MURFREESBORO — MTSU’s
Baseball in Literature and Culture Conference will take on the sepia tones of the
earliest photographs as it turns to the 19th century for
inspiration.
The ninth annual event, scheduled for Friday, April 4, in
the James Union Building, includes a demonstration of turn-of-the-century
baseball by re-enactors who play the game in their own “vintage” league. A
searchable campus map with parking details is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParkingMap13-14.
Representatives of the Tennessee Association of Vintage Base
Ball will don their period uniforms and show what the earliest version of the
sport was like at 3:10 p.m. in Walnut Grove outside the James Union Building,
weather permitting.
The players will be Michael “Roadblock” Thurmon of the
Nashville Maroons and Jeff “Skeeter” Wells and Jeff “Cornbread” Jennings of the
Stewart’s Creek Scouts.
“The earliest versions of the game before it began to
professionalize after the Civil War still had some of the same structures in
place,” said Dr. Warren Tormey, a lecturer in the Department of English and
co-director of the conference with fellow English professor Dr. Ron Kates.
Tormey said players did not wear gloves and spectators saw much
more cooperation between the pitcher and hitter than in the modern game. Also,
a fly ball caught on the bounce was still counted as an out.
Skip Nipper, a local baseball historian and sales
representative for New Era Sports, will set the tone of the conference with the
keynote address at 8:30 a.m. He will speak on “The Emerging Era of Middle
Tennessee Base-Ball.”
Nipper is president of the Nashville Old Timers Baseball
Association and a member of the Grantland Rice-Fred Russell chapter of the
Society for American Baseball Research. He is also author of “Baseball in
Nashville,” a pictorial history of the game in the Midstate area.
An administrator of www.sulphurdell.com,
an online archive for images of the old Sulphur Dell stadium, he has contributed
in various ways to the move to build a new stadium on that site for the minor
league Nashville Sounds. Sulphur Dell was the site of Nashville’s first
professional baseball team in 1885.
Willie Wilson, a former All-Star with Major League
Baseball’s Kansas City Royals, will deliver the luncheon address at 12:45 p.m.
in the James Union Building’s Tennessee Room.
Wilson was an American League All-Star outfielder in 1982
and 1983 and led the league in singles for four consecutive seasons from 1979
to 1982. He led the league in stolen bases in 1979, his first season as a
full-time player in the majors, and he captured the league batting title in
1982 with a .332 average.
Prior to the luncheon, Wilson will meet with youngsters from
the Boys and Girls Clubs of Middle Tennessee. The organization is working with
Major League Baseball’s Reviving Baseball in the Inner Cities (RBI) initiative
to reintroduce the sport to children in urban areas.
“It’s a program that is design to reconnect the game with
what has traditionally been one of its greatest fan bases,” Tormey said.
Following the luncheon, there will be a question-and-answer
period. Then Wilson will sign copies of his book “Inside the Park: Running the
Base Path of Life,” which he co-wrote with Kent Pulliam.
Throughout the conference, leading baseball scholars will
deliver presentations on various topics, including the place of baseball in
American childhood; the Atlanta Braves’ upcoming move to Cobb County, Ga.; and
the politics of umpires’ calls.
On baseball’s enduring fascination for the academic
community, Tormey repeated historian Jacques Barzun’s oft-quoted observation,
“Whoever wants to know the heart and mind of America had better learn
baseball.”
Tormey said, “No other sport has been credited with that
sort of status in connection with larger developments in American society.”
The entire conference is free and open to the public with
the exception of the lunch, which is $10 per person.
For more information, contact Tormey at 615-904-8585 or warren.tormey@mtsu.edu, or Kates at
615-898-2595 or ron.kates@mtsu.edu.
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