Why does boston hate the yankees




















New York and Boston remained intrinsically tied together from their very beginning. Dutch trade posts established in in the Hudson River Valley and run by the New Netherland Company represent the first European settlements in either area, while just six years later, the Pilgrims, initially intending to settle in the Hudson River, founded the first colony in Cape Cod in Both cities — one mercantile and heterogeneous, one religious and conforming — laid conflicting claims to wide swathes of territory in the Northeast, desiring to control the lucrative fur trade.

As part of two separate colonial empires, New Amsterdam and Boston fought over the region, a competition that ended online when the Treaty of Hartford of established as the boundary between the Dutch and English colonies the current border between New York and Connecticut.

That did not, however, end the hostility between New York and Boston. New York traders, for example, were often accused by New Englanders of selling weapons to Native American tribes in exchange for furs, weapons that were then used against New England during the many small wars among the English colonies, French colonies and Native American tribes that dotted the 17th and 18th centuries.

Over the course of the 18th century both cities prospered, becoming two of the largest ports in the American colonies. Lacking fertile land suitable for farming but abundant in timber, New England became a premier center for shipping — not only in America, but across the British Empire.

Fueled by immigration from throughout Europe, New York became a multicultural city early in its history, with 25, residents in second only to Philadelphia, with 30, ; its primary exports included agricultural products and manufactured goods, both of which, at this time, often involved slave labor. During the American Revolution, Boston became the leading city for resistance to British rule, first by organizing resistance to the Stamp Act in ; even before the Boston Tea Party in , British officials began to believe that the city could only be controlled through military force.

New York, on the other hand, remained very much divided, with its two political factions — the Livingston and de Lancey families — siding with the Continental Congress in Philadelphia and the British Crown, respectively. The city would remain occupied by the British army and a Loyalist bastion until the signing of the Treaty of Paris in recognized American independence.

After the Revolution, New York took over as the seat of government from Philadelphia for the new United States, serving as the seat of Congress under the Articles of Confederation and as the first capital under the US Constitution. It remained that way for only a year, despite the intention of Alexander Hamilton and the Federalist Party. The opening of the Erie Canal in eliminated this advantage, and by , New York surpassed Philadelphia as the largest city in the country. That is not to say that Boston became a backwater town; nay, on the contrary, the city became a center of industry and education, and served as a pioneer in the railroad industry as a way to combat the difficulties in building canals in New England.

The mid- and lateth century saw New York become the first city of the United States, if not the world. Despite this, Boston continued to vie with the city for, if not economic supremacy, at least cultural and intellectual influence. The collision at home resulted in, once again, punches being thrown and the benches clearing. The dugouts cleared again and a barrage of punches were thrown.

This was ideally the turning point in the rivalry. No longer were these isolated incidents between the teams. Now, it was personal. Growing up in a family of soccer players, I never fully comprehended the hatred Yankee fans had towards the Red Sox Garcia exchanged a few choice words with the Red Sox righty and the benches cleared, but nothing malicious came of it. In the bottom half of the inning with Roger Clemens on the mound and Manny Ramirez at the plate, Clemons threw one high and inside.

This time, to call what occurred next malicious would be an understatement. One of the most intense brawls ever seen in baseball followed. In the chaos, Yankee bench coach Don Zimmer was shoved to the ground by Martinez.

The game proceeded until the ninth inning when Yankee reliever Jeff Nelson and Garcia got in an altercation with a groundskeeper in the bullpen. For younger fans, this is the moment that lives in infamy, a moment that will never be forgotten.

Heart-breaking, agitating and unbelievable are just some of the words that could be used to describe what occurred that October in Never has baseball seen a playoff series comeback down three games to none, and it likely never will again.



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