Category: Visiting USA Baseball Teams

International Baseball in Ireland – US Navy Exhibition Match (1917) Re-enactment 2017

Result

DateHome TeamAway Team
100th AnniversaryVenue: Mardyke, UCC
25.07.2017Cork Rebel Alliance3UCC All Americans3
US Navy Baseball Match in Ireland 100th Anniversary Re-enactment – 25 July 2017 [Ref: 3]

Report

On the 100th Anniversary exactly of the US Navy’s Exhibition game in University College Cork, on exactly the same place, American Students studying at a Summer Camp in UCC, along with expats, re-enacted the match between the USS Melville and the USS Trippe (in Irish waters as part of the European Theater of Operations during WWI), which the USS Trippe won 7-6. [Ref: 1-2]

The US Students played a team made up of Irish Baseball players, including Baseball Ireland member Adrian Kelly, which was named the Cork Rebel Alliance, at the Mardyke, UCC on 25 July 2017. The Re-enactment finished a 3-3 tie after four innings, including 2 Home runs for the Cork Rebel Alliance. [Ref: 3]

UCC All Americans included Nicole Dehnel, Kristin Tocci, Alex Smith and Katie Wright. [Ref: 1] and the game raised money for Irish Charity, Guide Dogs for the Blind.

See: https://eirball.ie/2020/04/24/international-baseball-in-ireland-uss-trippe-7-uss-melville-6-1917/ for a report on the original match.

Baseball Ireland’s Adrian Kelly and Nicole Dehnel revreating the 1917 Baseball Picture. Pic: Eddie O’Hare [Ref: 4]

References

Newspapers

[1] O’Riordan, Sean (2017) “Famous Baseball game by US Sailors recreated in Cork” Irish Examiner. Wednesday, July 26, 2017. [Internet] Available from: https://www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/famous-baseball-game-by-us-sailors-recreated-in-cork-455663.html [Accessed 28 July 2017]

[2] Duncan, Mark (2017) “An Irishman’s Diary” The Irish Times. Wednesday, August 23, 2017.

Social Media

[3] Baseball Ireland Facebook (2017) Post , July 26, 2017:”” [Internet] Available from: https://www.facebook.com/baseballireland/posts/1603009249743866 [Accessed 24 April 2020]

Images

[4] O’Hare, Eddie (2017) “Adrian Kelly of Baseball Ireland and Nicole Dehnel recreating the 1917 Baseball picture at the Cricket Grounds in Cork” Irish Examiner. Wednesday, July 26, 2017. [Internet] Available from: https://www.irishexaminer.com/remote/media.central.ie/media/images/m/MardykeBaseballMatchJul17A_large.jpg?width=648&s=ie-455663 [Accessed 28 July 2017]

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Roisin O’Callaghan, Sarah Jane Masterson, Lorna Rose Masterson and Sondra Maher (Marlay Softball Club).

About this document

Researched, compiled and written by Enda Mulcahy for the

Eirball | Irish North American & World Sports Archive

Last Updated: 24 April 2020

(c) Copyright Enda Mulcahy and Eirball 2020

You may quote this document in part provided that proper acknowledgement is given to the authors. All Rights Reserved.

Major League Baseball in Ireland – Chicago White Stockings Tour of Ireland 1889

Results

DateHome TeamAway Team
Game 1Venue: NICC, Belfast
03.1889All-America Club9Chicago White Stockings8
Game 2Venue: Landsdowne Rd, Dublin
27.03.1889Chicago White Stockings3All-America Club5
Major League Baseball in Ireland – Chicago White Stockings Tour 1889 [Ref: 1]

Report

Following on from the first Major League Tour of Ireland and Britain in 1874, a tour was organised by A.G. Spalding as part of a grander plan to bring American Professional Sports to the World.

Spalding’s Chicago White Stockings (now Chicago White Sox), of the National League of Professional Baseball Clubs (then the only Major League, as the American League would not be founded until 1901, and the National Football League, National Hockey League and National Basketball association until decades later), toured Ireland and Britain.

The Chicago team played the All-America Club in the grounds of the North of Ireland Cricket Club in Belfast, with the All-America team winning 9-8 thanks to a late 9th Inning rally.

In the return match, played at Landsdowne Road in Dublin, the White Stockings were leading 3-1 until another late 9th Inning rally, which saw the All-America Club score four runs in the Top of the Ninth.

Another facet of this tour was the decision of the English Rounders Association (Liverpool) and Welsh Rounders Association to adopt some of the rules of American Baseball, including two-handed batting (up until then batting was one-handed) and tagging a player out with the glove. The Rounders Associations changed their names to the English and Welsh Baseball Associations, to reflect the changes, although they kept the posts instead of adopting the bases as in Baseball. Welsh Baseball is still played as the traditional Celtic game of Wales (see: https://eirball.ie/welsh-baseball/ for more on this sport, which is popular in areas of Wales and Liverpool with a large Irish Working Class immigrant population).

References

Bibliography

[1] Chetwynd, Josh (2008) “Baseball in Europe: A Country by Country History”. pg. 207. Published by McFarland and Company, Jefferson, North Carolina.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Frank Kingston and Hugh Mulcahy.

About this document

Researched, compiled and written by Enda Mulcahy for the

Eirball | Irish North American & World Sports Archive

Last Updated: 24 April 2020

(c) Copyright Enda Mulcahy and Eirball 2020

You may quote this document in part provided that proper acknowledgement is given to the authors. All Rights Reserved.

Major League Baseball in Ireland – Boston Red Stockings v Philadelphia Athletics 1874

Results

DateHome TeamGamesAway TeamGames
Two-Game SeriesVenue: Dublin
24.08.1874Boston Red Stockings1Philadelphia Athletics1
Major League Baseball in Ireland – Boston Red Stockings v Philadelphia Athletics 1874 [Ref: 1]

Report

Naturally, given the links between America and Ireland, Britain and France, the three countries got the biggest promotion of Baseball in the late Nineteenth and early twentieth centuries when Professional Baseball clubs toured Europe.

The earliest known game of Baseball in Ireland occurred on 24 August 1874 in Dublin, when National League clubs, the Boston Red Stockings and Philadelphia Athletics (later Boston Red Sox and Oakland Athletics) finished off a 12-game tour of England by playing two matches in Dublin. The series finished one game apiece.

The teams also played a match against the All-Ireland Cricket team. Because of the large number of Irish-Americans playing Professional Baseball at the time, this leg of the trip was considered essential by Boston owner Harry Wright.

References

Bibliography

[1] Chetwynd, Josh (2008) “Baseball in Europe: A Country by Country History”. pg. 206. Published by McFarland and Company, Jefferson, North Carolina.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Frank Kingston and Hugh Mulcahy.

About this document

Researched, compiled and written by Enda Mulcahy for the

Eirball | Irish North American & World Sports Archive

Last Updated: 24 April 2020

(c) Copyright Enda Mulcahy and Eirball 2020

You may quote this document in part provided that proper acknowledgement is given to the authors. All Rights Reserved.

Baseball Internationals in Ireland – America v Canada 1917

Results

DateHome TeamAway Team
Game 1Venue: Dublin
27.10.1917America6Canada10
Game 2Venue: Belfast
31.10.1917Canada5America5
International Baseball in Ireland – America v Canada 1917 [Ref: 1]

Box-Score 31 October 1917

123456789ExtraTotal
Canada01102000105
America20010000205
Baseball International Belfast 31 October 1917 – Canada v America Box-Score [Ref: 1]

Teams 31 October 1917

PositionAmericaCanada
PitcherStanleyDoyle
CatcherVannaisLangdon
First BaseChapinLatimer
Second BaseLeoReid
Third BaseGreenEdmundsen
Centre FieldCouedBiglard
Right FieldVan DyneJohnson
Left FieldMcLeodLoskey
Short StopHumphreysMaddock
Baseball International in Ireland 1917 – Amercan and Canadian Team Line-Ups. [Ref: 1]

Report

Two International Baseball matches between America and Canada were played in Dublin and Belfast in late October 1917.

In the first encounter Canada won by 10 runs to 6, and the return match, in Belfast, finished 5-5.

Doyle for Canada, and Stanley for America were the Pitchers, who were described as excellent.

America went 2-0 up in the first innings, but Canada added one in the second, and levelled the match in the third. America took the lead again in the fourth with a well-obtained run, but Canada retook the lead in the fifth by adding two runs. There was no score from then until the ninth innings, when America obtained two. It looked like America was going to win when Canada’s first batter failed, but they managed to equalise in the end. One Extra inning failed to separate the sides, and it finished five runs each.

References

Newspapers

[1] Anon. (1917) “Baseball Match in Belfast: America v. Canada”. The Belfast News-Letter. Thursday, November 1, 1917. pg. 3.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Frank Kingston and Richard Mulcahy

About this document

Researched, compiled and written by Enda Mulcahy for the

Eirball | Irish North American & World Sports Archive

Last Updated: 24 April 2020

(c) Copyright Enda Mulcahy and Eirball 2020

You may quote this document in part provided that proper acknowledgement is given to the authors. All Rights Reserved.

International Baseball in Ireland – USS Trippe 7 USS Melville 6 – 1917

Result

DateHome TeamAway Team
Exhibition MatchVenue: Mardyke, UCC
25.07.1917USS Trippe7USS Melville6
Baseball International Exhibition Match in Ireland 1917 [Ref: 1-2]

Report

A match, suggested by Admiral Sims, was played on the grounds of University College Cork, was played in aid of a wartime charity by two US Naval Vessels: USS Trippe and USS Melville. Despite being delayed by over a week due to rain, it attracted a large crowd, who witnessed USS Trippe win by 7 runs to 6.

Around 3,000 people attended, and the band of the 3rd battalion, the Leinster Regiment, played a selection of music, finishing with the US and British National Anthems.

A warm-up match had been played by USS McDougal and USS Wadsworth. The match raised £90 for the Cork War Workers Fund.

The Navy created a Baseball Diamond at Ringaskiddy, beside Ballybricken House, afterwards, and a Baseball bat from Ballybricken is in the Cobh Museuem.

A re-enactment took place at the Mardyke, UCC, exactly a century later, also in aid of charity (Irish Guide Dogs for the Blind) when a team of visiting US Students, attending a Summer Camp at UCC, along with a few expats, took on the ‘Cork Rebel Alliance’. the location was at the exact same place as the original match 100 years previously.

Milligan of USS Melville at bat in the Baseball match on 25 July 1917 [Ref: 3]

References

Newspapers

[1] O’Riordan, Sean (2017) “Famous Baseball game by US Sailors recreated in Cork” Irish Examiner. Wednesday, July 26, 2017. [Internet] Available from: https://www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/famous-baseball-game-by-us-sailors-recreated-in-cork-455663.html [Accessed 28 July 2017]

[2] Duncan, Mark (2017) “An Irishman’s Diary” The Irish Times. Wednesday, August 23, 2017.

Images

[3] Anon. (2017) “Milligan from the Melville team hits a mighty stroke playing in the baseball match against Trippe at the Mardyke on July 25, 1917.” Irish Examiner. Wednesday, July 26, 2017. [Internet] Available from: https://www.irishexaminer.com/remote/media.central.ie/media/images/z/zzzMardykeBaseballMatch1917A_large.jpg?width=648&s=ie-455663 [Accessed 28 July 2017]

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Frank Kingston.

About this document

Researched, compiled and written by Enda Mulcahy for the

Eirball | Irish North American & World Sports Archive

Last Updated: 24 April 2020

(c) Copyright Enda Mulcahy and Eirball 2020

You may quote this document in part provided that proper acknowledgement is given to the authors. All Rights Reserved.

Baseball Amateur World Series (1903) Re-enactment 2003

Result

DateHome TeamAway Team
World Series 1903
1903Lennons (Illinois)18Whytes (Indiana)1
Re-enactment 2003
06.2003Lennons3Whytes12
Baseball Ireland World Series (1903) Re-enactment 2003 [Ref: 1]

Report

South Roscommon witnessed its first ever game of Baseball in June 2003, on the 100th Anniversary of the World Series of 1903 between the Lennons of Joliet, Illinois and the Whytes of Indiana. The Amateur World Series was won by the Lennons by a score of 18-1, a feat which was acknowledged by the baseball Hall of Fame at Cooperstown, New York in 1963.

The re-enactment was played behind the Heritage Centre in Drum, Co. Roscommon, featuring family members of the original Whytes and Lennons teams, and didn’t go according to script, with the Whytes regaining some family pride with a 12-3 victory.

Tony Whyte was manager of both teams, and the large attendance were not put out by the Final score, enjoying the game and occasion, despite the Irish contingent not knowing the finer points of the rules like their American counterparts, who were large in numbers.

The Lennons were 1-0 up after the first innings, but the tactically superior Whytes were 9-1 up going into the fourth, but the Lennons were still hopeful of victory, and introduced two substitutesfrom the USA: Jonathan Burke from Boston and Brian Lennon from California. However, Mark Lennon’s impressive Home Run in the fourth was not enough as they were 12-3 down going into the closing stages, and failed to score in their final innings. [Ref: 1]

Baseball World Series (1903) Reenactment 2003 – Whytes and Lennons Line Up for Match [Ref: 1] Picture: P. Devanny

Teams

LennonsWhytes
Adrian Hughes LennonAdrian Millen
James LennonTom Seerey
Eamon LennonMark Whyte
Adrian LennonDarra Egan
Brian LennonOwen McManus
David LennonTony Whyte
Mark LennonEdward Egan
Alan Hughes LennonSeamus McManus
Pascal LennonScott Kahler
Cathal LennonRomy Currid
Robert Lennon
Sub: Jonathan Burke
Sub: Brian Lennon
Baseball Ireland World Series (1903) Re-enactment 2003 teams [Ref: 1]

Officials

Chief UmpireEd Burke (USA)
CommentatorHarold Lynan Webber
Presenter of MedalsFr. Ray Milton
Baseball World Series (1903) Re-enactment 2003 Officials [Ref: 1]

References

Newspapers

[1] Coyne, Declan (2003) “Historic Baseball Game didn’t go according to script as the Whyte’s out-run the Lennons!” Roscommon Champion. Friday, June 27, 2003. pg. 29

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Frank Kingston.

About this document

Researched, compiled and written by Enda Mulcahy for the

Eirball | Irish North American & World Sports Archive

Last Updated: 24 April 2020

(c) Copyright Enda Mulcahy and Eirball 2020

You may quote this document in part provided that proper acknowledgement is given to the authors. All Rights Reserved.