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Post by dave on May 26, 2012 3:10:00 GMT -5
I thought the above article had the explanation of the name "Dodgers" in it, but I see it didn't. I'll try to find that article, but from memory the Brooklyn team's name was changed from Bridegrooms to Trolley Dodgers, the latter name because of all the trolleys in Brooklyn and the need to be constantly dodging trolleys when crossing the streets. The name implied a team of nimble, fast and sure footed ball players and was later shortened to The Brooklyn Dodgers.
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Post by dave on May 26, 2012 14:44:11 GMT -5
In the original thread on MoreStories and Utica History, there was the following exchange:
(I don't think ClarenceBunsen will mind if I quote him.)
CB: Great article. It's impressive that he held the single season stolen base record for nearly a century and it was broken in a season with nearly 20% more games than the season in which he set it. Did Vince Coleman get an asterisk?
Dave: Elsewhere on the net I ran into discussions about whether Mike should be inducted into the HOFame. Some feel he should, others don't. If interested, google "baseball Mike Griffin hall of fame."
CB: The case could be made that he is more deserving than many other Famers.
Dave: It is tough to compare players from a century ago to today's baseball stars, I guess. From what I remember of the forum writer's nixing of Uncle Mike for the HOF, he felt that compared to other players in the 1890's , some of Mike's exploits were exemplary, but some were not all that unusual. Or something like that. I don't follow baseball so I can't judge.
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Post by dave on May 26, 2012 15:35:31 GMT -5
I'm trying to fill in more of the details from Great Uncle Mike's life. I have this labeled in my files as coming from the 1867 Utica Directory. That date is too early for Great Uncle Mike to be making cigars. He would have been about 2 years old. His father, Patrick, my great grandfather, was in business with his brother John making and selling cigars on Bleecker St. Toward the center of the page you'll see John, Patrick and Michael Griffin. Michael is listed here as a moulder, that is a maker of cigars. Michael's listed home address of 142 Bleecker and the Griffin Brothers business was listed at 45 Bleecker St. Current numbering of buildings on Bleecker St. begins at Genesee St. with (evidently) 100, so I can't tell where the business and Michael's home was, but they must have been close together in that year. Much of the area around the Busy Corner was originally fine housing while the business area of the city was down by Baggs Square and over Broad, but I don't know how long this was so. Certainly, many of the post cards depicted what we now call the Busy Corner as a business hub by the 1890's and the area was probably devoted to business earlier. (Is there an historian in the house?) John and Patrick were brothers (my father was named after his great uncle John). John's home address on Jay sounds right for the time (1867), and Patrick's home address ("h 43 Third") is an early address for him. Patrick let his son get away from the moulder's bench and go play what amounted to professional baseball in the summer when the seasons were certainly not as long as today. Also, Patrick is listed as Utica's Overseer of The Poor, a position he held for some time. It evidently stemmed from his devotion to the Irish immigrants who daily came to Utica, although one would presume he helped more than the Irish. Patrick's father, Ancestor Michael as we call him, came from Ireland, probably through Canada, landing in Utica in 1824. Another thing that surprises me are the number of Griffiths on this Directory page. I didn't think the Welsh began to come into Utica until around 1900, but I guess I was wrong. Firefox users click the graphic below twice. www.windsweptpress.com/images/1867 Griffin.jpg[/img]
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Post by dave on May 26, 2012 20:10:39 GMT -5
By the way, above where an "h" precedes an address indicates it is the home of the person named. If the person boards (gets room and board, a common arrangement for single men and women at the time) the designation "bds" precedes his or her address.
City directories indicated whether a person was employed and showed where they lived. As such, it gave banks and others who might issue credit a minimal amount of information on which to make their decision. If you were not in the city directory, you would not get credit.
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Post by dave on May 26, 2012 20:33:52 GMT -5
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Post by dave on May 26, 2012 21:10:04 GMT -5
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Post by dave on May 26, 2012 21:11:45 GMT -5
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Post by dave on May 26, 2012 21:13:21 GMT -5
One of the ads contained is from The Daily Press. Spicy news! Firefox users click twice to enlarge. Notice that in 1883 they are still on Broad St. THE business wholesale and trades street. www.windsweptpress.com/TEMP/direct press.jpg[/img]
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Post by dave on May 26, 2012 21:16:50 GMT -5
And ... AHAH! .... for those of you reading the sequel to Monk in the Cellar, called Monk On The Journey. As I suspected, Mucky Run Road in Frankfort was NOT named for a muddy, mucky creek, but for a man named Muckey. You'll find Warner Muckey listed as an advertiser from Frankfort, below. www.windsweptpress.com/TEMP/direct muckey.jpg[/img]
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Post by dave on May 26, 2012 21:19:58 GMT -5
This is interesting, here are the Griffin listings in the 1883 Utica City Directory. Note the addresses, especially for Griffin Brothers. www.windsweptpress.com/TEMP/direct griffin 1883.jpg[/img]
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Post by dave on May 26, 2012 21:23:30 GMT -5
(Again, here's the url where these pages reside on Google Books: books.google.com/books?id=kOoCAAA....e ctory&f=false You can thumb through them, so to speak, at your leisure.) Remember the address of 45 Bleecker Street in the directory mentioned earlier? That directory must be after this one from 1883. Check out the address in this ad from 1883.
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Post by dave on May 26, 2012 21:26:39 GMT -5
So, John and Patrick Griffin probably moved their business from 57 Bleecker Street and possibly took over George Young's business, or a part of it, at 45 Bleecker Street, where they are later listed as making cigars and selling tobacco. Great Uncle Mike is during this time upstairs making cigars and dreaming of spring and green grass and hitting one out of the park!
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Post by dave on May 26, 2012 21:29:31 GMT -5
45 Bleecker St. may have been where 145 Bleecker is today ... or was ... (approximately), on the south side of Bleecker near the intersection of Charlotte St.
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Post by dave on May 27, 2012 7:17:20 GMT -5
Found this in a great deal of data sent to me by my nephew, Steven.
Mike Griffin
Biographical Data Nickname: Mike Born On: 03-20-1865 Born In: Utica, New York Zodiac: Pisces Died On: 04-10-1908 Died In: Utica, New York Cemetery: St. Agnes Cemetery, Utica, New York College: None Attended Bats: Left Throws: Right Height: 5-07 Weight: 160 First Game: 04-16-1887 (Age 22) Last Game: 10-15-1898 Draft: Not Applicable
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Post by dave on May 30, 2012 2:29:28 GMT -5
Found the following. Don't know the author. The first few paragraphs are interesting to me, later paragraphs of interest to fans.
Los Angeles Dodgers History
Brooklyn's debut into the National League in 1890 began on a positive note as the team nicknamed the "Bridegrooms" won the championship with an 86-43 record. It was the first of 21 National League pennants that the Dodgers would win during the next 100 years.
The moniker "Bridegrooms" was attached to Manager William "Gunner" McGunnigle's 1890 ballclub because seven of the players got married around the same time in 1888. Despite the success of the Bridegrooms, McGunnigle didn't last past the initial year and the team paraded through six different managers before the end of the decade. The skippers included John Montgomery Ward (1891-92), Dave Foutz (1893-96), William Barnie (1897-98), Mike Griffin (1898), Charles H. Ebbets (1898) and Ned Hanlon (1899-1905).
The term "Trolley Dodgers" was attached to the Brooklyn ballclub due to the complex maze of trolley cars that weaved its way through the borough of Brooklyn. The name was then shortened to just "Dodgers." During the 1890s, other popular nicknames were Ward's Wonders, Foutz's Fillies and Hanlon's Superbas. Baseball was not new to Brooklyn, which had fielded a team as early as 1849. Charles Byrne, president of the Brooklyn club which started in the Interstate League and moved into the American Association, built Washington Park on the approximate site where George Washington's Continental Army had fought the battle of Long Island. The Dodgers of 1890 transferred to the National League from the American Association, where they had won the 1889 pennant.
Under Hanlon, who joined the Dodgers from Baltimore, the team brought stars to Brooklyn including "Wee" Willie Keeler, Hughie Jennings and Joe Kelley. Sportswriters dubbed the team "Hanlon's Superbas" because of a popular Broadway troupe of the same name. Brooklyn won the 1899 title under Hanlon, the first of two consecutive pennant winners.
Brooklyn-born Keeler, famous for saying "I hit 'em where they ain't," had great bat control and was an adroit bunter. He compiled a .345 career batting average, fifth best all-time in baseball. The 5-foot-4 Hall of Famer had a league-leading 140 runs scored in 1899. First decade stars also included pitcher William "Brickyard" Kennedy, who won 176 games; pitcher Tom Lovett, who won 30 games in 1890 (the only Dodger pitcher to record 30 wins in one season); outfielder Tommy "Oyster" Burns, who batted .300 from 1890-95 and led the league with 128 RBI in 1890; Mike Griffin, who batted over .300 in an eight-year period (1891-98) before managing; first baseman Dan Brouthers, who was the club's first batting champion with a .335 average in 1892; shortstop Tommy Corcoran, who batted .300 with 173 hits in 1894; and first baseman Candy LaChance, who hit .290 for six seasons (1893-98). 1890 - April 19, 1890: Brooklyn plays its first game in the National League, a 15-9 loss to the Boston Beaneaters, and went on to capture the National League pennant.
April 28, 1890: The Bridegrooms beat Boston, 5-2, in front of 1,222 fans at Washington Park, the first National League game in Brooklyn.
May 1, 1890: Third baseman George Pinckney brought his streak of 570 consecutive games-played streak with him to the National League, but it ended with an injury in a game that rain prevented from even making it to the books. Pinckney had played every inning since Sept. 21, 1885, a record that would last nearly a century. May 3, 1890: The Bridegrooms win the first National League contest between Brooklyn and the Giants, 7-3. June 12, 1890: Brooklyn beats the Giants, 12-6, at Washington Park in the first game to feature a passionate dispute between the two clubs in the National League, ignited by Brooklyn third-base coach Darby O'Brien, who pretended to be a baserunner and drew a throw over to third.
June 14, 1890: Tom Lovett tosses the first Brooklyn shutout over the Giants, a whopping 16-0 victory. Aug. 1, 1890: Oyster Burns is the first player in franchise history to hit for the cycle. Sept. 1, 1890: Let's play three? Brooklyn dispatches Pittsburgh three times in one day. 1891 - April 27, 1891: The Bridegrooms play their first game at Eastern Park, dropping the contest, 6-5, to the Giants. June 22, 1891: Thomas Lovett issues three walks, but no-hits the Giants for a 4-0 win. 1892 - May 29, 1892: Eight days after losing 28-year-old outfielder George "Hub" Collins to typhoid fever, the Bridegrooms and St. Louis Browns put on a benefit All-Star Game to raise money for his widow. Nov. 1, 1982: Dan Brouthers' .335 batting average is good enough for the title. 1893 - May 30, 1893: William "Brickyard" Kennedy beats Louisville, 3-0 and 6-2, in both games of a twin bill, allowing just eight hits all day. He's the first Major Leaguer to pitch and win two games on the same day since the mound was moved to 60 feet, six inches from the plate. 1894 - June 2, 1894: Ed Stein tosses a 1-0 no-hitter over the Cubs in a six-inning game. 1896 - May 20, 1896: Brooklyn sets a franchise record by scoring more than a score in a 25-6 win over Pittsburgh. 1897 - May 29, 1897: Mike Griffin starts a triple play in a 9-7 loss to Pittsburgh. Sept. 21, 1897: Twelve Brooklyn runners cross the plate in the opening frame of a 22-5 win in Boston. 1898 - Jan. 4, 1898: Owner Charles Byrne dies and Charles Ebbets later becomes president of the ballclub. April 30, 1898: "New" Washington Park opens. May 3, 1898: Jimmy Sheckard racks up 11 total bases, including a homer, two triples and a single. 1899 - Feb. 7, 1899: After the Bridegrooms and Orioles merge, with Baltimore owner Harry Von der Horst and Ned Hanlon taking a stake in the Brooklyn franchise, "Wee" Willie Keeler, Joe Kelley, Hughie Jennings and other players head to Brooklyn which will take on the name "Superbas." May 15, 1899: "Wee" Willie Keeler smacks an inside-the-park grand slam to get past the Phillies, 8-5. Oct. 7, 1899: Jim Hughes and the Superbas beat the Giants, 13-2, to capture the National League pennant.
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