Chicago Sun-Times

HEROES& HEARTBREAK

140 YEARS OF CUBS HISTORY

- BY STEFANO ESPOSITO Staff Reporter

In the beginning, they were the White Stockings. And they played on the South Side.

The team that would become the Chicago Cubs began playing baseball the same year Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer made a decision that would be seen as perhaps the most disastrous in United States military history.

The Cubs and their fans have learned a lot about the meaning of disaster since then. But back then, in 1876, the Cubs clinched the pennant with a 7- 6 win over the Hartford Dark Blues on Sept. 26. At the time, they played on the South Side, at 23rd and State.

The following year, the team— in what some, in hindsight, might see as a harbinger of the years to come— finished second to last.

The team later moved to Lakefront Park at Michigan and Randolph, before a switch to West Side Park at Congress and Loomis and then to Taylor Street and Walcott Avenue, where they remained for 22 years.

In 1879, the team lost its star pitcher in spectacula­r fashion. “Terry Larkin was struck on the head by a line drive, which not only ruined his pitching career but drove him to insanity and, eventually, suicide,” Art Ahrens and Eddie Gold wrote in their comprehens­ive 1986 book about the team, “The Cubs.”

The Stockings became the Colts, the Orphans, the Remnants. Finally, the name “Cubs” stuck.

In 1907, behind the pitching of future Hall of Famer Mordecai “Three- Finger” Brown, the Cubs won the first of two World Series titles, at the Taylor and Walcott stadium. They were the first team to win back- to- back titles.

Those teams included the double- play combo of Tinker to Evers to Chance— Joe Tinker, Johnny Evers and Frank Chance— immortaliz­ed in a famous poem, “Baseball’s Sad Lexicon,” by Franklin Pierce Adams.

Nine years after the Cubs won their most recent World Series, chewinggum magnate William Wrigley Jr. bought an interest in the Cubs, the same year the team moved to its present location. But the ballpark was called Weeghman Park and then Cubs Park.

By 1920, Wrigley had become sole owner of the club. In 1926, the ballpark was renamed Wrigley Field.

The 1930s saw the Cubs make the World Series three times and lose each time.

In 1937, the ivy on the outfield wall made its first appearance.

That decade also saw one of the greatest moments in Cubs history. On Sept. 28, 1938, the Cubs and the Pittsburgh Pirates were tied 5- 5 in the bottom of the ninth, with darkness about to swallow Wrigley Field and the umpire threatenin­g to call the game. That’s when player- manager Gabby Hartnett, another future Hall of Famer, hit “The Homer in the Gloamin,’” vaulting the Cubs past the Pirates into first place and on to the National League pennant that season. Itwas 1945— when World War II had seen many Major League players go off to fight— that the Cubs last appeared in a World Series, where they fell to the Detroit Tigers in seven games. In 1953, the Cubs got their first African- American player, Ernie Banks. Five years later, the future “Mr. Cub” was the National League’s MVP, and in 1959, he became the first NL player to win the MVP in back- to- back seasons.

The 1960s was a largely forgettabl­e decade for the Cubs, though Banks provided some thrills with 125 homers from 1960 to 1963. And 1969 brought a feeling of absolute certainty that— with Billy Williams, Ron Santo and Banks hitting 73 homers among them and Santo kicking up his heels to celebrate their victories— that this finally would be their year. That lasted, though, only until September’s collapse saw them surpassed by the New York Mets.

Champagne corks popped in 1984, when the Cubs won their first championsh­ip in 39 years— clinching the NL East crown. The same year, Rick Sutcliffe won the Cy Young Award and Ryne Sandberg the MVP award. But they lost the National League title to the San Diego Padres.

Before a corked- bat controvers­y and questions about performanc­e- enhancing drugs tarnished his image, slugger Sammy Sosa’s epic home- run battle in 1998 with the St. Louis Cardinals’ Mark McGwire thrilled Cubs fans and the baseball world. Sosa fell four short of McGwire’s 70 homers but led the Cubs to the playoffs for only the third time since 1945.

In 2003, Cubs fans once again dared to dream, but on Oct. 14, 2003, the Cubs were leading the Marlins 3- 0 in the eighth inning of Game 6 when left- fielder-Moises Alou rose to try to snag a foul ball, and a hand reached out fromthe stands. The hand belonged to Cubs fan Steve Bartman. You know the rest of the story.

Thirteen years later — with an improved and expanding Wrigley Field; a club president, Theo Epstein, with a record of having turned around a losing team in Boston; and a roster that won a Major League- best 103 games— Cubs fans again are dreaming that this could finally, really be the year.

 ?? | SUN- TIMES FILES ?? 1907 ABOVE: Team photo of the world champion Chicago Cubs. LEFT: Showing off his famous grip, pitcher Mordecai ‘‘ Three- Finger’’ Brown helped lead the Cubs to back- to- back titles in 1907 and 1908.
| SUN- TIMES FILES 1907 ABOVE: Team photo of the world champion Chicago Cubs. LEFT: Showing off his famous grip, pitcher Mordecai ‘‘ Three- Finger’’ Brown helped lead the Cubs to back- to- back titles in 1907 and 1908.
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 ?? | AP FILES ?? 1998 Before controvers­ies tarnished his image, SammySosa thrilled fans by hitting 66 homers in 1998.
| AP FILES 1998 Before controvers­ies tarnished his image, SammySosa thrilled fans by hitting 66 homers in 1998.
 ?? | SUN- TIMES FILES ?? 1969 Ron Santo clicks his heels after a Cubs victory, but the Cubs collapsed in September and lost the NL East to the NewYork Mets.
| SUN- TIMES FILES 1969 Ron Santo clicks his heels after a Cubs victory, but the Cubs collapsed in September and lost the NL East to the NewYork Mets.
 ?? | SUN- TIMES FILES ?? 1984 Ryne Sandberg celebrates after the Cubs won the NL East for their first postseason appearance since 1945.
| SUN- TIMES FILES 1984 Ryne Sandberg celebrates after the Cubs won the NL East for their first postseason appearance since 1945.

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