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Frederick G. Lieb New
Foreword by Richard "Pete" Peterson
Richard Peterson, series editor The first World Series in 1903 pitted Boston against Pittsburgh. Celebrate the centennial of that legendary encounter with the long-awaited reissue of these rare team histories recounting the earliest exploits of the Red Sox and the Pirates. An
admirer of Pirate president Barney Dreyfuss, prolific baseball writer
Frederick G. Lieb consorted with the club’s biggest stars, christened
the legendary Dreyfuss “the first-division man,” and produced The
Pittsburgh Pirates, one of the fifteen celebrated histories of major
league teams commissioned by G. P. Putnam’s Sons in the 1940s and 1950s.
Originally published in 1948, Lieb’s history ranges from the ball
club’s earliest professional days in the late nineteenth century as the
Pittsburgh Alleghenies to its spring training session in preparation for
the 1948 season, a span that included six National League pennants and two
World Series championships, as well as a loss to the Boston Red Sox, then
the Pilgrims, at the inaugural World Series a century ago. In Lieb’s personable and anecdotal prose, honed over the course of his sustained sportswriting career, the book conveys “baseball drama of the highest order,” including the pre-Dreyfuss days of Captain Kerr, Ned Hanlon, and Connie Mack; Dreyfuss’s dynasty in the early twentieth century; the dramatic World Series triumphs of 1909 and 1925; the end of the Dreyfuss era and the sale of the club to a syndicate headed by John Galbreath and Bing Crosby; and the purchase of Hank Greenberg and the emergence of slugger Ralph Kiner. Aided by twenty-five black-and-white photographs, this rare history revisits the glories and stories of “fabulous old Pirates” such as Honus Wagner, Tommy Leach, Fred Clarke, Babe Adams, Max Carey, Kiki Cuyler, Pie Traynor, Paul and Lloyd Waner, and Arky Vaughan.
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