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The
History of Umpiring the Great Game of Baseball
Traditionally regarded
as villains by fans, adversarial autocrats by players,
and invisible men by the press, umpires have been, as
Furman Bisher put it, "submerged in the history
of baseball like idiot children in a family album."
Yet the umpire is baseball's indispensable man, for
the arbiter transformed baseball from a recreational
activity to a competitive sport and has personified
the integrity of the professional game. Since attorney
William R. Wheaton officiated the first recorded "modern"
game on October 6, 1845, umpires have made important
contributions to the National Pastime. Indeed, the history
of the umpire mirrors the distinctive eras and developments
of the game itself.
From the creation of the
modern game in the 1840s through the Civil War, the
umpire was the personification of base ball (two words
then) as an amateur sport played by gentlemen. According
to the September 23, 1845, rules of the Knickerbocker
Club of New York, which created modern baseball, the
president of the club "shall appoint an Umpire,
who shall keep the game in a book provided for that
purpose, and note all violations of the Bylaws and Rules."
As "match" games between clubs became more
frequent, three officials were commonly used--one umpire
chosen by each team and a neutral "referee"
to decide the often partisan split decisions. In 1858
the National Association of Base Ball Players sanctioned
a single umpire, sometimes a spectator or even a player,
chosen by the home team with the consent of the rival
captain.
There was no dress code,
but contemporary prints depict the idealized portrait
of the gentleman arbiter--a distinguished-looking gentleman
resplendent in top hat, Prince Albert coat, and cane,
who stood, kneeled, or sat on a stool in foul territory
along the first base line. Although the attire became
less formal by the Civil War, the volunteer arbiters
continued to receive no remuneration for their services
other than the "honor" of being chosen "the
sole judge of fair and unfair play."
The nationwide popularity
of the game after the Civil War led to the professionalization
of baseball and, in turn, to professional umpires. In
1871 the newly formed National Association of Professional
Base Ball Players continued the tradition of unpaid
volunteers by allowing the home team to choose the umpire
from a list of five names submitted by the visiting
club, but gave the arbiter greater authority by limiting
appeals to decisions involving rules interpretation,
not judgment. In 1878 the National League of Professional
Base Ball Clubs, organized two years earlier, instructed
home teams to pay umpires $5 per game, and in 1879 National
League president William A. Hulbert appointed baseball's
first umpire staff--a group of twenty men from which
teams could chose an arbiter. The approved list and
compensation did not free the umpires from the "homer"
syndrome (ruling in favor of the home team as a civic
gesture) or suspicion of collusion with gamblers. Indeed,
in 1882 Richard Higham of Troy, New York, former manager
and National League player, was banished from the league
for advising
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