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TAKE
ME OUT TO THE BALL GAME:
ROSENBERG LIBRARY’S APRIL TREASURE OF THE
MONTH

Legend has it that
Abner Doubleday created the sport of American baseball in
Cooperstown,
New York
in 1839.
During the
Civil War, Doubleday served as a major general in the Union
Army, and he commanded the troops stationed in Galveston at that time.
According to Galveston lore, the state’s first baseball
game was played on the island in 1865.
Participants in the game were not
Galvestonians, however.
They were Union soldiers stationed
just north of where the Ursuline Convent once stood (near 26th Street
and Avenue N).
The locals who observed the game
became interested in the sport.
Soon,
baseball—and gambling on baseball—became favorite pastimes for
the citizens of Galveston.
The first inter-city match took place in 1867, when the
Houston Stonewalls defeated the Galveston R.E. Lees, 35-2.
While amateur
baseball teams, such as the Flyaways and the Pastimes, played
against one another from the 1860s through the 1880s,
professional baseball did not come to Galveston until the establishment of the Texas
League in 1888.
Initially,
there were six Texas cities
that belonged to the state’s pay-for-play baseball league:
San Antonio, Austin,
Dallas,
Fort Worth, Houston,
and Galveston.

Players in the Texas League were often imported from
other states and were paid as much as $250 per month.
The lack of
local players and the inflated salaries outraged many baseball
fans in Texas,
and attendance at the 25-cent games was often poor.
Galveston’s professional team—alternately
called the Galvestons, the Giants, or the Sandcrabs—fell into
financial trouble when team managers were unable to pay the
players their full salaries.
Star players were sold off to other
teams in order to make up for the deficiency in funds.
Money troubles
plagued the league for a number of years, but
Galveston
continued to have a team that was financially supported by the
city’s wealthy elite.
In 1899, the Galveston Sandcrabs
won the state Championship, reviving local enthusiasm for the
sport.
From 1902 through the early 1920s, ownership of the
Galveston
club changed hands regularly.
In 1924, the franchise, players,
and territorial rights were sold to the Waco,
Texas
franchise for $21,100.
Galveston stayed out the Texas League for the
next five years.
The sport
returned to Galveston in 1931 when Shearn Moody bought out the Waco club and brought the
team back to the island.
The Galveston Buccaneers won the
Texas State Championship in 1934.
Moody died in 1936, and the
subsequent owner sold the team to
Shreveport,
Louisiana
in 1939.
Galveston
has not had a professional baseball team since.

Photo Captions:
1.
Silver-plated baseball and wooden
bat, ca. 1885:
The baseball
and bat were awarded to Frank D. Mitchell, captain of Galveston’s amateur Flyaway team upon a
victory over its archrival, the Pastime club.
2.
Baseball
autographed by the Galveston Buccaneers team, ca. 1933.
In 1934, the Buccaneers won the
Texas League Championship for the first time since 1899.
3.
Team photo of the Galveston
Buccaneers, 1933.
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