Lexington Books
Pages: 278
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-4985-9903-0 • Hardback • May 2019 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-4985-9904-7 • eBook • May 2019 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
Subjects: History / United States / State & Local / Midwest (IA, IL, IN, KS, MI, MN, MO, ND, NE, OH, SD, WI),
Sports & Recreation / Soccer
Gabe Logan is professor of history at Northern Michigan University.
Chapter I: Kick Off 1887-1899
Chapter II: Play On 1900-1909
Chapter III: Firing on All Cylinders 1910- 1919
Chapter IV: Second Half 1920-1929
Chapter V: Final Minutes 1930-1939
Gabe Logan is one of the foremost scholars of American soccer and this book helps explode the persistent but mistaken notion that the United States is not a soccer playing nation. He deftly traces the early history of the game in Chicago and skillfully integrates the sport into larger economic and cultural developments. Not only is the book a must read for historians of sport it will also prove valuable for those working in urban, immigration, and labor history.
— Brian D. Bunk, University of Massachusetts
This is a first-rate history of the global game in “The Second City.” In this well-researched volume, Gabe Logan documents the deep historical roots of soccer in Chicago. Like its host city, Chicago’s soccer past has been marked by both tenacity and endurance. From immigrant beginnings to early professional soccer, and from youth and ethnic clubs to corporately-sponsored teams, Logan breathes life into what he calls “Chicago’s soccer mosaic.” This is a local story, but it also includes the national and international narratives, while exploring the important themes of recreation, immigration, and labor. Truth be told, we need another fifty books like this, from other places around the country, to tell the whole American soccer story. A triumph!— Thomas McCabe, Rutgers University
Gabe Logan passionately tells the untold story of soccer in Chicago. A must read for any scholar or fan of the “beautiful game”. — Steven Apostolov, Mercy College
A blueprint for future explorations of the hidden but rich histories of soccer in communities throughout the United States, Logan's study makes a convincing case for the Windy City's special status at the crossroads of sport, immigration, and labor studies. This book is full of surprises, forcing a reconsideration of who played what, where, and when, as sport became an integral element in American culture.— David Kilpatrick, Mercy College
The Early Years of Chicago Soccer not only fills a geospatial gap but stirs readers and researchers alike to continue journeying back in time to America’s soccer past.
— Journal of Sports History