War fever Boston, baseball, and America in the shadow of the Great War

Randy Roberts, 1951-

Book - 2020

"In War Fever, celebrated sports historians Randy Roberts and Johnny Smith explore the monumental changes taking place in Boston during the Great War through the stories of three men: Karl Muck, the German conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra;Charles Whittlesey, a Harvard Law Student who was called to service and became an unlikely leader; and perhaps the most famous baseball player of all time, the Red Sox's Babe Ruth. Each was cast into the turmoil of the war, and each emerged as a public figure of one sort or another: one a villain, one a hero,one an athlete.Throughout the war, Bostonians lived on high alert; fearing an attack on the city's harbor, mines were anchored in the bay and a wire net stretched across the ch...annels to prevent German submarines from encroaching. In an ethnically diverse city, fraught with tension between interventionists and pacifists, the war unleashed intolerance, hostility, and xenophobia. Karl Muck, after allegedly refusing to perform the"Star-Spangled Banner" at a symphony concert, was detained by federal agents and accused of espionage. His arrest soon became a national scandal as he was labeled a "dangerous enemy alien" and sent to an internment camp in Tennessee. Across the Atlantic, on the Western Front, Charles Whittlesey won overnight fame when he refused to surrender the makeshift battalion he commanded to the Germans. Dubbed by newspapers as "the Lost Battalion," Whittlesey and his men symbolized their country's iron resolve in one of the war's bloodiest battles. And for George Herman Ruth, perhaps the most famous German-American at the time, the war was transformative, paving the way for his metamorphosis from the most dominant left-handed pitcher in the game to the sport's greatest slugger. Together, the stories of these three men reveal how a city and a nation confronted the havoc of a new world order, the struggle to endure the war, and all its unforeseen consequences. At once a gripping narrative of American culture in upheaval and a sweeping account of the conflict, War Fever is narrative history at its best."--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Basic Books 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Randy Roberts, 1951- (author)
Other Authors
John Matthew Smith (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xix, 344 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 305-329) and index.
ISBN
9781541672666
  • Preface
  • Part 1. Gathering Clouds
  • 1. "Something That I Don't Want To!"
  • 2. Muck Raking
  • 3. Out of the Cage
  • 4. The War Game
  • 5. Bang That Old Apple
  • 6. The Keys
  • 7. Family Traditions
  • Part 2. The Storm
  • 8. The Mad Brute
  • 9. The Season of Doubt
  • 10. Welcome to The Show
  • 11. P.O.W. 1046
  • 12. The Great Experiment
  • 13. Slackers and Shipyards
  • 14. Brothers In Arms
  • Part 3. The Flood
  • 15. A Death in Pig Town
  • 16. The Shadow of War
  • 17. In God's Hands
  • 18. "Whether You'll Hear from Me Again I Don't Know"
  • 19. Into the Valley of Death
  • 20. "Please Don't Write About Me"
  • 21. Armistice
  • 22. The Revolution
  • 23. Homecoming
  • Epilogue: "A Misfit by Nature and by Training"
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

In a book whose thorough scholarship matches its superb prose, Roberts (Purdue Univ.) and Smith (Georgia Institute of Technology) offer penetrating insight into the diverse ways one major city, Boston, coped with crises engendered by American participation in WW I. The authors examine main currents in the city through the stories of quite disparate individuals: Karl Muck, conductor of the Boston Symphony, interred in a military camp under accusations of being a German spy; Red Sox pitcher George Herman ("Babe") Ruth Jr., who overcame an upbringing in a reformatory to become baseball's leading drawing card; and Charles Whittlesey, a New England aristocrat who led the famed Lost Battalion in the Meuse-Argonne campaign, one of the most harrowing experiences of the entire war. Also described is the coming of the so-called Spanish flu, which claimed the lives of 3,500 Bostonians by October 1918. Almost in passing, one learns of doughboy life, the culture of Boston's elite, and internal operations of professional baseball. Sources include standard monographs, scholarly articles, and one dissertation; the contemporary press (including Sporting News); and government archives covering military operations, the nation's loyalty crusade, and the execution of the military draft. Summing Up: Recommended. All levels. --Justus D. Doenecke, emeritus, New College of Florida

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Roberts and Smith, history professors at Purdue University and Georgia Tech respectively, portray the lives of three German-American men from Boston during WWI in this well-researched if flimsily connected sports history. The fever of the title refers to the Spanish flu epidemic of 1918, which killed millions worldwide, as well as to America's frenzy to find German sympathizers and the country's passion for baseball. At the center of this perfect storm of disease, war, politics, and sports are Karl Muck, the Boston Symphony Orchestra's German-speaking immigrant conductor; Harvard-educated lawyer Charles Whittlesey; and Red Sox player Babe Ruth. Muck, who refused to play the National Anthem before a concert, was later accused of siding with Germany and interned in a Georgia prison camp. Whittlesey enlisted in the Army and became a hero for saving his "lost battalion." Despite Ruth's hardscrabble upbringing and German roots, he escaped anti-German sentiment and was on his way to becoming an American baseball legend by 1919. The authors combine detailed research and solid storytelling to illustrate the ways in which these three German-Americans, however tangentially connected, were defined--as "war hero, war villain, and war athlete." Despite the tenuous connections between the main characters, this is a solid story of early-20th-century immigrant life. (Mar.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A lively historical account of 1918 Boston, a city obsessed with baseball and defeating the Kaiser in Germany.Roberts (History/Purdue Univ.) and Smith (History/Georgia Tech Univ.), co-authors of Blood Brothers: The Fatal Friendship Between Mohammad Ali and Malcolm X (2016), tell their story through the lives of two New EnglandersCharles Whittlesey, commander of the "lost battalion" in the Meuse-Argonne Offensive; and Karl Muck, the German conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestraand a Baltimore boy playing for the local team: George Herman "Babe" Ruth. As the authors write, the three "became, in 1918, the most famous war hero, war villain, and war athlete. Nearly everything they did was interpreted through the lens of the war." Whittlesey, an idealistic lawyer, enlisted in 1917. In 1918 in France, his battalion was surrounded. For five days, without food or water and running out of ammunition, they resisted German attacks and a request to surrender until relief arrived. Oppressed by his avalanche of fame, which continued after the war with demands for speeches, parades, and favors, he vanished during a cruise in 1921, probably a suicide. The authors stress that today's anti-Muslim prejudice pales in comparison to the nationwide anti-German hysteria that victimized the internationally acclaimed Muck. Although unashamedly German, he was no spy, terrorist, propagandist, or anti-American demagogue, accusations that poured from newspapers, women's clubs, patriotic organizations, and elected officials. Arrested in March 1918, he was interned in a Georgia camp for 18 months and then deported. That year, Babe Ruth was pitching for the Red Sox but was already nationally famous because of his slugging. At the time, baseball was in crisis, with teams crippled by enlistments and conscription and plummeting attendance. Concealing fears of bankruptcy behind fervent patriotism, owners proclaimed that baseball provided moral uplift to war-weary Americans and salvaged a shortened season and World Series that Boston, led by Ruth, won.An entertaining reminder that American hero worship, media hype, and fierce nationalism haven't changed much in a century. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.