Arthur Soden | |
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![]() Soden in the 1880s | |
| Born | (1843-04-23)April 23, 1843 |
| Died | August 13, 1925(1925-08-13) (aged 82) Sunapee, New Hampshire, U.S. |
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Arthur H. Soden (April 23, 1843 – August 13, 1925) was an American executive inMajor League Baseball who was the president/owner of theBoston Base Ball Club of theNational League[b] during the 1887–1906 seasons, president of theNational League in 1882, and aCivil War veteran.
Soden was born on April 23, 1843, inFramingham, Massachusetts.[1] Soden served as ahospital steward with the22nd Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry during theCivil War. After the war, Soden was an amateur baseball player of note. In 1874, he was part of the Boston club during their tour of England. He playedcenter field in a game at theKennington Oval.[2]
In 1876, Soden bought into the Boston Base Ball Club. He and J. B. Billings later purchased controlling interest in the club and Soden became the team's president in 1877.[2]
Soden is credited with inventing the baseballreserve clause—in 1880, standard player contracts began including a clause stating that the club could reserve the player for the following season; teams could reserve up to five players. In 1883, the number was increased to 11, which was a typical roster size in that era, and soon teams were allowed unlimited reserves.
In 1882, Soden served briefly as president of theNational League (NL) following the death ofWilliam Hulbert. When the rivalAmerican Association was preparing to expand to eight teams for the 1883 season, Soden acted to add NL teams in New York City andPhiladelphia (both cities had been kicked out of the league by Hulbert after the inaugural 1876 season), replacing theTroy Trojans andWorcester Ruby Legs, the bottom two teams in the league. Although Troy and Worcester objected to their removal, their attendance problems—drawing only 6 and 18 spectators in their final two games against one another—sealed their fate.
Soden played a major role in the war between the NL and thePlayers' League in 1890, bankrolling several teams in the league as attendance dropped; by the time the NL emerged triumphant, Soden owned a majority of theNew York Giants in addition to his control of the Boston franchise.[citation needed]
Boston won five pennants between 1891 and 1898. After losing the pennant toBaltimore in 1894 and 1895, a struggling start in 1896 led Soden to observe that his players' on-field arguments were having a negative effect, and stated that any players fined for abusing umpires would now pay their own fines rather than have the team cover the cost secretly; Boston went on a 22–2 run over the next few weeks, and briefly took over first place, but finished behind Baltimore (for the last time) that season.
Soden was known for being stingy, and catcherBoileryard Clarke observed after coming to the Beaneaters from Baltimore in 1899 that the team owner was also amazingly distant. Clarke later insisted that although he played for Boston for two years, Soden never knew he was on the team. After theAmerican League emerged as a rival in the 20th century, many players began deserting the NL for the new league, and Boston suffered the heaviest casualties.
Outside of baseball, Soden ran a successful roofing business with his son, Charles. He resided inWest Newton, Massachusetts.[2]
In 1909, Soden was sued byFrederick L. Small, a Boston-based stockbroker, for $500,000 ($17.5 million in2024). Soden was accused of having "alienated the affections" of Small's wife.[3] In 1911, Soden was ordered to pay Small a judgment of $10,000 ($337,464 in2024).[4]
Soden died at his summer home inSunapee, New Hampshire, on August 13, 1925.[5]
| Preceded by | National League president 1882 | Succeeded by |