FLASHBACK
First Opening Day at Fenway Park
By Harvey Frommer
It
was damp and chilly throughout New England for most of the spring of 1912, and
in Boston, it took a few tries before baseball at a brand new ballpark could be
played in decent weather.
On
April 9th, the Red Sox and Harvard's baseball team met in an exhibition game in
football weather and as one who was there observed, “with a little snow on the
side.” About 3,000 braved the elements. Boston won the game, 2-0 with both runs driven in by their pitcher,
Casey Hageman.
The scheduled official Opening Day
match on April 12th, however, was rained out. Finally on April 20th,
the weather improved a bit, and Fenway's first major league game: the Sox
versus the Yankees (then known as the Highlanders), was set to be played before
a crowd of 27,000 on soggy, lumpy grounds and infield grass transplanted from
the Huntington Avenue Baseball Grounds, the team’s former home.
Boston
Mayor John "Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald threw out the ceremonial first
ball. The man, whose grandson would become the thirty-fifth president of the
United States, was an ardent member of the "Royal Rooters" - a group
of Red Sox fans who staged pre-game parades accompanied by the singing of
"Tessie" and "Sweet Adeline."
Ordinarily the game would
have been the stuff of front-page headlines in New England dailies. Six days
earlier, however, the largest passenger ship in the world had struck an iceberg
and gone down in the icy waters of the Atlantic. The news of the sinking of the Titanic on its
maiden voyage and the accompanying loss of 1,517 lives would eclipse all other
stories.
Nevertheless, it was good news in Boston that the Red Sox
finally had a modern ballpark. The original field that the team -- then known
as the Boston Somersets -- played on was a former circus lot where sand covered much of the outfield and a tool shed sat in the
middle of centerfield.
Owner General Charles Henry Taylor, a Civil War
veteran and owner of the "Boston Globe," had decided back in 1910 to
build a new ballpark in the Fenway section bordering Brookline Avenue, Jersey Street, Van Ness Street and
Lansdowne Street. It would cost $650,000 (approximately $14 million today), and seat 35,000. Ground was broken September
25, 1911.
An
attractive red brick façade, the first electric baseball scoreboard, and 18
turnstiles, the most in the Majors, were all features being talked about. Concrete stands went from behind first base
around to third while wooden bleachers were located in parts of left, right,
and centerfield. Seats lined the field allowing for excellent views of the game
but limiting the size of foul territory.
Elevation was 20 feet above
sea level. Barriers and walls broke off at different angles. Centerfield was 488 feet from home plate; right field was 314 feet away.
The 10-foot wooden fence in left field ran straight along Lansdowne
Street and was but 320 ½ feet down the line from home plate with a high wall
behind it. There was a ten foot
embankment making viewing of games easier for overflow gatherings. A ten foot
high slope in left field posed challenges for outfielders who had to play the
entire territory running uphill.
This was the Opening Day
Lineup for the 1912 Boston Red Sox.
RF
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2B
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CF
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1B
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3B
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LF
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SS
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C
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P
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The Sox, with
player-manager first baseman Jake Stahl calling the shots, won the game, 7-6,
in 11 innings. Tris Speaker -- who that season would bat .383,
steal 52 bases and stroke eight inside-the-park home runs at Fenway -- drove in the winning run.
Spitball pitcher Bucky O’Brien was the winner in relief of Charles “Sea Lion”
Hall. The first hit in the park belonged to New York's Harry Wolter.
And that was
how it all began.
BOOKENDS:
Tom Yawkey: Patriarch of the Boston Red Sox by Bill Nowlin
(University of Nebraska Press, $36.95, 531 pages) is a masterwork on the
long-time BoSox owner that is long over-due. And Nowlin, whose resume includes
almost 40 books on the Sox and a multitude of articles, has truly out-done
himself.
Nowlin writes in his intro: “As I began to write a
biography of Tom Yawkey, I was surprised to learn how little had ever been
written about him.”
Now we have
a lot written about the man who owned the team from 1933 to 1976. Complete,
well written, filled with fascinating new information, Tom Yawkey: Patriarch of the Boston Red Sox is a must read for fans
of the franchise and all those interested in baseball history. Warts and all
Tom Yawkey and his time comes to life. HIGHLY
RECOMMENDED
=============================================
Harvey
Frommer is one
of the most prolific and respected sports journalists and oral historians in
the United States, author of the autobiographies of legends Nolan Ryan, Tony
Dorsett, and Red Holzman, Dr. Harvey has been a professor for more than two
decades in the MALS program at Dartmouth College, Frommer was dubbed
“Dartmouth’s Mr. Baseball” by their alumni magazine. He’s also the founder of www.HarveyFrommerSports.com. His
The
Ultimate Yankee Book is available on Amazon or directly from the author.
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