Trivia question: Did a Canadian invent the Baseball glove?
A: Some baseball historians suggest Art "Foxy" Irwin invented the baseball glove while others more cautiously describe him as having "popularized" the glove. Another source says Irwin was credited with inventing the "infielder's glove."At any rate, Irwin, also known as "Doc," was a baseball pioneer from Canada. He was born in Toronto on Feb. 14, 1858 and raised in Boston. He took up baseball and by 1880 was one of the best shortstops in the game. At this point in the game's development, infielders like Irwin caught balls with their bare hands. However, around 1883 a hard hit ball broke two fingers on Irwin's left hand and rather than waiting for them to heal, he bought a buckskin glove that was a bit too big, added some padding, inserted the fingers inside and kept playing. Within a couple of years several players were using what was know as the "Irwin Glove." For what it's worth, Irwin had an outstanding fielding percentage, well over .800 consistently. But Chip Martin, a London, Ont. writer, has been researching the early days of baseball and says a catcher, named Phil Powers, with the London Tecumsehs started using a primitive glove in 1878. Others were also beginning to try out new equipment at the time.
Nevertheless, Irwin was an interesting figure. He batted left, threw right, was five-foot eight-and-a-half inches tall and weighed 158 pounds. He played with a variety of teams in his 13-year career. In addition to his role in introducing the baseball glove, he led a player's revolt in 1890, managed a team in Toronto in the 1890s, was a National League umpire in 1902, introduced professional baseball to Cuba, and initiated the system of baseball scouting. Irwin was apparently depressed about having to handle two marriages at the same time and on July 16, 1921 jumped overboard and drowned while sailing on the liner "The Calvin Austin" between New York and Boston.
Q: Was the first baseball game played in Canada, and not Cooperstown, NY?
A: Good question, and one the folks in the southern Ontario community of Beachville have been asking for some time. Some fans may not know it, but the first recorded game of baseball took place in Canada, a year before Abner Doubleday supposedly "invented" the game in Cooperstown, New York. Beachville, about 40 kilometres east of London, Ont., boasts of itself as the home of baseball in Canada because it was here on June 4, 1838 that a game of baseball, or at least a form of the game as we now know it, took place in front of several spectators. The basis of this claim lies with a lengthy letter published May 5, 1886 in the Philadelphia-based Sporting Life magazine. The letter, entitled "A Game of Long-ago Which Closely Resembled Our Present National Game," was written by Dr. Adam Ford of Denver, Colorado, who had grown up in Beachville. What sets Ford's letter apart from other reminiscences of early ball games is details on the date, the way the game was played, and the names of players who participated. Most historians agree baseball flourished before 1840 and that Doubleday's claim of invention is pure bunk, but there seems to be little evidence on specific dates and places of the games. Although Ford's original letter is in the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York, officials there have never formally recognized the validity of his claim for Beachville. Two researchers from the University of Western Ontario examined the validity in a 1988 article for the Journal of Sport History. Nancy Bouchier and Robert Barney wrote: "The question remains: How credible is Adam Ford's letter relative to the early history of baseball? A thorough investigation of Ford himself, his sport involvement and the context of his times all suggest that his reminiscence is valuable."
Research of county records and tombstones in the area indicate most of the players would have been boys and men 15 to 24 at the time of the game, again making his recollections believable, say the researchers. Baseball is often thought of as deriving from the English game of rounders, and there is evidence to suggest variations of baseball were played as long ago as the Colonial period in the U.S. Given the thousands of United Empire Loyalists who emigrated to Canada during and after the Revolution, it's likely some brought a form of baseball with them. In fact, in Jane Austen's novel, Northranger Abbey written in the late 1790s, she writes of a character: "And it was not very wonderful that Catherine should prefer cricket, base-ball, riding on horseback, and running about the country at the age of fourteen, to books." But it's Ford's letter, which also includes a diagram of a five-sided playing field, that sets down for the first time the specifics of a game. There were distinguishing features to Ford's game: there was territory to show where fair and foul balls were, or "fair hit" and "no hit" as he called them. And the number of men on each side had to be equal before a game could be played, usually between seven and 12 players per team. Finally, some aspects of Ford's personal life may have fueled controversy surrounding the letter. Because he was born in 1831 and only a youngster when the game was played, some have questioned how a boy could have remembered such specifics. And Ford was also involved in a sensational murder scandal in St. Marys, Ont in 1878, when a Robert Guest who was the secretary of the St. Marys Temperance Association died mysteriously after drinking in Ford's office. A coroner's inquest was held behind closed doors, and Ford was not brought to trial. However, the incident prompted his move to Denver in 1880. Ford supposedly had a history of alcohol and drug problems and died virtually destitute on May 17, 1906. In 1988, a stamp was issued recognizing 150 years of the sport in Canada. As well, a match was held that year between a team in Beachville and one from Cooperstown, playing by the rules outlined by Ford.