Surviving members of the Oneida Football Club in 1925, when a monument honoring the team was unveiled on 艾可直播 Common. (Photo: Revolutionary Spaces)

The 鈥槹芍辈 Game鈥

Did a group of 艾可直播 schoolboys organize the first American football team? It鈥檚 a complicated, fascinating story, according to BC鈥檚 Mike Cronin鈥攁nd has to do with a lot more than sports

They were an accomplished band of friends, successful in family, business, and civic life, and many of them held a place of prestige and power in 19th- and early 20th-century 艾可直播 Brahmin society.

But for all their achievements as adults, their collective identity was fixed in a period from their teenage days, as reflected by their group correspondence and its 鈥淒ear Teammates鈥 salutation.

Such were the golden years for the members of the Oneida Football Club, which made an important contribution to American sports history鈥攐r, as others have suggested, perpetrated a myth-making hoax.

A new book authored by 艾可直播 College Ireland Academic Director Mike Cronin and international sports historian Kevin Tallec Marston tells the full story of the Oneidas, who claimed to be the first organized American football club, having played the game on 艾可直播 Common in the early 1860s鈥攚ell before other milestone events in the sport鈥檚 history. So convincing was their assertion, made through a campaign of memoirs, commemorative events, and artifact donations, that in 1925 a monument was erected on the Common to venerate the club鈥檚 self-proclaimed achievement.

Decades later, the club鈥檚 legacy, as represented by the monument, would be the subject of a tug-of-war between differing viewpoints as to which sport the Oneidas had in fact helped pioneer.

But Inventing the 艾可直播 Game: Football, Soccer, and the Origins of a National Myth is about more than sports and 艾可直播 history, say Cronin and Tallec Marston, whose research materials included correspondence by the Oneidas from a historical archive: The book also is an examination of memory and memorialization, and of the desire to create origin stories and narratives that reinforce individuals鈥 elite status amidst social and economic change.聽

Michael Cronin, Ph.D
Photo by Bobbie Hanvey

BC Ireland Academic Director Mike Cronin

鈥淚t鈥檚 not a history of the origins of football; it鈥檚 a history of the history,鈥 explained Cronin, a part-time 艾可直播member in the Woods College of Advancing Studies. 鈥淲e take a look at the Oneidas, the nature of their claim to be the forefathers of American football, and how they continued to promote it over time. We also set their story against the backdrop of a changing 艾可直播, and a changing America, in which the Oneidas鈥 status is no longer what it was.

鈥淎t the center of it all is the Oneidas, who numbered at least 52, and their deep, lasting friendships and ties. Eighty percent of them went to Harvard. Two-thirds would end up living within six blocks of each other. They would marry one another鈥檚 sisters, sometimes even one another鈥檚 daughters. They were well to do鈥攁lmost a dozen of them became millionaires鈥攁nd served on numerous civic and cultural boards, committees, and societies.

鈥淏ut it seemed very important to them that, when they died, they be remembered as 鈥榤embers of the first American football club.鈥 There鈥檚 a poignancy to that.鈥

The Oneidas鈥 story is complicated, say Cronin and Tallec Marston, because the origins of American football are complicated.

From the early 19th century on, various iterations of 鈥渇ootball鈥濃攐ften chaotic, sometimes violent鈥攚ere common in the United States, noted Cronin. 鈥淪choolboys played 鈥榝ootball鈥 on 艾可直播 Common for ages. You chose up teams, then agreed on the rules and started playing.鈥

But Gerrit Smith Miller, a student at 艾可直播鈥檚 Epes S. Dixwell School鈥攁n archetype of 19th-century upscale 鈥渢raining schools鈥 that prepared boys for college鈥攄ecided to create a more formalized version of football, and in 1862 organized a team of classmates to play on the 艾可直播 Common against a squad comprising other students from Dixwell as well as 艾可直播 English and 艾可直播 Latin. He called his team the 鈥淥neida Football Club of 艾可直播,鈥 named for the lake near his home in upstate New York.

聽Over the next three years, the club would score victories in a series of matches with other local schoolboy teams, including one in November of 1863 that was considered the 鈥湴芍辈 game鈥 championship. After 1865, with most of its members having moved on to college, the team essentially disbanded. But as the book explains, the Oneidas became something of a cross between fraternity and alumni association, championing themselves as the inaugural American football club. 聽

Interest in football began to grow regionally, then nationally. In the 1870s and 鈥80s, Walter Camp, a college football player and later coach, proposed a series of rule changes that codified many aspects of the game as it is now played. These and other subsequent innovations helped make football more popular among the general public, and colleges across the United States began fielding teams. Camp was, and still is, widely referred to as the 鈥淔ather of American Football鈥濃攁lthough the Wikipedia page for Miller refers to him as 鈥渢he father of football in the United States.鈥

cover of the book 'Inventing the 艾可直播 Game'

Meanwhile, the Oneidas grew older, most of them occupying positions of wealth and influence in Gilded Age 艾可直播, as chronicled by Cronin and Tallec Marston: 鈥淚t was a world in which most of them were entirely comfortable and content to live. They understood networking and how to use and preserve power.鈥 As American football flourished, Miller and his fellow Oneidas continued to stake their claim as the sport鈥檚 pioneers, and their message found resonance in the local media as well as among their peers in business and social circles鈥攂ut not so much at a national level. 聽

The world that the Oneidas had known began to change toward the end of the 19th century approached, as other cities like New York, Philadelphia, and Chicago began to surpass 艾可直播 in wealth, influence, and population, and massive immigration affected the city鈥檚 demographics.

With the ebbing of the Gilded Age, Brahmins sought to affirm their contributions to 艾可直播 and American history, heritage, and culture: The construction of the memorial to Robert Gould Shaw and the Massachusetts 54th Regiment at the edge of 艾可直播 Common was a prominent example.

One Oneida, James D鈥橶olf Lovett, published a book in 1906, Old 艾可直播 Boys and The Games They Played, a nostalgic look at popular childhood games and activities during the mid-19th century. He described the 1863 艾可直播 Common match, but made no mention of the Oneidas nor their claim as the first organized football team; this absence may be explained by Lovett鈥檚 personal modesty, Cronin and Tallec Marston speculate, or that the team鈥檚 history might have been outside the scope of Old 艾可直播 Boys.

Inventing the 艾可直播 Game describes, in often granular detail, the dilemmas, challenges, and uncertainties surrounding the Oneidas鈥 efforts to advocate for their legacy, culminating in the unveiling of the 艾可直播 Common monument when only six of the team remained. One source of contention is whether the ball the Oneidas donated to a historical society was the same one used in the 1863 鈥渃hampionship鈥 game as they had claimed. Even the exact membership of the team was imprecise for many years until the six survivors sat down and tried to define who was a member and who was not. 聽

The monument itself became a source of controversy. When soccer began gaining popularity in the U.S. during the 1980s, a national Soccer Hall of Fame that opened in upstate New York included a photo of the Oneida ball鈥攚hich was round, as were most sports and recreational spheroids of the era鈥攂ut its caption described the team as 鈥渢he first organized soccer club in America鈥 and thus put 艾可直播 in the limelight when the World Cup came to the U.S. in 1994. The ball depicted in the Oneida monument, however, was oval-shaped, like the modern American football, thus precipitating a campaign in 1996 to renovate and rededicate the monument鈥攚hich wound up sparking a counter campaign to restore the marker as it had been.

鈥淭here are some overarching themes here: What is it that鈥檚 remembered, and who decides?鈥 said Cronin, who last year published a book on the critical years of 1913-1923 in Irish history. 鈥淒o we know exactly what game the Oneidas played? Perhaps not as such. Did they stretch the truth a little, perhaps? Maybe. But they also have some evidence on their side. Perhaps the thing to do is simply appreciate what they did, and the bond they shared.鈥澛犅