The American National Game of Base Ball

Early 20th century reproduction of an iconic Currier & Ives print.

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Description

This is a lovely hand colored reduced reproduction of the iconic print featuring America’s pastime, published by Currier & Ives. This particular example was likely included in a high-end book of reproductions printed sometime in the early 20th century. According to the Metropolitan Museum of Art:

[The] large Currier & Ives lithograph, issued shortly after the American Civil War, ranks among the most celebrated of nineteenth-century pictures of a baseball game in progress — the 1865 championship game between the Mutual Club of Manhattan and the Atlantic Club of Brooklyn. This game was played before a huge crowd (some reported almost 20,000 spectators) at the Elysian Fields in Hoboken, New Jersey, the site of the first recorded, organized baseball game on June 19th, 1846. Since Manhattan lacked sizable grounds for baseball games, the Elysian Fields (located just across the Hudson River) became a preferred site for practices and organized matches during the formative years of the sport. In the late 1860s, when major baseball parks were established in Brooklyn, people tired of going to Hoboken. Attendance gradually dwindled at the games held at Elysian Fields; the last professional game played there in 1873.

This print presents the entire baseball diamond as seen from behind home plate. The scene shows the batter and catcher standing in the left center foreground, while all the other team players are in their infield and outfield positions. At the center of the image, a pitcher prepares to throw the ball underhand toward the batter, while two men are ready to run from their respective first and third bases. The umpire (shown from the back; dressed in brimmed hat and long brown coat) stands in the central foreground, while nearby there is a small group of men (some wearing top hats) and the rest of the batter’s team. In the background, there is a large crowd of spectators, as well as horse-drawn carriages. Typical of the early years of baseball, as the print also shows, in addition to underhanded pitching, the players have no gloves, and the catcher has no mask.

Reference: The Met Museum

Map Details

Publication Date: c. 1920

Author: Currier & Ives

Sheet Width (in): 13.9

Sheet Height (in): 10.4

Condition: B+

Condition Description: Faint toning and marginal damp stains confined to the outer edge of the sheet. One small hole near the bottom edge, well away from the image.

Out of stock