American Decades
My Life in Baseball: The True Record
Memoir
By: Ty Cobb, with Al Stump
Date: 1961
Source: Cobb, Ty, with Al Stump. My Life in Baseball: The True Record. New York: Doubleday, 1961, 75–79, 81.
About the Author: Ty Cobb (1886–1961) was one of the first professional baseball players to become independently wealthy. He negotiated tough contracts with baseball owners and invested his money carefully. Though a gifted player who set many records, some of which have yet to be surpassed, Cobb was a stubborn man whose personal prejudices interfered with his relationships, both personal and professional. He officially retired from baseball in 1928 and was the first of the original five players inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1936.
Introduction
By 1900, professional baseball had existed for thirty-one years, but it was largely a game of bunting, base stealing, and strategy. There were not many star...
[The entire page is 3538 words long]
1900's Sports Primary Sources
- "Boston's Champion Team"
- Bill Reid's Diary
- "General Health of Girls in Relation to Athletics"
- "Inter-School Athletics"
- "Baseball Scores Over Crap Games"
- "Athletes Aroused Over Point Scoring"
- "Travers Defeats Travis in Fine Golf"
- "Dorando Defeats Hayes in Marathon"
- "Why Sir Thomas Lipton Has So Much Trouble Challenging for the Cup"
- "Walter Camp for More Open Football"
- Fundamentals of Basketball
- "How to Play Shortstop"
- The Tumult and the Shouting: My Life in Sport
- My Life in Baseball: The True Record
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
