using the presidency to teach u.s. history: the presidential “first pitch”

14
Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”

Upload: clinton-atkins

Post on 13-Dec-2015

217 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”

Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History:

The Presidential “First Pitch”

Page 2: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”
Page 3: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”

Unionist candidate John Bell: “It appears to me very singular that we three should strike “foul” and be “put out” while old Abe made such a “good lick.”

Page 4: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”

Northern Democrat Stephen A. Douglas: “That’s because he had that confounded rail to strike with. I thought our fusion would be a “short stop” to his career.”

Page 5: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”

Southern Democrat John Breckenridge: “I guess I’d better leave for Kentucky, for I smell something strong around here and begin to think that we are completely “skunked.”

Page 6: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”

Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln: “Gentlemen, if any of you should ever take a hand at another match at this game, remember that you must have a “good bat” and strike a “fair ball” to make a “clean score” & a “home run.”

Page 7: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”

President Theodore Roosevelt thought baseball a “mollycoddle” game. He preferred American football

and boxing as more “manly.”

Page 8: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”

President Taft throws outthe first presidentialfirst pitch in the USA,

14 April 1910.

Page 9: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”

This was President Wilson’s third “first pitch.”

Page 10: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”

Baseball consciously exploits a connection with patriotism. This September 1917 World Series scorecard uses an April 1916 photo of President Wilson.

Page 11: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”

Griffith StadiumWashington D.C. 1924:

Photographers crowd to recordPresident Calvin Coolidge’s

“First Pitch”

Page 12: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”

The Coolidge “first pitch” the photographers crowded to depict.

Page 13: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”
Page 14: Using the Presidency to teach U.S. History: The Presidential “First Pitch”

FDR at Griffith Stadium on Opening Day 1940