Inventing the Boston Game

Regular price €34.99
1860s football game
19th century Boston sports
A01=Kevin Tallec Marston
A01=Mike Cronin
Abner Doubleday
American football invention debate
American football origin story
Author_Kevin Tallec Marston
Author_Mike Cronin
Boston Brahmins sports history
Boston Common football history
Boston Common sports history
Boston elite sports traditions
Boston game origins
Boston social history sports
Boston sports commemorations
Category=JBCC1
Category=NHK
Category=SCBT
Category=SCX
Category=SFB
Category=SFBD
Civil War era sports
commemorative sports monuments
Cooperstown
creation of sports origin myths
cultural history of football
early football clubs in America
early football in the United States
early versions of football in America
Elihu Phinney
elite networks in sp
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
eq_sports-fitness
football and Boston Brahmins
football archives and museums
football myth-making
Gerrit Smith Miller
Gilded Age Boston athletics
Gilded Age football origins
gridiron
Harvard and early football
Harvard football origins
Harvard-Yale game
history of American football
history of organized football in Boston
hoax
inventing American football
Johnson-Reed Act
Michael Cusack
myth of American football invention
Oneida Football Club
Oneida Football Club monument
origin of American soccer
Reconstruction era sports culture
Robert Tait McKenzie
Roger Tamte
Roger Wolcott
Rugby
Scopes Monkey Trial
Scopes trial
self-memorialization in sports
soccer and football origins
soccer history in America
sports and immigration history
sports history and elite culture
sports history Boston
sports memory and commemoration
The Immigration Act of 1924
Tom Wills
usable past
Walter Camp and the Creation of American Football
Yale

Product details

  • ISBN 9781625348425
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Jan 2025
  • Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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On Boston Common stands a monument dedicated to the Oneida Football Club. It honors the site where, in the 1860s, sixteen boys played what was then called the “Boston game”—an early version of football in the United States. The boys were largely the sons of upper-class Boston Brahmins, and they lived through the transformative periods of the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the Gilded Age. Later as they grew old, in the 1920s, a handful of them orchestrated a series of commemorative events about their boyhood game. Benefitting from elite networks developed through the city’s social and educational institutions, including Harvard University, they donated artifacts (such as an oddly shaped, battered black ball) to museums, deposited self-penned histories into libraries and archives, and erected bronze and stone memorials, all to elevate themselves as the inventors of American football (and later, by extension, soccer). But was this origin story of what, by then, had become one of America’s favorite games as straightforward as they made it seem or a myth-making hoax?

In Inventing the Boston Game, Kevin Tallec Marston and Mike Cronin investigate the history of the Oneida Football Club and reveal what really happened. In a compelling, well told narrative that is informed by sports history, Boston history, and the study of memory, they posit that these men engaged in self-memorialization to reinforce their elite cultural status during a period of tremendous social and economic change, and particularly increased immigration. This exploration of the Club’s history provides fascinating insight into how and why origin stories are created in the first place.
Kevin Tallec Marston is Research Fellow at CIES (Centre International d'Etude du Sport / International Center for Sports Studies) and Visiting Researcher and Lecturer at the International Centre for Sports History and Culture at De Montfort University. His writings on sports have appeared in edited collections and journals such as Contemporary European History and the International Sports Law Journal.

Mike Cronin is Academic Director, Centre for Irish Programmes at Boston College, Dublin. His publications include Sport: A Very Short Introduction.