feet long and 110 feet above the Cumberland River's low water mark. This structure was built at the present day Woodland Street Bridge. It was, however, destroyed in 1862 as Rebel armies cut the suspension cables as they fled the city ahead of the arrival of advancing Union forces. Shortly after the war, a new bridge was built using the same support towers that remained standing. The new bridge to Edgefield opened in June 1866, thus making it much easier for residents of Nashville to attend the games in Edgefield. The suspension bridge stood until a newer, much durable bridge was erected in 1886. This bridge was christened the Woodland Street Bridge and remained in service 80 years until a new Woodland Street Bridge, the current one, opened on December 1, 1966. This was the first Cumberland River bridge built under the Metropolitan Government.
Bridge source information: Debie Cox, nashvillehistory.blogspot.com
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