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Doc Adams

Doc Adams

Baseball player and executive

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Person
Person

Person attributes

Birthdate
November 1, 1814
Birthplace
Mont Vernon, New Hampshire
Mont Vernon, New Hampshire
Date of Death
January 3, 1899
Place of Death
New Haven, Connecticut
New Haven, Connecticut
Nationality
United States
United States
Educated at
Yale University
Yale University
Harvard Medical School
Harvard Medical School
Occupation
Politician
Politician
Physician
Physician

Other attributes

Wikidata ID
Q5287015

Daniel Lucius "Doc" Adams (November 1, 1814 – January 3, 1899) was an American baseball player and executive who is regarded by historians as an important figure in the sport's early years. For most of his career he was a member of the New York Knickerbockers. He first played for the New York Base Ball Club in 1840 and started his Knickerbockers career five years later, continuing to play for the club into his forties and to take part in inter-squad practice games and matches against opposing teams. Researchers have called Adams the creator of the shortstop position, which he used to field short throws from outfielders. In addition to his playing career, Adams manufactured baseballs and oversaw bat production; he also occasionally acted as an umpire.

From 1847 to 1861, the Knickerbockers selected Adams as their president six times, and as a vice president, treasurer, or director in six other years. As president of the club, Adams was an advocate of rule changes in baseball that resulted in nine-man teams and nine-inning games. When the National Association of Base Ball Players (NABBP) was formed in 1858, he led the rules and regulations committee of the new organization. In his role, Adams ruled that the fields' bases should be 90 feet (27 m) apart, the modern distance, and supported the elimination of the "bound rule", which allowed for balls caught after one bounce to be recorded as outs. He resigned from his positions with the Knickerbockers and NABBP in 1862. Adams' contributions in creating baseball's rules went largely unrecognized for decades after his 1899 death, but in 1980 a letter about him appeared in The New York Times; by 1993, researcher John Thorn had written about Adams' role. Other historians have given him credit for helping to develop the sport, and Thorn has called Adams "first among the Fathers of Baseball".

A graduate of Yale University and Harvard Medical School, Adams began working in the medical field in the late 1830s, and practiced in New York City during his time as a member of the Knickerbockers. In 1865, he left medicine and later became a bank president and member of the Connecticut legislature. He and his wife had five children.

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Further Resources

Title
Author
Link
Type
Date

Before They Were Cardinals: Major League Baseball in Nineteenth-Century St. Louis

Cash, Jon David

2002

The Baseball: Stunts, Scandals, and Secrets Beneath the Stitches

Hample, Zack

2011

The General Catalogue and a Brief History of Kimball Union Academy

Geroud, Samuel Lankton, ed.

1880

Peverelly's National Game

Freyer, John; Rucker, Mark

2005

References

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