By Miles Klotz

Boston Sports Tours in action with a group of executives, at Red Auerbach statue, Faneuil Hall.
Few cities in the world have a closer relationship to sports than Boston. From our city’s inception in the seventeenth century to the present day, athletics have played an important role in the city’s cultural and social development. Boston’s themes of freedom, liberty, and revolution show up in the history of Boston sports, both professional and amateur. How can public historians, when showcasing Boston’s sports history, balance the need to narrate the history of sports as entertainment – the championships, the players, etc. – with the important public role that sports has played in Boston’s histories of race, labor, and gender? That is the central question I have sought to answer this fall as I intern at Interpreting Sports, a sports consulting company headed
by UMB public history alumnus Kathryn Harris, working with tour development under her Boston Sports Tours umbrella.
Public historians working across all fields have worked over the past decades to tie narrow historical themes and debates into dialogue and exhibits tailored for a wider audience. Sports history, currently, is behind schedule in that pursuit, and my work this semester with the development of the Title Town Tour has provided me with an inside look at the challenges that come with developing a strong sports history tour that does more than simply narrating names and dates.
The Title Town Tour, which runs from the Boston champions’ parade route at Government Center, to the TD Garden, explores Boston’s history as a city that wins lots of championships. But the central theme of the tour is that, in fact, for much of the twentieth century, our sports teams were not winning championships, and yet the city’s love for sports never faded, and its athletes remained key parts of the city’s fabric in various ways. Sometimes these stories of sport’s importance to Boston are difficult – a stop at the Bill Russell statue by City Hall narrates the Celtics’ legend’s longstanding conflict with the city of Boston, particularly the racism that he experienced throughout his career and violence during the busing crisis.

This semester, my work with Kathryn has focused on tour development to best enhance the visitor experience. We’ve had the opportunity to host a number of tours this fall. The feedback visitors provide about what they want to see and hear is crucial in fine-tuning our tours. Unlike a physical exhibit with labels in place, the walking tour is a moldable object that can be altered each time it is given. Making sure to have a deep knowledge of facts and stories allows us as tour guides to add certain stories as may be necessary when walking to
a certain point, or depending on a visitor’s specific questions.
The most rewarding part of this internship has been understanding more deeply the relationship of sports in Boston to broader historical themes, especially those of race and labor. Boston was the last city to integrate its Major League baseball franchise; the Red Sox did not add their first black player until 1959. Bill Russell experienced vandalism, theft, and violence at the hands of Bostonians in his years as a player and coach. The original Boston Garden held numerous boxing matches that pitted African Americans and first-generation Italian-Americans against each other in an era of heightened racial tension. These are the stories that are generally left out of sports history museums.
It may take many years for sports history museums and tours to get to the stage where historical interpretation is for fields such as slavery, but the work of Harris and others in the field is establishing a useful framework for better linking broader historical themes and the study of sports. A reason that Boston is a good city to put these methods to use is the passion of sports fan in this city, a passion matched by few places in the country. Why are fans passionate here, and how does that passion intersect with other aspects of our city’s history? Every time we take a tour, and speak with a new visitor, and learn their stories, we find a new way to understand and tell the relationship of sports to Boston. A history and a meaning that regularly changes makes this field challenging, but extremely rewarding.










