The Gas and Flame Men: Baseball and the Chemical Warfare Service during World War I

The Gas and Flame Men

Baseball and the Chemical Warfare Service during World War I
 
Publisher: Potomac Books
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Cloth Over Boards
 
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GBP 27.99
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Product details:

ISBN13:9781640126053
ISBN10:1640126058
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:256 pages
Size:229x152 mm
Weight:542 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 19 photographs, 6 illustrations, index
692
Category:
Short description:

The Gas and Flame Men tells how chemical warfare changed the course of World War I, war in general, and the game of baseball—with famous players stepping away from the game to serve and fight in France.

Long description:
When the United States officially entered World War I in 1917, it was woefully underprepared for chemical warfare, in which the British, French, and Germans had been engaged since 1915. In response, the U.S. Army created an entirely new branch: the Chemical Warfare Service. The army turned to trained chemists and engineers to lead the charge—and called on an array of others, including baseball players, to fill out the ranks.

The Gas and Flame Men is the first full account of Major League ballplayers who served in the Chemical Warfare Service during World War I. Four players, two club executives, and a manager served in the small and hastily formed branch, six of them as gas officers. Remarkably, five of the seven—Christy Mathewson, Branch Rickey, Ty Cobb, George Sisler, and Eppa “Jeptha” Rixey—are now enshrined in the National Baseball Hall of Fame at Cooperstown, New York. The son of a sixth Hall of Famer, player and manager Ned Hanlon, was a young officer killed in action in France with the First Gas Regiment. Prominent chemical soldiers also included veteran Major League catcher and future manager George “Gabby” Street and Boston Braves president and former Harvard football coach Percy D. Haughton.

The Gas and Flame Men explores how these famous baseball men, along with an eclectic mix of polo players, collegiate baseball and football stars, professors, architects, and prominent social figures all came together in the Chemical Warfare Service. Jim Leeke examines their service and its long-term effects on their physical and mental health—and on Major League Baseball and the world of sports. The Gas and Flame Men also addresses historical inaccuracies and misperceptions surrounding Christy Mathewson’s early death from tuberculosis in 1925, long attributed to wartime gas exposure.
 

"Historian Leeke . . . offers a meticulous and informative account of the Chemical Warfare Service, an army unit hastily formed when the U.S. entered WWI to catch up to the conflict's extensive reliance on new weapons like flamethrowers and poison gas. . . . [The Gas and Flame Men is] an enjoyable and distinctive blend of war story and sports chronicle. It will appeal especially to baseball history buffs."—Publishers Weekly
Table of Contents:
List of Illustrations
1. Nashville
2. Gabby
3. Frightfulness
4. Winter
5. Good Scout
6. CWS
7. France
8. Summer
9. Final Innings
10. Shipping Out
11. Autumn
12. Coignes
13. Homecomings
14. Saranac Lake
15. Cooperstown
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Notes
Bibliography
Index