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  • |Name=Ballgame in Johannesburg in 1895 |Country=South Africa
    1 KB (183 words) - 18:56, 6 June 2020
  • |Country=South Africa ...1904, article titled "All the World Plays Baseball", gives details of the "South African Baseball association", quoting the Transvaal <em>Leader</em>'s arti
    2 KB (256 words) - 16:39, 28 March 2022
  • |Name=In Cape Town in 1808 |Country=South Africa
    810 bytes (114 words) - 14:12, 27 February 2024
  • |Country=South Africa ...there. The sailors won three, and proclaimed themselves the "Champions of Africa."</p>
    1 KB (146 words) - 12:10, 6 August 2020
  • |Country=South Africa |First in Location=Wynberg, South Africa
    782 bytes (107 words) - 06:22, 8 July 2020
  • |Location=Britain, India, Australia South Africa, New Zealand ...lass="reference"></sup><sup id="cite_ref-2" class="reference"></sup>In the South Asian region, gully cricket is very popular."<sup class="reference"></sup>
    1 KB (231 words) - 15:10, 20 January 2023
  • |Name=in Cape Town in 1897 |Country=South Africa
    713 bytes (109 words) - 06:26, 8 July 2020
  • ...year teams (now year 7) would meet 15 year old lads but size meant little in Puddox, as Mr Gracey would attest, being quite short himself.</p> ...k=1">John Huggins</a>&nbsp;recalls playing Puddox at Boston Grammar School in 1962. He believes it had migrated there from the&nbsp;<a class="extiw" titl
    9 KB (1,303 words) - 16:28, 16 August 2022
  • <p>The game is (arguably) recorded in 1300 in England, and for sure in 1598. See Altham, "A History of Cricket" p. 18-19, and Green, "A History of ...ates, led by Connecticut and Massachusetts.&nbsp; It seems to have crested in the post Civil War era, and town vs. town matches, some using teams of as m
    3 KB (441 words) - 05:52, 11 April 2023
  • ...fore another military man, one Abner Doubleday allegedly invented the game in the sleepy east central New York village of Cooperstown.</p> ...s march might have been fifteen miles, to locate a spot flat enough to get in the game. Clearly this game meant something more to Henry Dearborn and his
    92 KB (15,359 words) - 17:54, 9 February 2013
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