Description
Smith, who USA Today has called “America’s voice of authority on baseball broadcasting,” begins before America’s birth, when would-be presidents played baseball antecedents. He charts how baseball cemented its reputation as America’s pastime in the nineteenth century. Smith tracks every U.S. president from Theodore Roosevelt to Joe Biden, each chapter filled with anecdotes: Woodrow Wilson, buoyed by baseball after suffering disability; a heroic Franklin Roosevelt, saving baseball in World War II; Jimmy Carter, taught the game by his mother, Lillian; and George H. W. Bush, who explained, “Baseball has everything.”
The Presidents and the Pastime provides a riveting narrative of how America’s leaders have treated baseball. From William Howard Taft, the first president to throw the “first pitch” on Opening Day in 1910, to Barack Obama’s “Go [White] Sox!” scrawled in the guest register at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in 2014, our presidents have deemed it the quintessentially American sport.
Book Information
ISBN 9781496241023
Author Curt Smith
Format Paperback
Page Count 504
Imprint University of Nebraska Press
Publisher University of Nebraska Press