The Florence Eagles

The Florence Eagles (HM18PI)

Location: Northampton, MA 01062 Hampshire County
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Country: United States of America
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N 42° 20.117', W 72° 40.4'

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Inscription
The Florence Eagles were once one of the legendary teams of early baseball history. In 1865, as the Civil War drew to a close, the Army of the Potomac had its own championship team composed mainly of youths from Western Massachusetts. One of the team's members wrote to a friend in Florence suggesting that when they returned home they could play a local team. Almost immediately, young men from several area teams joined the Florence Eagles. The Eagles met the team of returned veterans on August 1, 1865, and as the Courier reported, "To the surprise of nearly everyone, the Eagle was victorious." Among the players that year was Luther Askin, thought to be the first African-American to play on an integrated baseball team in the nation.

Throughout the rest of the summer, the Eagles played teams from Conway, Amherst College, Easthampton, and Haydenville—all of which they won. Over the winter of 1865-66, the Eagles attracted as many as 100 members. With so many supporters, the Eagles could afford to challenge clubs from outside the area. They traveled to New York to compete against the two most powerful clubs of the day, the Brooklyn Excelsior's and Brooklyn Atlantics—-and not unexpectedly lost. It was no shame for the Eagles to lose to the Atlantics by five runs on November 5, 1866, since the Atlantics were regarded as national champions.

In 1867, the Eagles defeated teams from all over the Northeast—-Greenfield, Pittsfield, New Bedford, Meriden, CT, New London CT, and elsewhere. Recognized as the champions of Western Massachusetts, the Eagles were invited to Boston to play against four other teams from the eastern part of the state. The Eagles advanced to the finals against the Tri-Mountain Club of Boston, but soon decided that the umpire was biased in favor of the home team and after several disputed calls forfeited the game. The Eagles did not field a team in 1868 or thereafter but the record of the Eagles stands some 60 games played, of which they lost only 7, five of them (including the forfeit in Boston) to the strongest teams in the nation.
Details
HM NumberHM18PI
Tags
Placed ByHistoric Northampton
Marker ConditionNo reports yet
Date Added Tuesday, September 30th, 2014 at 5:10pm PDT -07:00
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Locationbig map
UTM (WGS84 Datum)18T E 691679 N 4689625
Decimal Degrees42.33528333, -72.67333333
Degrees and Decimal MinutesN 42° 20.117', W 72° 40.4'
Degrees, Minutes and Seconds42° 20' 7.02" N, 72° 40' 24.00" W
Driving DirectionsGoogle Maps
Area Code(s)413
Closest Postal AddressAt or near 67 Park St, Northampton MA 01062, US
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