Today’s random find from the Library of Congress Flickr feed: Lots of photographers at the 1912 World Series. Look at those old cameras!

Today’s random find from the Library of Congress Flickr feed: Lots of photographers at the 1912 World Series. Look at those old cameras!

Today’s random find from the Library of Congress Flickr feed: A picture of Grover Cleveland Alexander.

Today’s random photo from the Library of Congress Flickr Feed is of 1910s second-basemen Morrie Rath.

From the Library of Congress Flickr feed, here’s a public domain picture of Germany Schaefer hard at work taking photos for what are probably future pictures of the day.

The Library of Congress recently released a list of 88 Books that Shaped America, which are part of a current exhibit at the Library. It’s a pretty good list of books (which had to either be written by an American or by somebody who became an American), and it’s hard to argue with most of them. However, it’s missing something big: sports. America is the most diverse and sports-loving country on Earth. Most countries focus on only one sport (usually soccer), but America has many sports, and it affects our language and culture. We ask for ballpark figures and play Monday morning quarterback. Something that is a certainty is a slam dunk. It’s one of the last few universal experiences: at a sporting event, nobody cares (or at least 99.9% of people don’t care) what party you vote for or what you do for a living.
That the LoC would so ignore this aspect of American life is disappointing, especially because there are plenty of good sports books out there that have shaped America. Jim Bouton’s Ball Four was one of the first books to openly tell things like they were and show the public’s heroes with all of their flaws. Buzz Bissinger’s Friday Night Lights highlighted the importance of football in small-town Texas, and later was made into a movie and TV series. Juiced was hardly a triumph of literary genius, but it can’t be denied that Canseco shaped not only baseball but America, leading to the government hearings and efforts by all sports (although people only cared about what baseball did) in trying to fight it.
However, if I could add in one sports book to the Library of Congress list, it would be Michael Lewis’ Moneyball.
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From the Library of Congress is this image of Fenway Park in 1912- 100 years ago! The photo is from what is now right field. A larger version can be seen here.

Yes, that gigantic wall filled with advertisements is what we now know as the Green Monster. And, yes, those are seats in front of it. And there is no overhang on the third-base seats.
But, rest assured, it is Fenway. There is a site here that shows how that stadium has evolved over time.