July 15, 1876 – By George I think he’s got it! Almost 100 years to the day after a guy named George Washington was preserving freedom with patriotic forces while the Declaration of Independence was being signed by the Continental Congress, the game of baseball had its first official no-hitter declared when George Bradley of the St Louis Brown Stockings no-hits the Hartford Dark Blues team, in a 2-0 blanking.
Just to keep the George’s in order, When Bradley performed this eventful feat it was less than three weeks prior that George Armstrong Custer perished at Little Big Horn. That story may have enough Georges in it to make the Foreman family reunion!
To find more great daily sports history make sure to check out the Sports Jersey Dispatch and Pigskin Dispatch.
More From Sports History Network

The Most Lopsided Blowout In College Football History
Every year in college football there is a game where one team finds out

Relive My First Super Bowl Experience With Me (Super Bowl IV)
The first Super Bowl I can remember watching was Super Bowl IV. I was

Remembering Chester Marcol’s Incredible Rookie Season
By the time of the 1972 NFL Player Draft, the Green Bay Packers, in

The Pro Football Hall of Fame (From My Perspective)
***This is an updated article that I released about 2 years ago.*** The Pro

Dancing Sheik to Sheik: Blood, Fire, and The Original Sheik
The NEW YOU ASKED FOR IT, a show that ran in syndication from 1981

Art Folz: The NFL’s Biggest Villain That You Never Heard About!
Who is Art Folz, and why is he one of the most notorious villains

What Makes An NFL Dynasty?
In terms of gratuitous overuse in the American sports vocabulary, “dynasty” is a word

Joe Nuxhall: The Story of the Youngest Player In MLB History
The date was June 10, 1944, and for the Cincinnati Reds they, like the