The Eckford Base Ball Club of Brooklyn ("Eckford" or
the "Brooklyn Eckfords") was a two-time National
Association of Base Ball Players champion and one of the great early
amateur baseball clubs.
Established in 1855, Eckford was a founding member of the National
Association of Base Ball Players in 1857. Eckford defeated their chief
rivals, the Atlantic of Brooklyn, for the title in 1862 and kept it
through the 1863 season, becoming at the time the only other team to win
the NABBP title.
The Eckford's still had a respectable professional team in 1871 and
played all the best professional teams of the National
Association (NA) throughout the season. They did not, however, pay
their NA fee (a mere $10) by May 1st as required and their subsequent
arguments that their games should count and that they should be eligible
for the championship were rejected. Thus, you will not see their records
here nor any in any official accounting of the 1871 NA season.
The team had been hemorrhaging quality players for years and fielded a
lousy team in 1872 which finished a miserable 3-26. Even George
Zettlein, who would go 36-15 for Philadelphia the following season was
of little help going 1-8 in his brief time with the Atlantics.
David Nemec, the tireless 19th Century Baseball
researcher, has also written a novel called Early
Dreams, which takes place during this era and features real-life characters
such as Cap Anson, George Wright, and Henry Lucas.
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