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The Umpire Strikes Out: Baseball Music and Labor

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This post is by Katherine Walden, a 2017 summer intern with the Junior Fellows Program. Walden is a Ph.D. candidate in American studies and sport studies at the University of Iowa, where she is also completing a master’s degree in library and information science with a focus on digital humanities and archives. She has a bachelor’s degree in music from Vanderbilt University.

Katherine Walden at Vanderbilt University’s Hawkins Field. Photo by John Russell, Vanderbilt University.

This summer, I have been updating the Music Division’s 1991 baseball music bibliography, which identifies over 400 baseball-related titles in the division’s holdings. Much like a scavenger hunt, my internship involves thinking about where baseball songs might be in the collection, as well as what keywords or search terms might lead to copyright deposits for previously unknown baseball songs. My goal is to at least double the bibliography’s size to provide a robust resource for Library staff, academic researchers and anyone who wants to know more about baseball.

Among my many interesting finds, songs about umpires especially stand out for me. I research U.S. popular culture and baseball labor history, and umpire songs offer a fascinating glimpse into both.

Today, the umpire is frequently an object of fan ridicule. But long before instant replay destabilized umpires’ authority, early baseball fans—and Tin Pan Alley songwriters—looked for ways to ridicule “the man behind the plate.” I have yet to find a song written from an umpire’s perspective, which suggests songwriters thought depicting umpires as humorous or pitiful would have better popular culture traction than attempts to rehabilitate the umpire.

The chorus to the 1909 title “Let’s Get the Umpire’s Goat,” written by Nora Bayes and Jack Norworth (a co-writer of “Take Me Out to the Ball Game”), shows how fans expressed their frustration with the umpire:

“Let’s Get the Umpire’s Goat,” by Nora Bayes and Jack Norworth.

Let’s get the Umpire’s goat, goat, goat
Let’s make him go up in the air
We’ll yell, Oh you robber! Go somewhere and die
Back to the bush, You’ve got mud in your eye
Oh, what an awful decision!
Why don’t you put spectacles on?
Let’s holler like sin, and then our side will win,
When the umpire’s nanny is gone.

The 1905 title “The Umpire Is a Most Unhappy Man” suggests that driving a hearse was the only profession worse than being an umpire. The chorus asks

How’d you like to be an umpire
Work like his is merely play
He don’t even have to ask for
All the things that come his way
When the crowd yells, ‘knock his block off’
‘Soak him good,’ says ev’ry fan
Then who wants to be an umpire
The brickbats whiz when he gets his
For the umpire is a most unhappy man.

Listen at the Library’s National Jukebox:

Even the famous “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” includes a passing reference to umpires. The song’s main character, Katie Casey, “saw all the games” and “told the umpire he was wrong, all along good and strong.”

“Take Me Out to the Ballgame,” by Jack Norworth and Albert Von Tilzer.

Though entertaining, early 20th-century songs about umpires also reflect changes in popular culture and a period in American labor history rife with worker strikes and labor activism.

Early baseball in the United States existed primarily in upscale gentlemen’s clubs, but after the Civil War and into the 20th century, entrepreneurs like Albert Spaulding and Henry Chadwick made strategic efforts to market the game to working class fans, from mass-produced baseball equipment to inexpensive annual baseball guides.

As baseball infiltrated popular culture, labor in professional baseball became a contentious issue, just as it was in other realms. The American Federation of Labor had formed in 1886, the Western Federation of Miners was established in 1893, and the Pullman railway strike took place in 1894. Also occurring were a variety of coal strikes and movements advocating living wages, child labor laws and safe working conditions.

In baseball, it was team owners and league officials who were most often in tension with players in labor debates. But the umpire was an easier target, and composers continued writing songs about umpires past World War II.

Want to see more songs about baseball umpires? Check out umpire-related titles in the Library’s digitized sheet music collections.

To learn more about baseball songs in the era of sheet music, visit the Library’s exhibition “Baseball’s Greatest Hits: The Music of Our National Game.”

Comments (8)

  1. The Natick Massachusetts public library, the Morse Institute, might have information for you as the building near it is still referred to as the baseball factory where equipment was made

  2. Great article about one of our great American pastimes! The umpires have a tough job!

  3. Only a PhD candidate could love an umpire!

  4. Another wonderful article. My daughter is a baseball fanatic. I will be forwarding this to her.

  5. Have you researched Hotso Casey’s songs including “Don’t Kill the Ump”?

  6. From Katherine Walden
    Thank you for your inquiry. My post focused on early umpire songs from Tin Pan Alley, but the Library has songs from later in the 20th century, including the Hotso Casey title. Interestingly, they highlight how attitudes toward umpires haven’t really changed that much.

  7. I see this article was written in 2017 so hopefully you might be interested if it’s not too late.
    We have some letters and articles about Hotso Casey along with his whole catalog or at least most of it, of baseball songs. There is also some info about his friend Novella O’Hara a reporter at the San Francisco Chronicle.
    We have a binder with some info along with the sheet music of aproximately 3 hundred songs. I didn’t count them but there are a lot of them.
    Would you be interested in this collection?
    My husband is a sports collector and we purchased this along with a box of local sports items.
    Let me know anytime.
    Sincerely, Jan Lahti

    • Hi Jan,

      Thanks for thinking of us! I’ll pass along your email to the curators and let them follow up.

      All Best,
      Neely

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