Oct 8: Cow halts baseball

OCTOBER 8, 1871 | CHICAGO, ILLINOIS – The Chicago White Stockings (today’s Chicago Cubs) were in a great position to win the National Association pennant on this day in baseball history. Then the Great Chicago Fire erupted. It destroyed much of the city including, according to historian Leonard Koppett, the White Stockings’ ball park.

As Koppett writes in Koppett’s Concise History of Major League Baseball, the White Stockings had to play the rest of their games on the road and lost them. They dropped out of the league for two years.

The National Association is what passed for the major leagues in 1871. The National League was still five years from its inception. The White Stockings ended up joining the National League in 1876.

The White Stockings eventually shed the name, gave a few other names a try, such as Colts and Orphans, before settling on Cubs, which is what the team is known as today.

The Chicago franchise of the new American League took the name White Stockings in 1901, later shortening it to White Sox, which they still go by.

Contributing Sources:
Koppett’s Concise History of Major League Baseball
Cubs team history
National Association    

Sep 21: Out of left field

SEPTEMBER 21, 1888 | CHICAGO, ILLINOIS – According to Mark Lamster‘s book, Spalding’s World Tour, three Chicago White Stockings (later known as the Cubs) players were arrested on this date in 1888 for flirting with Mrs. Seth Blood, the proprietor of a house just beyond the wall at old West Side Park. Word of the “flirting” apparently got back to husband Seth, and the next thing you know the police started arresting people. What kind of “house” Mrs. Blood ran was was never clarified.

West Side Park, or West Wide Grounds, as it was sometimes referred to, was located near what is now Cook County Hospital, just south of the Eisenhower Expressway on Chicago’s west side. Until 2016, it was the site of the last Chicago Cubs World Series championship in 1908. There were actually two different parks on the site, one from roughly 1885 to 1891, and a second West Side Park from 1893 to 1915.

West Side Park is also said to be the origin of the saying “that came out of left field,” meaning preposterous, irrational or crazy. As the story goes, just beyond the left field fence of the ball park in the early 1900’s was a mental hospital called the Neuropsychiatric Institute. Irrational comments could be heard emanating from the insane asylum, as it was referred to at the time, hence the idiom, “that came out of left field.”

Contributing sources:
Spalding’s World Tour, by Mark Lamster, 2006, published by Public Affairs, New York
West Side Park
Chicago Sun-Times, April 2, 2006, by Mark Hoekstra