Dr. Harold Seymour

Baseball Historian

Dorothy Jane Mills

Dorothy's Work in Baseball

Dorothy Jane Mills, a k a Dorothy Z. Seymour, is the author of this site and of her own site at www.DorothyJaneMills.com. She is the widow of Dr. Harold Seymour and was his lifetime collaborator.

Picture of Dorothy

Dorothy Jane Mills
about 1960

Dorothy sitting at a desk

Dorothy as a college newspaper editor
about 1946

Dorothy sitting at a computer

Dorothy in her New Hampshire office
about 1990

Portrait of Dorothy

Dorothy Jane Mills in 2001

To learn about Dorothy's work in baseball and other sports, click on her web site and find "Sports History" in the navbar. Here you'll discover information about her connection with Dr. Seymour's books and the Seymour Medal. You'll also find out exactly what work Dorothy performed on the Seymour books by reading her article, "A Woman's Work." And you'll find out how Dorothy has continued her interest in sports history while working on other projects.

Oxford's Recognition

When Dr. Seymour's editor at Oxford University Press, Sheldon Meyer, learned of Dorothy's work on the third volume, Baseball: The People's Game, he wrote her in 1992 that he was "astounded by the news that you had actually written a good part of Volume III and received no credit for it. I don't know whether there is anything we can do to rectify the situation at this late date. It was certainly an injustice to you" and "we thank you deeply for your large contribution."

Proud Accomplishment

Meyer added, "All three volumes continue to sell in paperback and will remain on our active list for years to come. They do represent the basic history of baseball until 1930, and scholars and other writers and enthusiasts will continue to draw on them in the future. Actually, these three books represent one of the proudest accomplishments of my years at Oxford. It was my great privilege and pleasure to be involved in the publication of this seminal work."

Available Archive

Meyer also asked Dorothy, "What do you plan to do with the research for Volume IV? It should provide at least a valuable research tool for other scholars, and perhaps some scholar in the future might be interested in continuing Seymour's work." Not realizing that this material had been willed to Cornell University, Meyer urged, "this is a valuable archive that should be available in some form."

This valuable archive is of course available, in the form of the Seymour Collection at the Carl A. Kroch Library of Cornell University, where scholars use it frequently for their research into baseball history.

Dorothy accepting awards - a bat and a ball

Dorothy accepting awards from Justine Warren, President of the Women's Baseball League, at the league's first conference, Cleveland 2001

Important Women in Baseball

In the year 2000 a SABR committee on Women in Baseball selected Dorothy as one of the 25 most important women in baseball.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 11 February 2009 16:00
 
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