#frank embree
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Mr. Frank Embree, Fayette, Missouri, 1899.
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On the morning of July 22, 1899, a white mob abducted Frank Embree from officers transporting him to stand trial and lynched him in front of a crowd of over 1,000 onlookers in Fayette, Missouri.
About one month earlier, Frank Embree had been arrested and accused of assaulting a white girl. Though his trial was scheduled for July 22, the town’s residents grew impatient and, rather than allow Mr. Embree to stand trial, took matters into their own hands by lynching Mr. Embree.
According to newspaper accounts, the mob attacked officers transporting Mr. Embree, seized him, loaded him into a wagon, and drove him to the site of the alleged assault. Once there, Mr. Embree’s captors immediately tried to extract a confession by stripping him naked and whipping him in front of the assembled crowd, but he steadfastly maintained his innocence despite this abuse. After withstanding more than 100 lashes to his body, Mr. Embree began screaming and told the men that he would confess. Rather than plead for his life, Mr. Embree begged his attackers to stop the torture and kill him swiftly. Covered in blood from the whipping, with no courtroom or legal system in sight, Mr. Embree offered a confession to the waiting lynch mob and was immediately hanged from a tree.
Black people accused of crimes during this era were regularly subjected to beatings, torture, and threats of lynching in efforts to obtain a confession, and the results of those coercive attacks were later used to "justify" the lynchings that followed. In fact, without fair investigation or trial, the confession of a lynching victim was more reliable evidence of fear than guilt.
Though published photographs of Mr. Embree’s lynching clearly depict the faces of many of his assailants, no one was ever arrested or tried for his death.
#history#white history#us history#am yisrael chai#jumblr#republicans#black history#democrats#Frank Embree#all cops are bastards#dirty cops#bad cops#cops#police#defund the police#bad police#police officer#police brutality#law enforcement
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Silly Rick Headcanons
thanks @embree for encouraging my silly brain
Rick likes minions, like he thinks they’re HILARIOUS
uses them as reaction images
Has a bunch of shitty graphic tees he bought from the thrift shop
Yes he wears minion shirts on dates he does not care
Takes awful pictures and posts them on Facebook and is roasted by Radford
Frank is forced to wear that shirt for not knowing what a minion is
Rick does not tolerate fake minion stans
#spooky month#spooky month fanart#spooky month rick#rick hedony#spooky month rick hedony#spooky month frank#spooky month tiredvan#spooky month headcanons#they’re are somewhat serious#spooky month kevin#spooky month radford#they’re in the last image lol#just a silly millennial obsessed with minions#shitpost#late night doodles#tontalunar’s art
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The hatred toward reparations for African Americans.
Salutation to my blog, I want to share my feelings on the reparations movement and the viritol that is being received by many bigoted people. This will be a long post as a disclaimer. This tweets I'll share is not for a "witch hunt," but bringing awareness to an issue not receiving enough media attention with discrimination and racism toward African Americans and reparations.
To start, the word reparation means to make amends for a wrongdoing, usually through compensation.
African Americans were promised reparations (40 acres and a mule) after the horrific treatments of slavery, but the promise was never honored for all. Here is an article from PSB that discusses the topic.
The topic with reparations to me did not gain such animosity until Black Americans began to demand what is owed, and the reason is not only due to slavery. For over 400 years there have been cases of
Lynchings and the many unsolved murders
Stolen land (Tulsa massacre, Forsyth, GA, African American farmers)
Human experimentation (Medical Apartheid by Harriet A. Washington discusses this), The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment
Jim Crow Era
Racism and discrimination in the military and medical industry (e.g. Henrietta Lacks and Black women neglected in hospitals)
Redlining
Police brutality
COINTELPRO from the FBI (spying on the civil rights members and Black Panther Party)
Cases like Emmett Till, The Birmingham Church bombing, Tulsa or Rosewood massacre, The 1985 Philadelphia bombing, Frank Embree, James Byrd Jr. leading up to today with Elijah McClain, Sandra Bland, George Floyd, Sinzae Reed. Don't forget The Buffalo shooting in 2022 and the racism case for the Black Colorado ranchers experiencing racism for putting up a BLM flag.
youtube
More restlessness came the more injustice happened. The topic of reparations is growing more than ever on social media. Unfortunately that brought the attention to many bigoted people on different platforms, to where I chose to take screenshots as proof:
I took many screenshots, but will only share these examples I have seen on Twitter. There are many protesting reparations on Instagram, YouTube and other platforms as well.
There is constant hostility and aggression toward African Americans, yet I have NEVER seen this for other people who received compensation from America, like the Jews from the Auschwitz Holocaust, the Japanese in internment camps and also billions for other countries.
This nation is known for giving out land and money to other countries and citizens here in America. From free land for Caucasians through The Homestead Act, to the G.I. Bill, to reparations given to other groups.
As a serious question to the reader who reached this far: Why are people against reparations when this country had no trouble giving out money and land to other races? I'm in favor reparations for all who were wronged, and this is no different for my people here or victims of racism and colonialism in Brazil, Africa, Australia, Canada and other continents. The fight for justice will continue, but I want a genuine answer why these people are angry against reparations for African Americans.
#Black history month#Black history#racism#viral#February#reparations#White people#Black Americans#Black people#Youtube
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19 year old Frank Embree was tortured, castrated, skinned and then lynched in front of a cheering crowd, for a crime he didn’t commit in 1899. Though published photographs clearly depicted the faces of his assailants, no one was ever arrested. BlackHistorymonth
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A mob lynches Frank Embree hours before his trial in Fayette, Missouri, July 22, 1899
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Frank Embree (C. 1880 - July 22, 1899, in Burton, Missouri) was an African American who was lynched by white citizens because of an alleged violent crime and his skin color. The case led to a falling out between the governors of the neighboring states of Kansas and Missouri.
He was arrested in Garnett, Kansas, in early 1899. He was accused of raping a white underage girl in the neighboring state of Missouri, near the small town of Benton. This charge was not uncommon against unpleasant African Americans and usually resulted in a death sentence and execution without much evidence in court.
He denied having committed the crime. His trial awaited him in the state of the alleged crime, in Missouri. He was met by several Missouri police officers, picked up in Kansas, and put on the train, but did not reach his destination. In the middle of the Higbee line, the mob stopped the locomotive. The guards released the prisoners without resistance.
He was taken to nearby Burton, stripped, and whipped for half an hour. About 1000 people watched the spectacle. He painfully admitted that if only he would be released from torture and killed, he would admit to everything. A professional photographer portrayed the naked man with his deep wounds from the front and back and when he was hung from a tree.
Judging by the press of that time, the prisoner transport of an African American in the racist state of Missouri meant certain death. The New York Times on July 23, 1899, read:
“Since his arrest several weeks ago, it has been speculated that he would never reach his place of justice.”On August 3rd the newspaper said:
“The accusation against the guy was the one that so often means the sudden and painful death without trial for members of his race.” The case was published in numerous newspapers in the US and was more or less richly illustrated. The Grand Forks Daily Herald of South Dakota brought the victim of alleged rape into play. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
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Warning for loud glitchy noises at the end.
I misremembered this. I thought it was a child, but it is a man telling his graphophone in 1915 at 1:06 that, "All of these records will be very interesting in time to come, when all these people have passed away and only their voices can be heard on you from your graphophone, good bye."
He then tells it something along the lines of it being out of fashion now because they have new kinds of graphophones.
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(Part 2)
(Part 3)
Posted on July 8, 2022 by Douglas P. Marsh
"The strike was called November 9th, 1903. … The whole state of Colorado was in revolt.” – Mother Jones
It’s well known how, in 1905, the famous “Big” Bill Haywood helped found the Industrial Workers of the World in Chicago with Mother Jones, Lucy Parsons, Eugene V. Debs and others. Fewer know that Colorado – specifically the Colorado Labor Wars – was where Haywood and several other wobbly founders forged bonds of solidarity among miners and learned the pitfalls of business unionism. Or, that it’s where Haywood ran for governor, albeit from inside an Idaho jail cell.
And very few know that Colorado’s most successful strike took place under IWW leadership, during an overlooked surge in the union’s influence between 1927 and 1928.
Western Federation of Miners and the founding of the IWW
Approaching the turn of the 20th century, in the American West’s mining industry, big Capitalists were putting the squeeze on Labor and conditions were increasingly mean. Workers from Idaho, Montana and Colorado began organizing and, in 1893, would form the Western Federation of Miners.
WFM’s initial strikes took place in Colorado, with Cripple Creek’s first miner’s strike of 1894, and after that, in Leadville in 1896-1897. Haywood joined the WFM in 1896 as did another of IWW’s earliest members, Adolphus S. Embree, in 1899.
In Idaho, 1899, mine workers, armed and masked, hijacked a train and blew up mining equipment belonging to operators that refused to sign a WFM contract. The equipment was targeted because it was at the cutting edge in mining technology of the time and thus extremely expensive.
The event terrified bosses on both sides of the national border. At the time, Haywood was also in Idaho, while Embree was farther north in British Columbia, Canada, both mining precious metals. Idaho Governor Frank Steunenberg declared martial law, convincing President McKinley to deploy soldiers and detaining over a thousand men in a barn without trial.
By 1903, tensions would erupt into what is now remembered as the Colorado Labor War, where employers brought against workers the most systematic use of violence in U.S. labor history. In the face of brutal suppression, miners executed multiple coordinated direct actions in at least six mining towns throughout the state in 1903 and 1904.
Galvanized in these and other struggles in the region, radical factions within the WFM sent delegates to Chicago in June of 1905 to help found a new organization to compete with the American Federation of Labor in uniting workers from different industries.
The IWW was founded as AFL’s radical alternative – staunchly international and anti-capitalist – fiercely critical of the AFL’s privileging skilled labor and its tolerance of nativist sentiments.
Back in Idaho, Steunenberg was assassinated in a bombing outside his Caldwell residence in late December, 1905.
Colorado and the IWW’s early years
The IWW’s second convention, in 1906, began in open conflict and concluded in schism.
As with many revolutionary organizations, the IWW was internally divided from the outset. Many members drawn from the AFL brought the federation’s reformist tendencies, while WFM dual-carders (workers affiliated with two unions) included members with more conservative beliefs.
“The struggle for control of the organization formed the Second convention into two camps. The majority vote of the convention was in the revolutionary camp. … On the adjournment of the convention the old officials seized the general headquarters, and with the aid of detectives and police held the same, compelling the revolutionists to open up new offices,” – Vincent St. John
A few months after the convention, “Big” Bill Haywood was arrested in Denver at WMF headquarters and transported to Idaho, where he was accused of orchestrating the assassination of former governor Steunenberg. From his Boise jail cell, he won over 16,000 votes for governor of Colorado on the Socialist Party of Colorado ticket while designing WFM posters and reading Upton Sinclair’s “The Jungle”. By the end of 1907, the WFM would cut ties with IWW, Haywood would leave the WFM in 1908.
Dual-carding wobblies were likely involved in continuing labor disputes in Colorado, including the infamous Ludlow Massacre of 1914. The IWW had held free speech rallies in Denver in 1912 and 1913, and A.S. Embree was seen during the long strike (1910-1914) which preceded the massacre and other events of the Colorado Coal War.
In 1916, IWW leadership determined to wage a major campaign, authorizing “an appropriation of $2,000.00 be made for organizing the miners of California, Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, Montana, Utah, Idaho,” (Proceedings of the Tenth Convention of the Industrial Workers of the World. Chicago, 1916, page 61). Embree and another wobbly, Frank Little, were two of the external organizers sent to the field. They arrived to find the IWW forgotten to most miners and a united front among bosses and government agencies.
The Mountain West and the Fall of the IWW
“Guns, revolvers, machine guns came to Bisbee as they did to the front in France. ‘Shoot them back into the mines,’ said the bosses,”.
“Then on July 12th, 1,086 strikers and their sympathizers were herded at the point of guns into cattle cars in which cattle had recently been and which had not yet been cleaned out; they were herded into these box cars, especially made ready, and taken into the desert. Here they were left … without food or water to die,”- Mother Jones
The United States entered World War I in the spring of 1917. Early that summer, workers with IWW Local 800, fighting for better conditions in Arizona’s copper mines, were ready for action. A.S. Embree had been organizing miners operating out of Bisbee, with another IWW leader coordinating from Phoenix. Just before the strike, the Phoenix offices were moved to Salt Lake City, and Embree was cut off.
Though over 2,000 workers joined the Bisbee strike, a posse of even more assembled on behalf of the bosses and selected 1,200 deportees to load onto a train, later to be dumped in the desert over a hundred miles away. They were held in Columbus, New Mexico for over two months by federal troops who had been on the hunt for Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa.
It was the largest deportation in U.S. labor history.
After release, A.S. Embree would travel north to copper mine strikes in Butte, Montana where IWW organizer Frank Little was lynched, on August 1, 1917. Little was the second of three early IWW martyrs along with Joe Hill, an IWW songwriter, organizer, and activist executed by firing squad in Utah, in 1915, and Wesley Everest, a former Serviceman and Lumberjack who was lynched by a mob while defending his union hall following the 1919 Seattle General Strike.
Embree had earned a reputation in subsequent strikes in and around Montana as IWW’s “ablest tactician” while also returning to Tucson, Arizona to face down incitement of riot charges over events at Bisbee. He was targeted by federal agents from 1917-1920 who provided evidence to prosecutors in Idaho, where he was sent to state prison from 1921 to 1924 on charges of, so-called, “criminal syndicalism.”
Disrupting the copper industry during war-time production led in part to the federal government’s overwhelming and devastating attacks on the IWW. These began on September 5, 1917, when state and local forces initiated raids against IWW offices, as well as private residences of the union’s leaders, all across the U.S.
In the end over 150 wobblies were arrested and charged under the then new Espionage Act. IWW co-founder Eugene V. Debs would be arrested in June of 1918 and sent to prison in April 1919 for speaking publicly against the war, “Big Bill” Haywood fled to Russia in 1921, where he would die seven years later at the age of 59.
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The lynching of Frank Embree in Fayette, Missouri on 22nd July 1899....
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19-year-old Frank Embree after being whipped 103 times and before being hanged from a tree by a white mob in Fayette, Missouri on July 22nd, 1899. [450×657] Check this blog!
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The story of Frank Embree is a very horrifying one that exposes the vulnerability of being born black in the U.S. especially during the days of slavery, it’s abolishment and the Jim Crow era. The treatment that Frank Embree went through before dying for a crime he did not commit needs to be told over and over to give more meaning and historical background to the injustice that several blacks are facing today and stamp the need to advocate for justice for all and finally against racism. On June 17, 1899, the 14-year-old daughter of Wood Dougherty was on her way to visit a friend when she was assaulted and raped by an unknown man believed to be an African who was tagged as the fiend or the black brute. The attacker was riding a horse that belonged to John Collins who was Frank’s uncle making Frank the immediate suspect without questioning. Seeing that his life was in danger, Frank opted to go back to Kansas in order to save his life since he was probably visiting his uncle who lived in Howard County where the rape occurred. - ELIZABETH OFOSUAH JOHNSON | Staff Writer for Face 2 Face Africa https://www.instagram.com/p/B4AVopLJ3VZA7ygfe_m57sF9u_pYzebeYp3hi80/?igshid=s4l2jzguzeot
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A
Alberto Adriano
Gerald Asamoah
Ramazan Avcı
B
Sarah Baartman
Mario Balotelli
Kola Bankole
Ota Benga
Alexander Bengtsson
Steve Biko
James Byrd junior
C
Emmanuel Chidi
Stephon Clark
D
Mustafa Demiral
Fuat Deniz
Viola Desmond
Karamba Diaby
Hrant Dink
Jeremiah Duggan
E
Marwa El-Sherbini
Frank Embree
Semra Ertan
G
Jorge Gomondai
Farid Guendoul
H
Benjamin Hermansen
Theodor Hopfner
J
Kiomars Javadi
K
Alter Kacyzne
Habil Kılıç
Martin Luther King
Rodney King
Amadeu Antonio Kiowa
Kissing Case
L
William Lanne
Stephen Lawrence
M
Nelson Mandela
Noël Martin
Trayvon Martin
N
Olivier Ndjimbi-Tshiende
Nguyễn Văn Tú
Solomon Northup
O
Marcus Omofuma
Helen Betty Osborne
Abdurrahim Özüdoğru
P
Rosa Parks
S
Anthony Lamar Smith
Tadesse Söhl
T
Süleyman Taşköprü
Recy Taylor
Emmett Till
Todesopfer rechtsextremer Gewalt in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland
Jordan Torunarigha
Truganini
Józef Trzeciak
Mehmet Turgut
W
Seibane Wague
Minik Wallace
Jesse Washington
Alberta Williams King
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İsmail Yaşar
Nihat Yusufoğlu
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On July 22, 1899 Frank Embree was murdered in cold blood by the hands of an angry white mob of men that consisted of over a thousand. He was accused of raping a 14 year old white girl and fled the city after learning of the incident and the girls father claiming he was the rapist. Fearing for his life he fled the city but was apprehended and released to the white men.
He was handcuffed, stripped of his clothes and forced to confess. When he claimed his innocence he was whipped over a hundred times; knowing he was going to die whether he confessed or denied the accusations he confessed and requested that his family be notified of his death and to not be set on fire (it was a common method for whites to set fire during lynchings.)
He was castrated and made to eat some of his penis before being hung on a oak tree. After praying the mob hung him and shot him several times. After abandoning the body, the church members buried him. He was 19 years old.
In The Democrat Leaders’ editorial, the comment read: “His fate is a fair warning to all others who would commit such hellish crimes. The citizens of Howard County will not tolerate such. The negro was given no more than he deserved. Let others beware.”
What’s more vile and disgusting is that they used the photos of Frank before and after his lynching as postcards.
The horrors of being black and vulnerable in the south. This is what your history teacher didn’t tell you. Accusing any black man who “fit” the description was always met with death by the hands of whites. Innocent lives taken just because of the color of your skin and pointing fingers.
#blm#black lives matter#police brutality#being black#racisim#the good old south#say their names#melanin#feminism#feminist#colourism#womanism#womanist#blackmen#depressed#blackgirls#black positivity#afrofuturism#blackgirlmagic#blackgirlsrock#blackisbeautiful#blackish#panafrikanism#wokeaf#stay woke#consciousliving#consciousmusic#thisisamerica#malcolmx#polyglot
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Our Monday recap includes everything from the drafted teams to Sports Center Top 10 catches in the outfield.
The morning started off with a practice that was meant to loosen up the muscles, but what it turned into was a tryout for the campers to be scouted by their favorite coaches. The looming worry about the lunch time draft left players diving for fly balls, swinging the bat to hit the ball to the moon, and straining muscles they didn’t even know they had. It was as if they were that little kid again in gym class, waiting for their name to be called onto a team. Don’t fret campers, everyone gets drafted! Participation trophies for all!
The doors then closed and the coaching staff got started on the draft. The room was tense as each name was taken and put onto the board. Victor Rodriguez and Frank Viola got into a scrum over a player who they thought would lead them to the 2020 Fantasy Camp Championship. Trot and Dauber whispered side by side, strategically planning their next move. Alan Embree talked up players he knew nothing about to try and throw off next round choices, but the group caught on to his guerrilla warfare tactics. El Tiante fell asleep.
And finally, your 2020 Fantasy Camp teams:
Billy’s Ballgamers
BILL MUELLER, KEITH FOULKE
DAVID CATALANO
BRUCE DIAZ
MICHAEL DIXON
JEFFERY FRAZIER
THOMAS GRAZIANO
STEVE KNOTT
JAMES MOROSCHAK
HOWARD NELSON
ERIC ROUKEY
JACK SANDLER
SCOTT SARIAN
BRIAN STOLTZ
THOMAS URBANSKI
Cori’s Fireballers
JIM CORSI, JOHN VALENTIN
CHRISTINA ALAVIAN
JAMES ANTONELLIS
HEATH BAKER
JOSHUA BOSLEY
JON BROLIN
JEFFREY BROOKS
MICHAEL BURNS
PHILIP PRATT
RANDY ROBINSON
JUSTIN STEINBACH
RUSSELL UPTEGROVE
SCOTT VIBERT
RON YOUNG
Embree’s Outlaws
ALAN EMBREE, MANNY DELCARMEN
BOB CONNORS
DARYLL DODA
BRIAN DRULA
MIKE FRANCIS
DAVE GREEN
DAVID HALL
ROBERT SULLIVAN
TOM SULLIVAN
CURT SWIFT
CHRISTOPHER SWIFT
CURTIS SWIFT II
JOHN TOINTIGH
LEO YORKELL
Gedman’s Bombers
RICH GEDMAN, RICK WISE, DAVE SMITH
JOE GILL
ERIC GRANDMAISON
MIKE GRANDMAISON
JIM HUTCHISON
MARK KENTON
MATTHEW MARSHALL
TONY MATEUS
JOHN MONAHAN
LUI REDIGONDA
MONIKA SELMONT
RICHARD SHINKLE
GARY STEVENS
CHARLES WU
Hobson’s Heroes
BUTCH HOBSON, RICH GARCES, LUIS TIANT
FRANK CASTIGLIONE
CHRISTOPHER DECATUR
ROY KAPLAN
JAMES KELLY
JIM KELLY
RYAN KELLY
JAMES MACHADO
DANIEL MCKENZIE
JEFF MILLAR
ROBERT MILLER
JOHN PITTMAN
STEVE PITTMAN
RICHARD STRAUSS
STEPHEN WOLFE
Lenny’s Legends
LENNY DINARDO, POKEY REESE
EVAN ANDERSON
PAUL ANDERSON
DOUGLAS BISSANTI
ALAN CASTELLANOS
BRIAN ECKART
JIM FORBUSH
PETER GAW
MARINO JIMENEZ
TIM KEEFE
CHARLES ORNDORFF
PAUL PEREIRA
BRIAN STACK
BRIAN SULLIVAN
Nixon’s DirtDogs
TROT NIXON, BRIAN DAUBACH
CONNER DRIGOTAS
FRANK DRIGOTAS
CHARLIE EARL
MARK ELGART
IAN HAY
STEVE KINGSTON
SEAN LEE
KEVIN LOW
BRIAN MCWHINNIE
JOE MUSTO
SCOTT SNOW
MICHAEL SYLVESTER
VINCENT WELCH
Sabe’s Babes
BRET SABERHAGEN, TOM GORDON
JONATHAN BEAN
CHARLES CAWLINA
DEAN COHEN
DAVID DORAN
PAUL EDWARDS
BILLY GRANT
BRIAN HABIG
CHARLEY HOWE
KEVIN HYATT
HERB SARGENT
JEFFREY VACHON
RICK VACHON
MIKE WALDEN
Stanley’s Steamers
BOB STANLEY, BOB MONTGOMERY, AL BUMBRY
DON AMIRALIAN
ERIK BOVASSO
JOSEPH BRADY
JON DAVIS
MIKE DIPALMA
TOM FREEMAN
JOHN GARREN
JADE HERBST
TODD KOPCZYNSKI
MARK OBERT
RANDY OCHAB
ROB SCHRAGER
DANNY TANGEN
Wins & Saves
FRANK VIOLA, JEFF REARDON, VICTOR RODRIGUEZ
DOUG BELAIR
MATTHEW BELAIR
DANIEL CALLAHAN
STEPHEN CAMP
BOB HENAULT
AL HERNANDEZ
DENIS IBEY
JUSTIN JAGHER
JIM KENNEY
JEFF PERRY
DAVID POMERANZ
GREG RUSHFORD
BRANDON THOMPSON
JIM VIEIRA
The teams got together, sang a cheer, and headed out to the fields to try and win their first regular season match.
The Bombers and Heroes had a close game in the main stadium. The campers got fired up as their name could be heard over the loud speakers walking up to the plate. Each team was facing the sun in the outfield. Their chances of catching any fly balls was slim. Against all odds, they rose to the occasion! There were multiple catches made that had the crowd jumping up and down, cheering in pure amazement. Steve Wolfe (Awwwoooooooo) made an unbelievable, almost backwards, snag in the right center. The Heroes were able to rally and win 4-6.
Sabe’s Babes and Wins & Saves was a different story. Wins and Saves crushed the Babes, 14-6. Bret Saberhagen was seen shedding a tear in the dugout after the game, while coach Tom Gordon flipped the Gatorade cooler. Yikes… Wins & Saves, congrats on the first game W and welcome to the winner’s circle- for now.
The Legends and the Outlaws had 27 runs all together. These games were coach pitched. Maybe our coaches should get some more practice in before lobbing the ball over the plate. Campers, take it while you can! That was just a warm up. Embree’s Outlaws outlasted the Legends, and came away with the 15-12 victory.
Something must have been in the water at JetBlue Park yesterday morning, because there was another 29 run game. Stanley’s Steamers and Corsi’s Fireballers went neck and neck, fighting until the last inning. Corsi was seen pacing the dugout, almost about the charge the Ump, at every play. After last camp, Corsi was longing for a team that could win a game. And gosh dammit, the Fireballers did not disappoint. His team ended the drought and won the game 15-14. Corsi, your luck may be changing!
The last game was a blowout not usually seen during coach pitched games. Billy’s Ballgamers demolished Nixon’s DirtDogs 18-3. You heard it here folks, 18-3. Trot is known for pitching zingers against his own team, but was that the reasoning here? Or did Billy “Where’s the sunscreen?” Mueller and Keith “I need to take a nap” Foulke draft the dream team to beat?
We’ll have to wait and see!
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