| Management number | 233458080 | Release Date | 2026/06/27 | List Price | US$10.34 | Model Number | 233458080 | ||
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Orioles Lost / Orioles Found: Baltimore Baseball from 1890 to 1954 tells the untold story of a city that lost its team, endured half a century of exile, and reclaimed its rightful place in the national game. In 1902, the Baltimore Orioles were stripped from their city and sold away for only $18,000, their players transferred to become the New York Hihglanders – then the Yankees - in one of the most bitter betrayals in American sports. What followed was not silence but endurance. For more than fifty years, Baltimore lived in the shadow of absence, keeping its baseball culture alive through sandlots, industrial leagues, and the International League Orioles. This is a history of Baltimore baseball exile and return, a chronicle of how loss deepened loyalty and how restoration became redemption.Bill Johns traces the arc of Baltimore baseball with historical depth and cultural insight. He brings to life the legendary 1890s Orioles under Ned Hanlon—John McGraw snarling at umpires, Willie Keeler perfecting “hit ’em where they ain’t,” Wilbert Robinson blocking the plate—and shows how their cunning brilliance shaped the game itself. He follows the heartbreak of 1902, when Baltimore was discarded, and the defiant hope of 1914 when the Baltimore Terrapins of the Federal League gave the city a fleeting chance at major league recognition. The collapse of the Terrapins left scars, but also proved that Baltimore would never accept life on the margins.Through decades of minor-league triumphs, Jack Dunn’s Orioles became more than a ballclub. They were a lifeline, sustaining Baltimore’s connection to the game and producing players who left their mark on baseball’s history. A young pitcher named George Herman “Babe” Ruth passed briefly through Dunn’s roster in 1914, a reminder that even in exile Baltimore still shaped the national pastime. Local pride rested not only on individual stars, but on the persistence of the team itself, which carried the city’s name and spirit through years when the major leagues refused to recognize it.When the St. Louis Browns moved east in 1954 and were reborn as the Orioles, the roar of Memorial Stadium was not the sound of novelty but of vindication. The return of the name “Orioles” united the city’s fractured baseball past—the champions of the 1890s, the minor-league heirs, the memory of the Terrapins—and restored Baltimore to its rightful place among America’s baseball capitals. From the bitterness of 1902 to the joy of Opening Day in 1954, Baltimore baseball cultural history is revealed here as a story of identity, memory, and endurance.Orioles Lost / Orioles Found is both history and elegy. It shows how Baltimore transformed exile into loyalty, how generations carried a scar and turned it into pride, and how the return of the Orioles was more than a relocation—it was redemption.Step into the silence after 1902, follow the long vigil of a city’s devotion, walk through the gates of Memorial Stadium in 1954, and hear the city roar its long-awaited answer. This is the story of Baltimore baseball—its loss, its memory, and its return. Read more
| ASIN | B0FMY1F7FT |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 979-8298700030 |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Independently published |
| Dimensions | 6.24 x 0.99 x 9.24 inches |
| Item Weight | 1.33 pounds |
| Print length | 353 pages |
| Part of series | Legends of the Lineup: Icons in American Sport |
| Publication date | August 18, 2025 |
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