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Charles Dryden

Charles Dryden
Charles Drdyen (1907).png
Charles Dryden in 1907
Born March 1860
Monmouth, Illinois
Died February 11, 1931(1931-02-11) (aged 70)
Biloxi, Mississippi
Occupation Baseball writer and humorist

Charles Dryden (March 10, 1860 – February 11, 1931) was an American baseball writer and humorist. He was reported to be the most famous and highly paid baseball writer in the United States during the 1900s. Known for injecting humor into his baseball writing, Dryden was credited with elevating baseball writing from the commonplace. In 1928, The Saturday Evening Post wrote: "The greatest of all the reporters, and the man to whom the game owes more, perhaps, than to any other individual, was Charles Dryden, the Mark Twain of baseball."

In 1965, Dryden was posthumously inducted into the "writers' wing" of the Baseball Hall of Fame, the fourth writer to receive that honor. His biography at the Baseball Hall of Fame notes that he was "often regarded as the master baseball writer of his time."

Dryden was born in March 1860 in Monmouth, Illinois. His father, William A. Dryden, was an Ohio native who worked as a salesman. Dryden did not attend college and worked as a young man as a moulder in an iron foundry. At the time of the 1880 United States Census, Dryden was living with his father in Monmouth, and his occupation was listed as a "moulder." Several accounts indicate that he wrote humorous sketches while working at the foundry and was urged him pursue a writing career by a friend who read his sketches.

Dryden traveled extensively as a young man, taking jobs as a merchant sailor and fisherman. One colleague noted that there was "a queer gleam, as of the old wanderlust, in the man's eyes when he falls to talking of the sea." In the early 1890s, Dryden visited and wrote about Robert Louis Stevenson at Stevenson's home in Vailima, Samoa. His portrayal of Stevenson's life in Samoa was described as "one of the nearest and most clear-cut pictures yet made on the subject."

Dryden later published an autobiographical account of his years on the road. The book, titled "On and Off the Bread Wagon: Being the Hard Luck Tales, Doings and Adventures of an Amateur Hobo" was published in 1905.

Dryden wrote his first baseball story in 1889. He had reportedly never seen a regular game of baseball before the assignment. His first baseball story was an account of a game in Chicago written "in imitation of the stilted, archaic phrase of Bible language." The story was "an instant hit." From 1889 to 1896, Dryden worked for newspapers in San Francisco and Tacoma.


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