Bim Gibson's latest book digs into history of baseball in Auburn

Nov. 21—One of the things that stood out to Bim Gibson while researching his new book is that the recent success of Edward Little's baseball team stacks up well with the history of the program.

"I was thinking that baseball isn't what it used to be," Gibson said. "Then I started looking at what Edward Little has done since Dave Jordan's taken over. In the last 10 years, EL has had the best winning percentage in the history of the program."

As he speaks, Gibson is sitting at a table in the Hall of Fame Room at Gippers Sports Grill, which decades earlier was the location of Auburn Athletic Association Park, or AAA Park, the namesake of Gibson's new book, "From AAA to Pettengill and Beyond: The Story of Auburn and Edward Little Baseball."

"We're like sitting in left field. This is AAA Park," Gibson said. "This is where baseball started. We're sitting there. Isn't that cool? I love that."

Gipper's will also be the site of Gibson's book launch Wednesday beginning at 5 p.m. Gibson self-published the book and is selling them for $20 each. He will donate all of the proceeds to the Edward Little High School baseball program.

"AAA to Pettengill" is Gibson's third book about sports history in Auburn and Lewiston. He published "Battle of the Bridge: The History of Edward Little and Lewiston Football" in 2012, and four years later came "The History of Edward Little and Lewiston Basketball." So it seemed that a baseball book was inevitable.

Not quite.

But, as it so often did, the coronavirus pandemic changed things. Gibson, a history teacher at Auburn Middle School, had a lot of alone time in 2020. He had already compiled some of the information about Auburn's baseball history while helping one of his students with a project.

"I was literally bored because of COVID," Gibson said.

With so much free time and not much else to do, Gibson began what he called "a two-and-a-half year journey" of digging into the past. He pored over articles dating back to the 1890s from the Lewiston Daily Sun and Lewiston Evening Journal — and, when those two papers merged in the 1980s, the Sun Journal — and other Maine papers on Google Archives. He scoured Edward Little High School yearbooks.

Then he started writing, which for him is the most difficult part of the book process.

"The research part I love," Gibson said. "And then once you have all that, you go, 'Ugh. Now I have to write.'"