Excelsior Club of Spring Hill: Difference between revisions

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|Club Name=Excelsior
|Club Name=Excelsior
|Type of Date=Year
|Type of Date=Year
|Date=1868/10/01
|Date=1868/01/01
|Date of Dissolution Type=Day
|Date of Dissolution Type=Day
|Country=United States
|Country=United States
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|Nine Class=Senior
|Nine Class=Senior
|Description=<p>The <em>Mobile Register</em>, July 9, 1868, under the headline "Base Ball at Spring Hill" reports that the St. Elmo team is to play the Excelsior team, which is made up of students of Spring Hill College.</p>
|Description=<p>The <em>Mobile Register</em>, July 9, 1868, under the headline "Base Ball at Spring Hill" reports that the St. Elmo team is to play the Excelsior team, which is made up of students of Spring Hill College.</p>
<p>Spring Hill was annexed by Mobile in the 1900s. Spring Hill College is an old Jesuit College. Cuhaj, "Baseball in Mobile" pp. 9, 15 says that the college students played baseball among themselves as early as 1860. The book cites the reminiscences of Nemesio Gallo, a Cuban who attended the college starting in May 1860 and later said he learned the game of baseball while at the school.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Spring Hill was annexed by Mobile in the 1900s. Spring Hill College is an old Jesuit College. Cuhaj, "Baseball in Mobile" pp. 9, 15 says that the college students played baseball among themselves as early as 1860. The book cites the reminiscences of Nemesio Guillo, a Cuban who attended the college starting in May 1860 and later said he learned the game of baseball while at the school.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Spring Hill was a Catholic school where many of New Orleans' wealthy families sent their sons. Seeing as how baseball was played in New Orlaans in 1859, many of these students would, by 1860 at least, have been exposed to baseball prior to attending.</p>
<p>Spring Hill was a Catholic school where many of New Orleans' wealthy families sent their sons. Seeing as how baseball was played in New Orlaans in 1859, many of these students would, by 1860 at least, have been exposed to baseball prior to attending.</p>
|Sources=<p>The&nbsp;<em>Mobile Register</em>, July 9, 1868</p>
|Sources=<p>The&nbsp;<em>Mobile Register</em>, July 9, 1868</p>
|Has Source On Hand=No
|Has Source On Hand=No
|Comment=<p>In Feb. of 2023 a marker was dedicated at Spring hill to the Cuban spring Hill students who introduce baseball to Cuba. See&nbsp;https://www.shc.edu/from-the-hill-to-havana-how-spring-hill-college-launched-cubas-national-pastime/&nbsp;</p>
<p>"Next month, Cuba celebrates Spring Hill College and three of its graduates, Nemesio Guillo, his older brother Ernesto, and Enrique Porto who brought baseball from The Hill to Havana. Representatives from the city of Mobile, Havana&rsquo;s sister city, will take part in a ceremony dedicating a ballpark built to honor the country&rsquo;s baseball history. A marker describing the relationship between Spring Hill College and baseball in Cuba will serve as the centerpiece of the park. Blake Stein, a 2005 graduate of Spring Hill will represent the College. He is a former pitcher and MLB player and currently serves as an Assistant Principal at McGill-Toolen Catholic High School.</p>
<p>&ldquo;As a new addition to the Spring Hill community, I have enjoyed learning about the almost 200-year history of the College and meeting our incredible students,&rdquo; said Spring Hill&rsquo;s President, Mary H. Van Brunt, PhD. &ldquo;This is another example of how the College and its alumni have had such a profound and global impact through their experience on the Hill.&rdquo;</p>
<p>After graduating in 1864, The Guillo brothers headed back home and the sport they learned at Spring Hill spread quickly across Cuba. In 1868 they founded the country&rsquo;s first baseball team, the Habana Base Ball Club. The sport had become a large part of the culture not just for the game but for what it represented to Cubans, both nationally and internationally.</p>
<p>After forming the nation&rsquo;s first baseball team, the duo, along with the first Latin American professional baseball player in the United States Esteban Bell&aacute;n, played against a group of American sailors, which ended with the Cubans triumphant after delivering a &ldquo;sovereign beating&rdquo; to the hometown opponents. Word spread of the victory in the country, as did enthusiasm for the sport."</p>
|Reviewed=Yes
|Reviewed=Yes
|Submitted by=Bruce Allardice,
|Submitted by=Bruce Allardice
|Entered by=Bruce Allardice
|Entered by=Bruce Allardice
|First in Location=Spring Hill, AL
|First in Location=Spring Hill, AL
|Has Supplemental Text=No
|Has Supplemental Text=No
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 07:45, 8 February 2024

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Awaiting Review
Nick Name Excelsior
Earliest Known Date 1868
Location Spring Hill, AL, United States
Modern Address Mobile
Nine Class Senior
Description

The Mobile Register, July 9, 1868, under the headline "Base Ball at Spring Hill" reports that the St. Elmo team is to play the Excelsior team, which is made up of students of Spring Hill College.

Spring Hill was annexed by Mobile in the 1900s. Spring Hill College is an old Jesuit College. Cuhaj, "Baseball in Mobile" pp. 9, 15 says that the college students played baseball among themselves as early as 1860. The book cites the reminiscences of Nemesio Guillo, a Cuban who attended the college starting in May 1860 and later said he learned the game of baseball while at the school. 

Spring Hill was a Catholic school where many of New Orleans' wealthy families sent their sons. Seeing as how baseball was played in New Orlaans in 1859, many of these students would, by 1860 at least, have been exposed to baseball prior to attending.

Sources

The Mobile Register, July 9, 1868

Comment

In Feb. of 2023 a marker was dedicated at Spring hill to the Cuban spring Hill students who introduce baseball to Cuba. See https://www.shc.edu/from-the-hill-to-havana-how-spring-hill-college-launched-cubas-national-pastime/ 

"Next month, Cuba celebrates Spring Hill College and three of its graduates, Nemesio Guillo, his older brother Ernesto, and Enrique Porto who brought baseball from The Hill to Havana. Representatives from the city of Mobile, Havana’s sister city, will take part in a ceremony dedicating a ballpark built to honor the country’s baseball history. A marker describing the relationship between Spring Hill College and baseball in Cuba will serve as the centerpiece of the park. Blake Stein, a 2005 graduate of Spring Hill will represent the College. He is a former pitcher and MLB player and currently serves as an Assistant Principal at McGill-Toolen Catholic High School.

“As a new addition to the Spring Hill community, I have enjoyed learning about the almost 200-year history of the College and meeting our incredible students,” said Spring Hill’s President, Mary H. Van Brunt, PhD. “This is another example of how the College and its alumni have had such a profound and global impact through their experience on the Hill.”

After graduating in 1864, The Guillo brothers headed back home and the sport they learned at Spring Hill spread quickly across Cuba. In 1868 they founded the country’s first baseball team, the Habana Base Ball Club. The sport had become a large part of the culture not just for the game but for what it represented to Cubans, both nationally and internationally.

After forming the nation’s first baseball team, the duo, along with the first Latin American professional baseball player in the United States Esteban Bellán, played against a group of American sailors, which ended with the Cubans triumphant after delivering a “sovereign beating” to the hometown opponents. Word spread of the victory in the country, as did enthusiasm for the sport."

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Found by Bruce Allardice
Entered by Bruce Allardice
First in Location Spring Hill, AL

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