Dorothy Seymour Mills Explained

Dorothy Seymour Mills
Birth Name:Dorothy Jane Zander
Birth Date:5 July 1928
Birth Place:Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.
Death Place:Tucson, Arizona, U.S.
Notable Works:Baseball trilogy

Dorothy Jane Mills (; July 5, 1928 – November 17, 2019), known as Dorothy Seymour Mills, was an American baseball researcher, author, and novelist who authored and co-authored over thirty books, fiction and non-fiction, over her life.

Seymour Mills is best known as the co-author the Baseball trilogy with her first husband Harold Seymour: Baseball: The Early Years, Baseball: The Golden Age, and Baseball: The People's Game. Uncredited during her husband's lifetime, Seymour Mills finally received co-authorship credits in 2011.

Biography

Seymour Mills was born Dorothy Jane Zander in Cleveland, Ohio, the daughter of Henry and Katherine Zander. Her father was a printer, and her mother was a homemaker. She met her future husband Harold Seymour while attending Fenn College (later renamed Cleveland State University), where he was teaching. They married in 1949 after which she transferred to Case Western Reserve University where she completed her studies.[1]

The couple lived in New York and Massachusetts where Harold taught in colleges. Seymour Mills taught in elementary schools. She also worked for a Boston publishing company and wrote numerous children's books. After her husband gave up teaching, the couple moved around, for a time living in Ireland even, before settling in New Hampshire. Dorothy was widowed when Harold died of Alzheimer's disease; the couple had no children.[2]

After a few years, she remarried to Roy Mills, a former Royal Canadian Air Force officer and settled down with him in Naples, Florida. During her second marriage, she began writing novels under the name "Dorothy Jane Mills". Seymour Mills was widowed again after Mills died in 2011.

Seymour Mills died in Tucson, Arizona, after complications from an ulcer. She was 91.[3]

Authorship credit controversy

See also: Baseball (book series). When Harold Seymour was approached by Oxford University Press to write a book about baseball history, he ended up relying heavily on his wife who later said he could not type and hated research. Seymour Mills – who was not a fan of baseball – did majority of the research, organized material, structured the notes for the first and second volumes of the work, and edited his manuscripts. For the third volume, Harold Seymour's health had deteriorated significantly, and Dorothy wrote most of it by herself.

During Harold's lifetime, Dorothy did not get any credit for her contributions. Seymour Mills later said: "Everyone assumed that he had done all that work by himself — that's what he wanted them to assume, but we were equal partners. All these things were done jointly. He just couldn't share credit. And I didn't say anything at the time, because at the time, wives just didn't do that."

After Seymour's death and her remarried, Seymour Mills wrote about her contributions in her memoirs A Woman's Work and, as early as 1993, her contributions had become publicly known, with the Society for American Baseball Research jointly honoring her and her husband. In 2011, Oxford University Press finally credited her as a co-author of the books , , and . For the third book, her name now appears first.[4]

Legacy

The Seymour Medal, awarded annually by the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) since 1996, was named in honor of Dorothy and Harold Seymour.[5] In 2017, SABR created the Dorothy Seymour Mills Lifetime Achievement Award in her name to recognize "any person with a sustained involvement in women's baseball or any woman with a longtime involvement in baseball in any fashion."[6]

Along with her husband, Seymour Mills received SABR's inaugural Henry Chadwick Award in 2010.[7] Initially, the award was only given to her husband. However, after female members of the organization protested, SABR quickly altered their decision and awarded the pair jointly.[8]

Books

Baseball trilogy

Non-fiction

Novels

Notes and References

  1. News: Dorothy Seymour Mills, who received belated credit for husband's baseball writing, dies at 91 . Schudel . Matt . November 20, 2019. The Washington Post.
  2. News: Thomas . Robert Mcg. Jr. . Harold Seymour, 82, a Pioneer In the Field of Baseball History . . September 29, 1992.
  3. Web site: In Memoriam: Dorothy Seymour Mills . Society for American Baseball Research.
  4. News: O'Neill . Ann . A baseball wife emerges from the dugout . . February 25, 2011 .
  5. Web site: The Seymour Medal . Society for American Baseball Research.
  6. Web site: Dorothy Seymour Mills Lifetime Achievement Award (Women in Baseball) . Society for American Baseball Research.
  7. Web site: Thorn . John . Henry Chadwick Award: Harold Seymour and Dorothy Seymour Mills . Society for American Baseball Research.
  8. News: Schwarz . Alan . SABR Ends Controversy, Gives Credit to Historian's Wife . . March 6, 2010.