The Blue Ridge League

The Blue Ridge League

$24.99

Publication Date: 11th July 2011

Between 1915 and 1930, nine towns in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Pennsylvania, Maryland, and West Virginia hosted teams in one of the most successful Class D minor leagues in professional baseball. The Blue Ridge League launched the careers of legendary Hall of Famers Lefty Grove and Hack Wilson and served as a training ground or final stop for over 100 major-league players. This feisty league challenged laws prohibiting Sabbath baseball games (resulting in mass arrests of players and management), pioneered night baseball, served as a laboratory for the establishment of baseball's farm system,... Read More
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Between 1915 and 1930, nine towns in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Pennsylvania, Maryland, and West Virginia hosted teams in one of the most successful Class D minor leagues in professional baseball. The Blue Ridge League launched the careers of legendary Hall of Famers Lefty Grove and Hack Wilson and served as a training ground or final stop for over 100 major-league players. This feisty league challenged laws prohibiting Sabbath baseball games (resulting in mass arrests of players and management), pioneered night baseball, served as a laboratory for the establishment of baseball's farm system,... Read More
Description
Between 1915 and 1930, nine towns in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Pennsylvania, Maryland, and West Virginia hosted teams in one of the most successful Class D minor leagues in professional baseball. The Blue Ridge League launched the careers of legendary Hall of Famers Lefty Grove and Hack Wilson and served as a training ground or final stop for over 100 major-league players. This feisty league challenged laws prohibiting Sabbath baseball games (resulting in mass arrests of players and management), pioneered night baseball, served as a laboratory for the establishment of baseball's farm system, and helped develop a postseason five-state championship series.
Details
  • Pages: 128
  • Publisher: Arcadia Publishing Inc.
  • Imprint: Arcadia Publishing
  • Series: Images of Baseball
  • Publication Date: 11th July 2011
  • State: Maryland
  • Illustration Note: Black and White
  • ISBN: 9780738582399
  • Format: Paperback
  • BISACs:
    HISTORY / United States / State & Local / Middle Atlantic (DC, DE, MD, NJ, NY, PA)
    SPORTS & RECREATION / Baseball / History
    TRAVEL / Special Interest / Sports
    PHOTOGRAPHY / Subjects & Themes / Sports
Reviews

Title: Parasiliti: Savitt shines light on Blue Ridge League
Author: Bob Parasiliti
Publisher: Herald Mail
Date: 7/10/2011


There are some who think Hagerstown lives in the dark ages.

Not local author Bob Savitt who has proof that Hagerstonians have been an enlightened bunch since at least the early 1900s, especially when it came to their baseball.

"We were pioneers of baseball," Savitt said. "Back then, Sunday baseball was big at the amateur level, but it was nearly impossible here on the professional level because of blue laws. ... The first night baseball game was played here in Hagerstown in 1930 at Municipal Stadium before first night game was played in the major leagues in Cincinnati (in 1935)."

The Blue Ridge League threw the switch to start to jolt professional baseball. The circuit lasted for only 15 years but its effects on the area, the era and the foundation of baseball as we know it has sent ripples for a few lifetimes.

Savitt traces the history of the league and this area's contributions to baseball in his new book, "The Blue Ridge League," which debuts today. Savitt illustrates the former Class D minor league was not only successful, but it was an innovative slice of local Americana.

"A theme of mine has been that baseball in areas like ours was more than a game," Savitt said. "It was part of our culture -- an activity to view, discuss, argue about, cheer over and if you were skillful enough -- to play. Moreover, in small communities like those of the Blue Ridge League, having a professional team was a source of communal pride that validated importance and standing."

Savitt spent 15 years researching the book -- ironically, precisely how long the league lasted. He has assembled 128 pages of memories, 200 images and standings from a league that played in Pennsylvania, Maryland and West Virginia from 1915-30.

The league not only challenged local Sabbath laws to play games, but it sent 100 players to the majors -- including Lefty Grove and Hack Wilson. It provided a prototype for present day minor league farm teams, like the Hagerstown Suns.

"The league shows baseball was 'it' in the 1930s as far as the sporting culture of the times," Savitt said. "The Blue Ridge League was a microcosm of what was happening around the country. Everyone wanted to have a team in their hometown. It was a craze."

The support was rabid. Savitt shows how the area romaticized the league with press clippings and research interviews, sparking competition between towns through controversy created by fans, players and umpires.

For Savitt, an admitted transplant to the area, Blue Ridge interest began casually in 1995, becoming "a slow life of its own."

"I would always stumble into things," he said. "It was like finding a lot of pieces of a puzzle.

"It was very fulfilling after all these years to get the nostalgia and anecdotes out there. A lot of people shared their stories. Most people in our area don't know they had professional baseball in their towns."

"The Blue Ridge League" brings back the days when baseball was truly America's pastime when attending a game was a must for the whole family. Savitt shows the world might forget the history of baseball, but it can't eliminate the game's impact on history.

"The Blue Ridge League," $21.99, Arcadia Publishing. Available at local retailers, online bookstores or through Arcadia Publishing at www.arcadiapublishing.com or at 888-313-2665.

Bob Parasiliti is a staff writer for The Herald-Mail. He can be reached at 301-791-7358 or by email at bobp@herald-mail.com


Title: History of the Blue Ridge League Told Through Photographs
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Date: 7/11/2011


The newest addition to Arcadia Publishing's Images of Baseball series is The Blue Ridge League from local author Robert P. Savitt. The book boasts more than 200 vintage images and memories of days gone by.

Between 1915 and 1930, nine towns in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Pennsylvania, Maryland, and West Virginia hosted teams in one of the most successful Class D minor leagues in professional baseball. The Blue Ridge League launched the careers of legendary Hall of Famers Lefty Grove and Hack Wilson and served as a training ground or final stop for over 100 major-league players.

This feisty league challenged laws prohibiting Sabbath baseball games (resulting in mass arrests of players and management), pioneered night baseball, served as a laboratory for the establishment of baseball's farm system, and helped develop a postseason five-state championship series.

Highlights of The Blue Ridge League:
? Nine communities had teams during the Blue Ridge League's 15-year history: Frederick, Hagerstown, and Cumberland, Maryland; Chambersburg, Hanover, Waynesboro, and Gettysburg, Pennsylvania; Martinsburg and Piedmont, West Virginia.
? The organizers and directors of each Blue Ridge League team were prominent local businessmen and town officials. Their aim was not to earn profits; indeed, a season was considered successful if a team broke even. Rather, the key motivations were civic pride and local quality of life.
? Hagerstown's Municipal Stadium - still being used today for professional baseball -- was built to house the city's Blue Ridge League team. Other Blue Ridge League stadiums still standing include McCurdy Field in Frederick, and Henninger Field in Chambersburg

Available at area bookstores, independent retailers, and online retailers, or through Arcadia Publishing at www.arcadiapublishing.com or
(888)-313-2665.

Arcadia Publishing is the leading publisher of local and regional history in the United States. Our mission is to make history accessible and meaningful through the publication of books on the heritage of America's people and places. Have we done a book on your town? Visit www.arcadiapublishing.com.
###

Author Bio
Robert P. Savitt writes and lectures on a variety of historical subjects. He holds a doctoral degree from Georgetown University, served in the Departments of Defense and State, and was legislative director for a US senator. Savitt has authored three previous Arcadia Publishing titles.
Between 1915 and 1930, nine towns in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Pennsylvania, Maryland, and West Virginia hosted teams in one of the most successful Class D minor leagues in professional baseball. The Blue Ridge League launched the careers of legendary Hall of Famers Lefty Grove and Hack Wilson and served as a training ground or final stop for over 100 major-league players. This feisty league challenged laws prohibiting Sabbath baseball games (resulting in mass arrests of players and management), pioneered night baseball, served as a laboratory for the establishment of baseball's farm system, and helped develop a postseason five-state championship series.
  • Pages: 128
  • Publisher: Arcadia Publishing Inc.
  • Imprint: Arcadia Publishing
  • Series: Images of Baseball
  • Publication Date: 11th July 2011
  • State: Maryland
  • Illustrations Note: Black and White
  • ISBN: 9780738582399
  • Format: Paperback
  • BISACs:
    HISTORY / United States / State & Local / Middle Atlantic (DC, DE, MD, NJ, NY, PA)
    SPORTS & RECREATION / Baseball / History
    TRAVEL / Special Interest / Sports
    PHOTOGRAPHY / Subjects & Themes / Sports

Title: Parasiliti: Savitt shines light on Blue Ridge League
Author: Bob Parasiliti
Publisher: Herald Mail
Date: 7/10/2011


There are some who think Hagerstown lives in the dark ages.

Not local author Bob Savitt who has proof that Hagerstonians have been an enlightened bunch since at least the early 1900s, especially when it came to their baseball.

"We were pioneers of baseball," Savitt said. "Back then, Sunday baseball was big at the amateur level, but it was nearly impossible here on the professional level because of blue laws. ... The first night baseball game was played here in Hagerstown in 1930 at Municipal Stadium before first night game was played in the major leagues in Cincinnati (in 1935)."

The Blue Ridge League threw the switch to start to jolt professional baseball. The circuit lasted for only 15 years but its effects on the area, the era and the foundation of baseball as we know it has sent ripples for a few lifetimes.

Savitt traces the history of the league and this area's contributions to baseball in his new book, "The Blue Ridge League," which debuts today. Savitt illustrates the former Class D minor league was not only successful, but it was an innovative slice of local Americana.

"A theme of mine has been that baseball in areas like ours was more than a game," Savitt said. "It was part of our culture -- an activity to view, discuss, argue about, cheer over and if you were skillful enough -- to play. Moreover, in small communities like those of the Blue Ridge League, having a professional team was a source of communal pride that validated importance and standing."

Savitt spent 15 years researching the book -- ironically, precisely how long the league lasted. He has assembled 128 pages of memories, 200 images and standings from a league that played in Pennsylvania, Maryland and West Virginia from 1915-30.

The league not only challenged local Sabbath laws to play games, but it sent 100 players to the majors -- including Lefty Grove and Hack Wilson. It provided a prototype for present day minor league farm teams, like the Hagerstown Suns.

"The league shows baseball was 'it' in the 1930s as far as the sporting culture of the times," Savitt said. "The Blue Ridge League was a microcosm of what was happening around the country. Everyone wanted to have a team in their hometown. It was a craze."

The support was rabid. Savitt shows how the area romaticized the league with press clippings and research interviews, sparking competition between towns through controversy created by fans, players and umpires.

For Savitt, an admitted transplant to the area, Blue Ridge interest began casually in 1995, becoming "a slow life of its own."

"I would always stumble into things," he said. "It was like finding a lot of pieces of a puzzle.

"It was very fulfilling after all these years to get the nostalgia and anecdotes out there. A lot of people shared their stories. Most people in our area don't know they had professional baseball in their towns."

"The Blue Ridge League" brings back the days when baseball was truly America's pastime when attending a game was a must for the whole family. Savitt shows the world might forget the history of baseball, but it can't eliminate the game's impact on history.

"The Blue Ridge League," $21.99, Arcadia Publishing. Available at local retailers, online bookstores or through Arcadia Publishing at www.arcadiapublishing.com or at 888-313-2665.

Bob Parasiliti is a staff writer for The Herald-Mail. He can be reached at 301-791-7358 or by email at bobp@herald-mail.com


Title: History of the Blue Ridge League Told Through Photographs
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Date: 7/11/2011


The newest addition to Arcadia Publishing's Images of Baseball series is The Blue Ridge League from local author Robert P. Savitt. The book boasts more than 200 vintage images and memories of days gone by.

Between 1915 and 1930, nine towns in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Pennsylvania, Maryland, and West Virginia hosted teams in one of the most successful Class D minor leagues in professional baseball. The Blue Ridge League launched the careers of legendary Hall of Famers Lefty Grove and Hack Wilson and served as a training ground or final stop for over 100 major-league players.

This feisty league challenged laws prohibiting Sabbath baseball games (resulting in mass arrests of players and management), pioneered night baseball, served as a laboratory for the establishment of baseball's farm system, and helped develop a postseason five-state championship series.

Highlights of The Blue Ridge League:
? Nine communities had teams during the Blue Ridge League's 15-year history: Frederick, Hagerstown, and Cumberland, Maryland; Chambersburg, Hanover, Waynesboro, and Gettysburg, Pennsylvania; Martinsburg and Piedmont, West Virginia.
? The organizers and directors of each Blue Ridge League team were prominent local businessmen and town officials. Their aim was not to earn profits; indeed, a season was considered successful if a team broke even. Rather, the key motivations were civic pride and local quality of life.
? Hagerstown's Municipal Stadium - still being used today for professional baseball -- was built to house the city's Blue Ridge League team. Other Blue Ridge League stadiums still standing include McCurdy Field in Frederick, and Henninger Field in Chambersburg

Available at area bookstores, independent retailers, and online retailers, or through Arcadia Publishing at www.arcadiapublishing.com or
(888)-313-2665.

Arcadia Publishing is the leading publisher of local and regional history in the United States. Our mission is to make history accessible and meaningful through the publication of books on the heritage of America's people and places. Have we done a book on your town? Visit www.arcadiapublishing.com.
###

Robert P. Savitt writes and lectures on a variety of historical subjects. He holds a doctoral degree from Georgetown University, served in the Departments of Defense and State, and was legislative director for a US senator. Savitt has authored three previous Arcadia Publishing titles.