image description
The site across from Park Square is now the First Church of Christ and is marked with a sign.

Pittsfield Council Gives Baseball a Birthday

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Baseball now has a birthday in the city of Pittsfield.

On Tuesday, the City Council unanimously voted to recognize Sept. 5 as the official birthday of baseball.  The effort was led by Ward 5 Councilor Patrick Kavey and baseball enthusiast Phil Massery.

Kavey thanked Mayor Linda Tyer for supporting the effort.  She submitted a resolution for the council's approval at the meeting.

"We look forward to working with you over the next couple of months and the incoming mayor to really make the next fifth of September something something really awesome and something we can all be proud of with with our history of baseball," he said.

Massery, who has for years championed Pittsfield's role in baseball, approached Kavey to give the game of baseball a local holiday. The date is in reference to the over 230-year-old broken window bylaw and always falls around Labor Day weekend, which is a good time to celebrate baseball.

Kavey has suggested that the local holiday be recognized with a street fair on Wahconah Street or a charity baseball game at the historic Wahconah Park, which is currently the focus of a multi-million dollar overhaul.

The bylaw prohibits the playing of "wicket, cricket, base ball, bat ball, foot ball, cat, fives, or any other game or games with a ball" within eighty yards to protect the city's new meeting house and is the first written reference to baseball in America.


The site across from Park Square is now the First Church of Christ and is marked with a sign.

Kavey explained that Massery, who was watching the meeting from home, was ecstatic about the new holiday.

Ward 2 Councilor Charles Kronick joked that the city needs to update its fees for playing baseball too close to a municipal building, as the bylaw was written in 1791.

Thanks to the efforts of the late U.S. Rep. John Olver, Congress recognized the Sept. 5, 1791, broken window bylaw of Pittsfield as the first written mention of the game of baseball in North America. Then Gov. Patrick Deval proclaimed Sept. 5 as "Pittsfield Baseball Day" in 2007.

Congress also officially recognized Pittsfield Massachusetts as the birthplace of college baseball because of the first college game in 1859 that was played in Pittsfield on the corner of North Street and Maplewood Avenue between Williams College and Amherst College.

On June 23, 2008, Congress officially recognized these findings as accurate and they were made unimpeachable facts.

 


Tags: baseball,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Pittsfield Road Cut Moratorium

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The city's annual city road cut moratorium will be in effect from Nov. 29, 2024 to March 15, 2025. 
 
The road cut moratorium is implemented annually, as a precautionary measure, to ensure roads are kept clear of construction work during snow events and to limit the cuts in roads that are filled with temporary patches while material is unavailable.
 
During this period, steel plates are not to be used to cover open excavations in roads. Also, the Department of Public Services and Utilities will not be issuing the following permits:
 
• General Permit
• Sewer Public Utility Connection Permit
• Stormwater Public Utility Connection Permit
• Water Public Utility Connection Permit
• Trench Permit
 
Limited exceptions will be made for emergency work that is determined to be an immediate threat to the health or safety of a property or its occupants.
View Full Story

More Pittsfield Stories