I feel bad giving this work such a low review considering the Herculean effort made by Harold and Dorothy Seymour to put together what is still one of the definitive works on early baseball history. But this is about how much I liked the book, and frankly, this one was a tough read. The writing is dense and dry, and the last names of people or a reference to an event mentioned in passing pop up again fifty pages later when the reader doesn't remember who they are and has to look back to find them. And yet one has to appreciate the ambitiousness of such a extensive volume on baseball history -- the amount of labor in its research before the age of the Internet, in an era when there weren't baseball books published on every obscure topic and a society full of experts to share this research. This book is also an interesting timepiece; this review is approximately as temporally removed from its publication as the book was from the founding of the American League (where it ends). In 1960, the reserve clause was still very real, and the authors make some eye-opening arguments for keeping it that today would be pretty preposterous (I had to laugh when they alluded to the "fat salaries" of contemporary players -- you ain't seen nothin' yet!). Major league baseball was on the eve of expansion -- of both the leagues and the amount of regularly scheduled games, integration was still very recent history, and people were only starting to realize just what all that throwing could do to a pitcher's arm. "Modern" comparisons aside, much of the history still holds up, though I wish footnoting were common practice the way it was now, so one could follow their trail -- the book still holds up as an invaluable resource on the early history of the game, albeit its tedium to give you what you need.