The Nats and the Grays: How Baseball in the Nation's Capital Survived WWII and Changed the Game Forever

The Nats and the Grays: How Baseball in the Nation's Capital Survived WWII and Changed the Game Forever

The Nats and the Grays: How Baseball in the Nation's Capital Survived WWII and Changed the Game Forever

The Nats and the Grays: How Baseball in the Nation's Capital Survived WWII and Changed the Game Forever

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Overview

On a chilly Sunday, December 7, 1941, major league baseball’s owners gathered in Chicago for their annual winter meetings, just two months after one of baseball’s greatest seasons. For the owners, the attack on Pearl Harbor that morning was also an attack on baseball. They feared a complete shutdown of the coming 1942 season and worried about players they might lose to military service. But with the support of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the national pastime continued.

The Nats and the Grays: How Baseball in the Nation’s Capital Survived WWII and Changed the Game Forever examines the impact of the war on the two teams in Washington, DC—the Nationals of the American League and the Homestead Grays of the Negro Leagues—as well as the impact of the war on major league baseball as a whole. Each chapter is devoted to a wartime year, beginning with 1941 and ending with the return of peacetime in 1946, including the exciting American League pennant races of 1942-1945. This account details how the strong friendship between FDR and Nationals team owner Clark Griffith kept the game alive throughout the war, despite numerous calls to shut it down; the constant uncertainties the game faced each season as the military draft, federal mandates, national rationing, and other wartime regulations affected the sport; and the Negro Leagues’ struggle for recognition, solvency, and integration.

In addition to recounting the Nationals’ and the Grays’ battles on and off the field during the war, this book looks beyond baseball and details the critical events that were taking place on the home front, such as the creation of the GI Bill, the internment of Japanese Americans, labor strikes, and the fight for racial equality. World War II buffs, Negro League historians, baseball enthusiasts, and fans of the present-day Washington Nationals will all find this book on wartime baseball a fascinating and informative read.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442245754
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 03/26/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 342
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

David E. Hubler is a professional writer who has worked for such organizations as the Washington Post Co., United Press International, and the Voice of America, where he served as the literary editor for a decade. He has written numerous articles for such publications as The Washington Times magazine, The Washington Post, and Islands Magazine. This is his fourth book.

Joshua H. Drazen is a professional writer and researcher. He has been a Washington correspondent for the Medill News Service, a reporter for the Times newspaper in Chicago, and a reporter on Capitol Hill for a variety of news outlets.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Preface
Chapter One 1941: BP – Before Pearl Harbor
Chapter Two 1942: Changing Uniforms
Chapter Three 1943: Coming Up Just Short
Chapter Four 1944: Meet Me in St. Louie, Bluege
Chapter Five 1945: Rounding Third and Heading Home
Afterword 1946: Extra Innings
Notes
Index
About The Authors
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