

What follows is a guide to some of the more significant baseball related
holdings in the University Libraries of Notre Dame. Its purpose is to provide
researchers with a convenient overview of available resources in this subject
area; it does not aspire to be comprehensive. Some types of materials, including
virtually all monographs and some annual and periodical titles, are included
in the University Libraries Online Catalog, and may be found in
various locations throughout Hesburgh Library, as detailed on the individual
catalog record. Other materials, including some annuals and periodicals and
most yearbooks, media guides, programs, scorecards, and special collections,
have no catalog records; these items are held in the Rare Books Unit of the
Department of Special Collections, 102 Hesburgh Library. Such items may
be consulted in the reading room of the Department, from 8:00 A.M. to 5:00
P.M. weekdays. Researchers interested in materials specifically pertaining
to the history of baseball at Notre Dame should contact University
Archives, 607 Hesburgh Library.
Title or collection descriptions on this page are linked to records,
inventories, and other appropriate types of finding aid. The dates that
follow many of the annual and periodical titles on this page indicate the
span of years a given title was published; available holdings are indicated
in the linked finding aid. Questions concerning the materials on the page
may be directed to the Curator of the Joyce Sports Research Collection,
George Rugg, 102 Hesburgh Library.
Monographs
- Approximately 1500 titles in the Library of Congress GV 862-880 range.
These titles may be searched in the
University of Notre Dame Libraries' Online Catalog: most are available for circulation,
and may be found on the upper floors of Hesburgh Library. Some older or
scarcer baseball-related titles are held in the Department of Rare Books and
Special Collections, 102 Hesburgh Library.
Annuals -- guide format
- Complete holdings of the Spalding (1876-1939), Reach (1883-1939), Spalding-Reach
(1940-41), and Sporting News (1942- ) annual
guides. Historically, the guides have sought to provide a narrative and
statistical chronicle of the previous year's events in professional baseball
-- though the Spalding and Reach books generally include some treatment
of amateur and semi-pro ball as well. From 1883-91 coverage of the two
major leagues was largely divided between Reach (American Association)
and Spalding (National League); a similar situation obtained nominally
after 1900, with the Reach billing itself as the official guide of the
new American League, but the emphasis in coverage is not that marked. Given
the frequently excellent editorial content of the guides, there is no better
source for obtaining a good contemporary overview of a given season.
- Complete or near complete holdings of such annual record books as Spalding's Official Base Ball Record (1908-24)
and its successor, the Little Red Book of Baseball
(1926-32, 1934-71); and the variously titled Sporting
News annual record books (1908-42, 1948- ).
- Complete or near complete holdings of Who's Who
in Baseball (1912, 1916-); Who's Who in the
Major Leagues (1933, 1935-52); and the Sporting
News Baseball Register (1940- ). These annuals all emphasize biographical
and statistical information on contemporary major leaguers.
- Holdings of various annuals emphasizing instructional material. Among
these are Hillerich and Bradsby's Famous Slugger
Year Book and the extensive Spalding's Athletic Library series, including
How to Play Base Ball (1903-35), How
to Play First Base (1905-20), How to Play
Second Base (1905-20), How to Play Third Base
(1905-20), How to Play Short Stop (1905-20),
How to Play the Infield and How to Play the
Outfield (1905-40), How to Pitch (1905-33),
How to Catch (1905-35), How
to Run Bases (1905-35), How to Bat (1905-40),
How to Umpire (1905-40), How
to Organize a League (1919-36), How to Score
a Base Ball Game (1911-20), and Official Indoor
Base Ball Guide.
- Complete holdings of the Whitman/Dell Major League
Baseball (1937-39, 1941-53), an annual notable for its inclusion of
the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League in its 1945 to 1948
editions.
Annuals -- magazine format
Periodicals
- The Sporting News (1886- ). Complete
holdings. Microform. The erstwhile "Bible of Baseball."
- The Sporting Life (1883-1917). Complete
holdings. Microform. Published in Philadelphia by Francis Richter (who
also edited the Reach guides for many years), Sporting Life provided
much the same sort of detailed weekly coverage of the game as Sporting
News -- though Richter's editorial stances often differ from those
of the Spinks. Unlike Sporting News, Sporting Life did not concern
itself exclusively with baseball; for many years the masthead read "A
Weekly Newspaper Devoted to Base Ball and Trap Shooting" - and news
on shooting does in fact occupy as much as 25% of each issue.
- Baseball Magazine (1908-57, 1964-65). The premier
baseball monthly of the first half of the century. Strong holdings
from 1922.
- Baseball Digest (1942- ). Near complete
holdings from 1945-74, and 1989 to date. Paper and microform.
- Near complete holdings in microform of several early sporting weeklies
emphasizing baseball: The Ball Players' Chronicle
and its continuation, The American Chronicle
of Sports and Pastimes (1867-68), and The New
England Base Ballist and its continuation, The
National Chronicle (1868-70). Also, substantial holdings of The New York Clipper (1853-1924) from 1857 to 1884.
- A small collection of American League and
National League team newsletters, mostly from the
1940s, 1950s, and 1960s.
Yearbooks and media guides
Programs and scorecards
- A collection of over 2400 American League and National League regular season
and exhibition game programs and scorecards. Most of the programs in the
collection date from the decades of the 1930s, 40s, 50s, and 60s; examples
from the Dead Ball Era (1900-20) number no more than a half dozen. Finding
aids to home game programs for all franchises may be accessed by clicking on the
links below:
- A group of 88 World Series programs,
spanning the years 1926 to 1996.
- A group of 26
major league All-Star Game programs, from 1937 to 1986.
- A collection of approximately 2300 minor league baseball
programs and scorecards. Programs issued by clubs from all levels of
organized baseball, and from all parts of the United States, are included;
teams from the Pacific Coast League are especially well represented.
The programs date mostly from the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, though items
ranging in date from the 1890s to the 2000s are included. Finding aids
to home game programs for all franchises represented in the collection are
currently available, and may be accessed by clicking on the links below.
Teams are listed alphabetically, by home city.
- A small collection of earlier college programs and
scorecards; most are from eastern schools and date from the late 19th and
early 20th centuries.
Special Collections
- A collection of sixty-four autographed baseballs,
1914-1996. Included are team-signed, group-signed, and single-signature
balls; signatures of close to fifty Hall of Famers are represented. An
illustrated on-line catalog of this collection has recently been added
to this website. Gifts of John J. Evers, Jr; Emmit Jennings; Mike Ravine.
- A collection of materials on the All-American Girls Baseball League,
1943-1954. Most of the collection consists of records compiled by Dr. Harold
T. Dailey, a South Bend, IN dentist and president of the league's South
Bend Blue Sox franchise from 1948 to 1950. Much of the Dailey material
is included in a set of ten loose-leaf notebooks totaling over 1100 leaves,
with items r. and v.; these were apparently intended as a documentary history
of the league, and perhaps as source material for a narrative history Dailey
never found time to write. Included are minutes of the meetings of the
AAGBL Board of Directors, financial information, and player information
and statistics, as well as correspondence, newspaper clippings, printed
ephemera, and photographic materials. Much of the documentary material
is in the form of transcriptions from the originals, onto heavy Manila
stock. Notebooks are arranged chronologically, and cover the full span
of the league's history, from 1943 to 1954, with an emphasis on the South
Bend franchise. Finding aids to the 314 photographic prints in the Dailey
notebooks and elsewhere in the AAGBL collection may be consulted by clicking
on the following categories:
- A collection of 120 open reel audio tapes,
most about forty-five minutes, of interviews conducted by Lawrence S. Ritter
for his seminal oral history The Glory of Their Times (1966). From
1963 to 1965 Ritter sought out and interviewed players of the 1900-1930
era, editing the resulting tapes into one of the most entertaining and
significant of all baseball books. These tapes are copies of the originals,
which are now in Cooperstown. Gift of Lawrence S. Ritter.
- An accumulation of scrapbooks on American baseball.
These consist almost entirely of newspaper clippings from local dailies
and sporting weeklies; content includes both off-field developments and
game accounts and box scores, with a general emphasis on the professional
game at its most elite level. Dates vary, but the greatest emphasis is
on the years 1870-1885. Many of the scrapbooks are held only in microform,
while in other cases only the paper originals are held.
- Research notes and other materials accumulated by Marshall Smelser while writing
his 1975 biography of Babe Ruth, The Life That Ruth Built. Included are 1) a
file of approximately 1500 index cards, chronologically arranged, indicating
the news and feature stories on Ruth that appeared in The New York Times,
1914-1969; 2) a file of approximately 6500 index cards of facts and observations
pertaining to Ruth, with sources, arranged by chapter (i. e., in the sequence in which
the relevant material appeared in the book); 3) a collection of 74 photographs relating
to Ruth, most of which appeared in the book. Smelser was a long-time professor of history
at the University of Notre Dame. Location: HESB Special Coll (Sports).
- A collection of materials on the Pete Rose gambling investigation
of 1989. These materials, consisting primarily of photocopies of documents and clippings,
were assembled in 1989 by journalist Jim Newton of the Fort Hamilton (OH) Press, and
acquired by the University Libraries in 1990. Included are copies of the Dowd Report (Major
League Baseball's investigation into Rose's activities) with its many attendant volumes of
exhibits; legal documents pertaining to the Rose affair; and newspaper clippings tracking
the case from March to September, 1989. Location: HESB Special Coll (Sports).
- A small collection of books, scrapbooks, photographs, and personal
effects belonging to Hall of Fame second baseman Johnny Evers (1883-1947).
Much of the material relates to the exhibition series played in Europe
in 1924 by the New York Giants and Chicago White Sox, a series in which
Evers participated as White Sox manager. Gift of John J. Evers, Jr. Location:
HESB Special Coll (Sports).
[Home/Table of Contents]
http://www.sports.nd.edu
Questions and comments about this homepage should be
directed to George.K.Rugg.1@nd.edu
Copyright 1996. University of Notre Dame. Last update: 2/18/05