Big
League sluggers Babe Ruth and Shoeless Joe Jackson
Ten
Bucks for One
Field
of Dreams
or
A Brief History of Pro Ball
in
Contra Costa County
by
Jamie Jobb
“Bush League” –
Also see “Bush-leaguers”.
Adj.
1) Below good
standards, not good or incorrect.
Pitiful, poor,
terrible, awful, bad
…
Some
folks toss out the term “semi-professional baseball” to describe
teams like the neophyte Martinez Clippers – hoping to distinguish
top-salaried Big League pros from gig ballplayers who play the game
for grins and stipends.
But
the Clippers don’t care to be known as a “semi-pro” team, and
who could blame them? The new local nine consider
themselves part of “an independent league” ranked at a “high
single-A minor league level” – although the six-team Pacific
Association is not connected in any way with Major League Baseball®
and its full multitude of contract players, impartial umpires,
licensed brands and dedicated minions decorated in team swag.
Paraprofessional
baseball is nothing new to Contra Costa. Many so-called “semi-pro”
teams existed throughout the county, particularly around the turn of
the Twentieth Century and well into the World War years. Like
Vaudeville, these ball clubs began to fade away with the advent of
television and stay-at-home families diverted by other “post-war”
pastimes. Some of them downgraded into adult recreational softball
leagues open to anyone who could regularly show up for games.
Urban
sophisticates called these underpaid players “bush-leaguers” –
implying they were lost in The Sporting Outback somewhere south of
Down Under. The term also applied to any minor league team not
within the “Big Leagues”.
But
on these underfunded local teams, a self-certain attitude always
persisted – “If-you-build-it-they-will-come”. Indeed three of
these 20th Century “Field-of-Dreams” ballparks have
survived to this very day – and that’s half of the Pacific
Association’s venues. The Vallejo Admirals still use that town’s
charming old wooden ballyard in Wilson Park, the San Rafael Pacifics
call venerable Albert Park home and the Sonoma Stompers use Arnold
Field just a short walk north of the town square.
*
* *
In
the old days, if your team couldn’t afford the luxury of a
neighborhood ballyard, it used a convenient farmer’s field.
Curious, isn’t it, that ballyards are often called “fields” to
acknowledge the sport’s grass-roots? “Once in a while,” wrote
Nilda Rego, “the farmer would want his field back and the team
would have to move.”
Port
Costa (current population 228) once was a major West Coast deep-water
port that supported teams known as the Tigers, the Wild Cats and the
Bull Valleys. In the 1920s, the growing towns of Concord, Pittsburg,
Antioch, Richmond joined with Martinez to field semi-pro teams in the
Three C League. A hundred years ago, Pacheco (current population
3,685) cheered for its All-Stars.
Rego
in her 1988 Contra Costa Times article – “The national pastime
was once a local obsession” – quotes Ernie Mangini whose father
played for those Pacheco Stars:
“You
brought in a pitcher, paid him ten dollars. That was big money.”
Rego
also wrote that in the 1930s “every major manufacturing plant in
the county seemed to have a baseball team”. And plant managers
were always scouting for potential employees who also were productive
on the basepaths. Shell Oil,
and
Union 76 fielded rival teams in the Refinery League. Then, as now,
players had colorful names – Louis Ferreira, Poly Northcutt, Coco
Commuzzi.
Martinez
historian Tom Greerty recalls the Refinery League was filled with a
lot of former major leaguers who played “really good baseball”.
And they “got paid” for playing ball at night by working for
Shell in the daytime.
“It
was a way to get a good job,” Greerty said. “The refineries were
always looking for a worker who could play second base.”
*
* *
Thanks
to Harriett Burt and Tom Greerty; Andrea Blachman and Richard Patchin
at the Martinez Museum; Priscilla Couden and Maxine Brown at the
Contra Costa History Center for all their help is preparing this
brief report.
*
* *
“Days
Gone By, Vol. 1” by Nilda Rego. Available at the Contra Costa
History Museum.
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