Greetings,
A new aspect to the hobby!!!
Craig "Hammy" Young
FYI:
Dirigo Vintage Base Ball Club
The Dirigo Vintage Base Ball Club was founded on November 20, 2005. We take our name from an actual club playing base ball in Augusta from 1867 to 1869 . The Dirigo Vintage Base Ball Club played its inaugural match on September 11, 2005 as the Third Maine’s Red Diamonds vs. the Essex Base Ball Club before 100 cranks assembled around an open field in Washburn - Norlands Park, Leeds, ME.
Vintage base ball goes in many different directions, everything from casual groups playing games for family and friends to big public events at either living history museums or reenactments. The Dirigo Vintage Base Ball Club is developing a 2006 spring and summer schedule of twice a month practice games as well as competitive games. The club will be an Associate Member of The Vintage Base Ball Association and will play a few games each year against its established clubs as well as non member clubs.
If interested contact:
Dirigo Vintage Base Ball Club
Captains: Matt Bray Or Mark Rohman
E-mail address is dirigobaseball@hotmail.com
http://www.dirigobaseball.org





mission and purpose of the Dirigo Vintage Base Ball Club
If interested contact:
Dirigo Vintage Base Ball Club
Captains: Matt Bray Or Mark Rohman
E-mail address is dirigobaseball@hotmail.com
Dirigo Vintage Base Ball Club's Mission Statement
The mission and purpose of the Dirigo Vintage Base Ball Club shall be to preserve, perpetuate, and promote the game of base ball as it was played during its formative years in the mid-nineteenth century and other historic eras. This worthy objective shall be accomplished by the following activities and endeavors:
Present the game of base ball as it was actually played in accordance with the rules, equipment, uniforms, field specifications, customs, practices, language, and behavioral norms of the period.
Supporting the formation and strengthening of vintage base ball clubs by sharing vintage base ball information, setting standards of historical accuracy and participation, and providing a means to recognize and communicate with other vintage base ball clubs.
Encourage research and disseminating information in order to recreate the game in keeping with the highest levels of accuracy and authenticity.
Educating the public regarding the character, history and growth of the game with attention to the historical context in which it originated and developed.
In order to achieve its goals and sustain the traditions and values which it seeks to honor and emulate, the Dirigo Vintage Base Ball Club and all of its members will conduct all matches, meetings, and other activities - both on and off the field - according to the highest standards of sportsmanship, gentlemanly behavior, courtesy, and respect for others which characterized the Knickerbocker Base Ball Club, established September 23, 1845. In addition, all matches shall be conducted using the official rules and regulations of the New England Vintage Base Ball League and the Vintage Base Ball Association.
Pvt/Lt Craig Young
3rd Maine, Company A
He can't throw it that far...
Boston College 47 Miami 45 November 23, 1984
MWLWN LABE! Molon labe, “Come and get them!
Vintage Base Ball Club
Second meeting will be at my place of work in Chelsea. Tentative date will be Sunday January 22nd. Matt Bray and myself hope to have our uniforms by then. Topics of discussion will include: rules of play, equipment required (very little), mission statement, rough drafts of constitution and by-laws and nicknames for added fun. All interested parties can contact myself Pvt/Pioneer Mark A. Rohman (3rd maine), Cpl. Matt Bray (3rd Maine) or Lt./Pvt. Craig Young (3rd Maine). We really believe this will be a lot of fun. Even if you think you might not want to play there is still a need for individuals to fulfill other roles. Please email any of us and we will be more than happy to answer any questions.
Mark A. Rohman
Augusta, ME 04330
What drugs do you take for
What drugs do you take for that energy and or can you direct me to your time machine...how do you guys find time for this? do you have a personal assistant that manages your time?....good luck on this...i hope there might be a time i might drop in on a game or skirmish, er scrimmiage and have a "ball" myself..
Seamus
(peanuts! Popcorn! Guiness!)
"it is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifing......nothing"
MacBeth
If you are interested.....
If you are interested, just say, IM INTRESTED on here and I will add you to the email list, Thats you Seamus, your in for it now, MUHAHAHAHA....
seriously this is alot of fun, the time we put it we know we will be re-paid for in an excellent addition to this excellent hobby...
and Seamus, keep our personal assistant on the down low, but his name is MoJo and he is a monkey...
shhhh
COME PLAY BASE BALL!
Matt & MoJo
There is more
How many people will I need?
You need nine to play which is called the 1st Nine and then, you need a 2nd Nine who are the back ups. You should have 12-15 committed players. A fully-staffed club also has umpires (at lest two) and scorekeepers, and some even have costumed interpreters that answer questions in the crowd. If you don't play but want to be involved, there are roles to play both on the field and in the organization such as Officers, Historian, Web Master, Photographer, Reporter, and others.
Pvt/Lt Craig Young
3rd Maine, Company A
He can't throw it that far...
Boston College 47 Miami 45 November 23, 1984
MWLWN LABE! Molon labe, “Come and get them!
Add me to the email list. I
Add me to the email list. I might be interested. I did play a little ball in school.
Lt. Jason Porter
29th Georgia Volunteer Infantry
ferinus vis quod ignarus
Baseball
Guys I will stand by and cheer. I was a PE major but can not see myself catching in a hoop skirt but best of luck this seems like a really interesting sport and sounds like a spring picnic to go along with the ball playing. Hawks and Eagles fly like Doves. CopperHeadAnnie
Im interested.
cant vouch for how much time but it sounds like a fun thing especially if there is fried chicken in the pic-a-nic basket, eh Booboo?
Seamus
(jellystone ranger)
"it is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifing......nothing"
MacBeth
Um Gee...
Yogi... the Ranger's not gonna like this!
"Hawks and Eagles fly like Doves"
Major Eric R. Reeder
CSO, 1st Division ANV, Staff
Liberty Hill Signals
2nd Lt Eric R. Reeder United States Army Corps of Topographic Engineers "Hawks and Eagles fly like Doves"
Dirigo Website
Please checkout the beginnings of what will be a great website - www.dirigobaseball.org. Just getting started and very excited about the whole project!!!
Mark A. Rohman
Augusta, ME 04330
Website and everything! so
Website and everything! so do you have Craig going to the Pt for his knee for the next season? looking to get the arthroscoptic surgery or just spends time in the whirlpool?
Maybe I can sell hot daschund sasuges on the sidelines!
Seamus
"it is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifing......nothing"
MacBeth
Official Statement
4:19 PM EST
Office of the General Manager of the Dirigo Vintage Base Ball Club:
The status of our brave slugger named Craig "Hammy" Young (nicknames were period in vintage base ball) is that he is seeing the finest doctors we have avaible, and that Hammy is a vaulable asset to the organization. His past history of contract disputes and disruptive behavior in the locker room is all in the past. A qoute from Hammys Agent, "Its just Hammy being Hammy" and yes we here at the DVBBC expect him to play a vital role in our organization for many years wether it be on or off the field.
watch out Theo, im comming for your job!
soon we will discuss your contract Seamus....
Matt
Flashbacks
His reputation has preceeded him, Hammy is infamous for his tantrums and his bat throwing,But its good to see you have a handle on him....as to my contract, i noticed there is a schedulding conflict, and besides I still am having flashbacks of nearly going off the edge of the casement at Ft. knox, and flolding back the soles of my brogans....not to mention my rampant alcholism.
Not a good role model for the kiddies, id never get my picture on a tobbacco trading card.
Seamus
(peanuts! popcorn! candied apples!)
"it is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifing......nothing"
MacBeth
How about being a mascot Seamus?
After you showcased your "groove thang" at the Chester Greenwood parade I think you'd make an excellent mascot.You could wear one of those oversized cartoon heads & no one would be the wiser about that alchoholism thing, rampant or not.
~Miss Patti
Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind~Dr. Seuss
Costume
what kind of outfit would a dirigo be????
Seamus
"it is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifing......nothing"
MacBeth
A dirigo is ...
Seamus,
A Dirigo has the head of a moose, the body of a pine tree, and the tail of a cod fish. I don't think that you will need a costume!
I guess that its bark is worst then its bite and it can be a bit horny but that just might be a fish tale.
Pvt/Lt Craig Young
3rd Maine, Company A
29th Georgia/7th Maine
December 3rd, 2005 Go NAVY!!! 2004 Game Score: Navy 42 - Army 13
MWLWN LABE! Molon labe, “Come and get them!
looks can be decieving
Despite your fairly normal exterior, you are indeed a strange man....
but I suppose that means you "think outside the box"
Seamus
(also an "idea man")
"it is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifing......nothing"
MacBeth
A reward for the elusive creature!
I understand there is a reward of a bottle of Guiness for a photograph of this elusive creature. I want one for the website!
Speaking of the website, I think the initial content is just about complete. So if you haven't looked at it in a few days then you should visit again as Mark and I have been working hard on getting all the content up. There are a few more ideas and issues we want to improve but Mark was anxious to get things going. Additional photos and news items may not appear until after the New Year.
--
Michael Johnson
First Meeting Date Changed
I have been informed by Mark Rohman that the first meeting of the Dirigo Vintage Base Ball Club has been changed to Sunday, January 15, 2006.
http://www.dirigobaseball.org/
--
Michael Johnson
America's National Pastime
America's National Pastime
Submitted by Bootlicker on December 28, 2005 - 3:51pm.
Author: Michael Aubrecht ©. Published: 07-2004. Appeared On: Baseball Almanac.
It is considered America's National Pastime. Far more than just a mere sporting event, baseball has become a major part of the American culture and has often been responsible for bringing people together in times of crisis. During war, following natural disaster and in the midst of economic hardship, the game has always provided an emotional escape for people from every race, religion and background who can collectively find solace at the ballpark. Therefore, it somehow seems fitting that the origins of modern baseball can be traced back to a divided America when the country was in the midst of a great Civil War. Despite the political and social grievances that resulted in the separation of the North and South, both sides shared some common interests such as playing baseball.
Although baseball was somewhat popular in larger communities on both sides of the Mason Dixon line, it did not achieve widespread popularity until after the war had started. The mass concentration of young men in army camps and prisons eventually converted the sport formerly reserved for "gentlemen" into a recreational pastime that could be enjoyed by people from all backgrounds. For instance, both officers and enlisted men played side by side and soldiers earned their places on the team because of their athletic talents, not their military rank or social standing. Both Union and Confederate officers endorsed baseball as a much-needed morale builder that also provided physical conditioning. After long details at camp, it eased the boredom and created team spirit among the men. Often, the teamwork displayed on the baseball diamond often translated into teamwork on the battlefield. Many times, soldiers would write of these games in letters home as they were much more pleasant to recall than the hardship of battle.
Private Alpheris B. Parker of the 10th Massachusetts wrote:
The parade ground has been a busy place for a week or so past, ball-playing having become a mania in camp. Officer and men forget, for a time, the differences in rank and indulge in the invigorating sport with a schoolboy's ardor.
Another Private, writing home from Virginia recalled:
It is astonishing how indifferent a person can become to danger. The report of musketry is heard but a very little distance from us...yet over there on the other side of the road most of our company, playing bat ball and perhaps in less than half an hour, they may be called to play a Ball game of a more serious nature.
Sometimes, games would be interrupted by the call of battle. George Putnam, a Union soldier humorously wrote of a game that was "called-early" due to the surprise attack on their camp by Confederate infantry:
Suddenly there was a scattering of fire, which three outfielders caught the brunt; the centerfield was hit and was captured, left and right field managed to get back to our lines. The attack...was repelled without serious difficulty, but we had lost not only our centerfield, but...the only baseball in Alexandria, Texas.
It has been disputed for decades whether Union General Abner Doubleday was in fact the "father of the modern game". Many baseball historians still reject the notion that Doubleday designed the first baseball diamond and drew up the modern rules. Nothing in his personal writings corroborates this story, which was originally put forward by an elderly Civil War veteran, Abner Graves, who served under him. Still, the City of Cooperstown, NY dedicated Doubleday Field in 1920 as the "official" birthplace of the organized baseball. Later Cooperstown became the home to the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
Doubleday was an 1842 graduate of West Point (graduating with A.P. Stewart, D.H. Hill, Earl Van Dorn and James Longstreet) and served in both the Mexican and Seminole wars. In 1861, he was stationed at the garrison in Charleston Harbor. It is said that it was Doubleday, an artillery officer, who aimed the first Fort Sumter guns in response to the Confederate bombardment that initiated the war. Later he served in the Shenandoah region as a brigadier of volunteers and was assigned to a brigade of Irwin McDowell's corps during the campaign of Second Manassas. He also commanded a division of the I Corps at Sharpsburg and Fredericksburg as well at Gettysburg where he assumed the command of I Corps after the fall of Gen. John F. Reynolds, helping to repel the infamous "Pickett's Charge." Strangely, his outstanding military service has been all but forgotten yet his controversial baseball legacy still lives on. Regardless of really being (or not being) the actual "inventor" of the modern version, Doubleday did apparently organized several exhibitions between Union divisions and was an apparent student and fan of the game. Many of these contests were attended by thousands of spectators and often made front-page news equal to the war reports from the field.
In 1861 at the start of the war, an amateur team made up of members of the 71st New York Regiment defeated the Washington Nationals baseball club by a score of 41 to 13. When the 71st New York later returned to the man the defenses of Washington in 1862, the teams played a rematch, which the Nationals won 28 to 13. Unfortunately, the victory came in part because some of the 71st's best athletes had been killed at Bull Run only weeks after their first game. One of the biggest attended sporting events of the nineteenth century occurred on Christmas in 1862 when the 165th New York Volunteer Regiment (Zouaves) played at Hilton Head, South Carolina with more than 40,000 troops looking on. The Zouaves' opponent was a team composed of men selected from other Union regiments. Interestingly, A.G. Mills, who would later become the president of the National League, participated in the game.
After the war ended, many men from both sides returned home to share the game that they had learned near the battlefield. Eventually organized baseball grew in popularity abroad and helped bring together a country that had been torn apart for so many years. Coincidentally, another Civil War icon, General George Armstrong Custer, was killed along with two hundred and sixty-four Union Calvary troopers after engaging the Sioux tribe at Little Big Horn the same year the first National League was established. Custer had fought at the first battle of Bull Run, distinguished himself in both the Peninsular campaign as well as Gettysburg and was selected as the Union officer to receive the Confederate flag of truce at Appomattox Courthouse. It has been reported that many members of the U.S. Calvary, most of them veterans of the Civil War, also engaged in baseball games to pass the time while protecting the western territories.
Today, over a century later, baseball is still a popular American institution and remains a testament to both "Billy Yank" AND "Johnny Reb" who laid down their muskets to pick up a ball and help establish a National Pastime.
War Games
Although early forms of baseball had already become High Society's pastime years before the first shots of the Civil War erupted at Fort Sumter, it was the mass participation of everyday soldiers that helped spread the game's popularity across the nation.
During the War Between the States, countless baseball games, originally known as "townball", were organized in Army Camps and prisons on both sides of the Mason Dixon Line. Very little documentation exists on these games and most information has been derived from letters written by both officers and enlisted men to their families on the home front. For the hundreds of pictures taken during the Civil War by photography pioneer Matthew Brady, there is only one photo in the National Archives that clearly captured a baseball game underway in the background. Several newspaper artists also depicted primitive ballgames and other forms of recreation devised to help boost troop morale and maintain physical fitness. Regardless of the lack of "media coverage", military historians have proved that baseball was a common ground in a country divided, and helped both Union and Confederate soldiers temporarily escape the horror of war.
The following table represents a few of the games that had been recorded for historical significance either by participants or observers. (For simplicity, all forms of the game including "townball" and "roundball" will be referred to as baseball.)
1862 Union
Trainees from 13th Massachusetts and 51st Pennsylvania vs. themselves. Games were played evenings on the drilling field in many training camps prior to deployment.
1862 Union
165th New York Infantry (Second Duryea’s Zouaves) vs. NY Regiment All-Star nine. Perhaps one of the most famous of all Civil War games, this one was witnessed by 40,000 troops.
1862 Union
The “Irish Brigade
PLAY BALL!!!
You are invited to the first Annual Meeting of the Dirigo Vintage Base Ball Club
When: Sunday January 15, 2006 @ 1:00 PM
Where: Apgar Office Systems 65 River Road
(RT 9) in Chelsea, Maine 04330 – Just past Soule’s Auto
Topics of Discussion:
· What Vintage Base Ball is all about
· 19th Century Base Ball Rules, Customs & Equipment
· How you can get involved…it’s very easy!!!
Contact information:
· Mark A. Rohman (President) – email: tenstix@prexar.com
- Phone: 207-626-9231
· Matt Bray (Vice- President) – email: mbraycatch@hotmail.com
· Craig “Hammy