Guest MINDSETTER™ Doyle: Shoeless Joe and Chemical Warfare

Dan Doyle, GoLocalProv Guest MINDSETTER™

Guest MINDSETTER™ Doyle: Shoeless Joe and Chemical Warfare

Shoeless Joe Jackson
On April 6, 1917, the United States Congress voted to declare war on Germany.  "The war to end all wars," stated President Woodrow Wilson. Forever to be known as the Chemists War, it was to be a conflict that would, according to President Wilson, "make the world safe for democracy."

On April 6, 2017, on the back of President Trump's campaign promise to make America safe again, a U.S. missile attack hit an air base in Syria. The strike was in retribution for a chemical weapons attack made possible by professional descendants of the scientists who amplified World War I agonies. History repeating itself!

Shoeless Joe, a play I have written on the life of baseball legend Shoeless Joe Jackson, addresses, among other issues, the Chemists War and, as noted in the following excerpt, its dreadful impact on Hall of Fame pitcher Christy Mathewson. 

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Din they be Ty n' Matty, dat be Christy Mathewson, also one of the greatest pitchers eva lived.  

N' da two of dem, Ty Cobb 'n Christy Mathewson, dey be two of the smartest fellas I ever know.

Anyhow, dey sign on wid da army toward the end of the 19 and 18 season, and git sent straight to France.  Now because the Germans be usin' all dis killer gas on our troops, da U.S. Army form what dey called da Chemical Warfare Service.  Ty 'n Matty both join on, figurin' it be da best way to help with da war effort.

Only a few days after dey get git together with dere new unit, dey be at a trainin' session.

Katie Jackson (Joe's wife):  

There was a newspaper article about what happened that I read to Joe.  The article quoted Ty, and I trembled when I read it.  Ty said it this way:  "I will never forget the day when some of the men, myself included, missed the signal to snap our masks into position.  Men screamed.  The moment they got a whiff of death in the air, they went crazy with fear.  I remember Matty telling me, Ty, I got a big dose of that stuff and I feel terrible.  I saw Christy Mathewson doomed to die."

You know, when I finished reading Ty's quote, Joe was trembling, too.

Joe Jackson:

N' Matty did die.  He fought it off fer seven years, but he finally died in 19 and 25, he be only 45 years old.  

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Shoeless Joe will premiere in September. Following the premiere, the Institute for International Sport will stage the play not only in theaters, but on college campuses in a two-day format, on day one the play, on day two a seminar on issues addressed in Shoeless Joe, including illiteracy (Joe was illiterate), race, the Grand Jury system, labor, women's rights, and war, with a focus on chemical warfare. 

 

In preparing the discussion format for the campus seminars, I have looked at the future, while contemplating President Wilson's misguided forecast of a century past. Soothsayers picture an April 6, 2117 world that reflects extraordinary advances in technology and science. The majority of infants born on April 6, 2017 will be alive in a century, and world hunger may well be eradicated. But it also appears likely that by April 6, 2117, certain forces will be capable of wiping out humanity; the power of weaponry so daunting that Crossing the Rubicon... the point of no return... will be in sight unless a philosophy of restraint has taken hold. 

Who knows? Perhaps by April 6, 2117, society will have no choice but to harken back to an elusive concept introduced by late 19th century peace campaigner, Emile Arnaud, and adopted by other peace initiatives, such as the 10th annual Universal Peace Congress in Glasgow in 1901. Pacifism! 

For more on the play, click here.

Dan Doyle is the founder of the Institute for International Sport. Mr. Doyle is the author of several books, including An African Rebound and The Encyclopedia of Sports Parenting, Volumes I and II.  Mr. Doyle is currently scripting a documentary on the Grand Jury system.

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