The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  This Just In
WFNX_1000x50g

Tales of bravery

Letters to the Boston editor, May 25, 2007
By BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS  |  May 23, 2007

Thanks for the wonderful article on the old Boston Braves. I was 16 when they left town for good, and have never forgotten them and the impact they had on my early childhood years. Now, it all seems like part of a lost ghost world. Day games, 50 cent tickets, those great uniforms with the Indian on the sleeve and the tomahawk on front — they can have all the big money and hype we must endure in major-league baseball today. What I wouldn’t give for just one more day, circa 1949–50, at Braves Field, watching a big-league doubleheader for 50 cents.

John Blake
Revere

Excellent article on the Boston Braves! I remember asking my dad, the son of Irish immigrants in South Boston, if he rooted for Ted Williams when he was a kid. He said the Red Sox were for the rich kids and that he was a Braves fan. I’ll never forget that. You did a great job capturing the flavor of the Braves and what they meant to the working-class families of that time. Nice work!

Coleman Nee
Cohasset

I was born on November 7, 1952, so technically I was around when the Braves were still in Boston. However, I grew up hearing about the Milwaukee Braves, and not knowing their history. That is, until I came across a 1952 date book that showed the schedules for the Boston Red Sox and the Boston Braves. My first guess was that they were an old minor-league team — until my dad told me they were the same franchise that was then called the Milwaukee Braves.

Shortly afterward, around 1961, my father took me past Nickerson Field to point out what was left of Braves Field: the old light towers, the right field wall, the old track for the outfield wall inside this wall, the right field pavilion, and even the trolley tracks next to the ballpark. How stupid it was to tear down part of a perfectly good ballpark to put up dormitories! Sometimes, even today, I’ll walk into the pavilion and look for the seams that mark where the Braves shifted the foul lines in their last years here. Or, I’ll head to the western end, where another seam marks the end of the old pavilion, and try to imagine the grandstand beginning a few feet away, the jury box, the bullpen nearby, and the idea of seeing National League teams without the need for interleague play. I’m happy with the Red Sox now — don’t get me wrong — but it would be nice to have a choice.

Jonathan T. Melick
Dorchester

Loaded gun
Your recent “Presidential Tote Board” column contains some interesting commentary, but is way off on guns. People do hunt with handguns, and state law does not allow the use of assault rifles for hunting purposes. In fact, in order to be classified as an assault rifle, a rifle must be capable of full automatic fire. I don’t know of any state that allows that. The above is a moot point, however, since the Second Amendment doesn’t refer to hunting; it refers to an individual’s right to have firearms. Hunting is not a requirement of the Second Amendment.

Stephen Kerner
Biddeford, Maine

Steven Stark responds: I plead guilty to the astute points you have made and apologize for the error on handguns. This is obviously a field with which I have little familiarity. Next time Mitt Romney goes hunting, I’ll ask him to bring me along.

Related: Boston music news: March 28, 2008, You could look it up, The Boston Red Sox, More more >
  Topics: Letters , Mitt Romney, Politics, Baseball,  More more >
| More

ARTICLES BY BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   BACK TO THE FUTURE + IT'S IN THE CARDS (NSFW)  |  May 30, 2012
    I'm a lifelong music fan and DJ (radio and club) and I have to admit I feel like Daniel Brockman's blog post (see "The Problem with the Future of Music: Amanda Palmer and the rise of the music biz Super PAC," thePhoenix.com, May 3) has been beamed in from bizarro land.
  •   GONE FOREVER  |  May 23, 2012
    Although I could spend this opportunity ranting and raving about the sale of WFNX to Clear Channel, I'd like to take the opportunity to thank WFNX .  
  •   SPOILER ALERT  |  May 16, 2012
    I took issue with the final statement of Peter Keough's review of The Avengers ("Awkward First Steps," Arts & Entertainment, May 4) — with his dismissal of Agent Phil Coulson's death as not "compelling" enough to rally a group of heroes into action.
  •   THE FUTURE -- FOR SOME  |  May 09, 2012
    I think Amanda Palmer missed the reason she has such a broad, wide, and fervent fan base is because she was on Roadrunner in the first place.
  •   FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION  |  May 02, 2012
    I'm curious about the inconsistency of the 2012 Boston Phoenix ballot for Best Trivia Night.

 See all articles by: BOSTON PHOENIX LETTERS



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group