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- In Gottingen in 1861 + (George Haven Putnam recalled playing baseball and cricket with some English students while studying at Gottingen in 1861.)
- In Boston in 1844 + (Girls of 14 played round ball on the Boston Common.)
- Star Base Ball Club of Louisville v Star Base Ball Club of Louisville on 6 September 1858 + (Gives sorta box score. James B. Hervey was the umpire. The two candidates for JBH are the son of the local court clerk, born circa 1843, and a James B. Harvey, blacksmith, born circa 1833, killed 1876, a Confederate army veteran.)
- Gotham Jr. Club of New York v Suffolk on 14 October 1863 + (Gotham 2nd nine. Jrs.)
- Lawrence Base Ball Club of Cambridge v Lawrence Base Ball Club of Cambridge on 11 November 1858 + (Gould's side 33, Washburn's side 11)
- Club of Govanstown + (Govanstown is a neighborhood of Baltimore)
- Bright Eagle Club of Knoxville + (Greenville Independents, a "colored" club, to play the "colored" Bright Eagle BBC of Knoxville.)
- In Hamilton on 22 August 1835 + (Guelph played Toronto at Hamilton)
- Gully Cricket + (Gully Cricket is a more forgiving form of … Gully Cricket is a more forgiving form of cricket often associated with India and the Indian diaspora.</br></br><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><span style="font-size: 10pt;">"10 Gully Cricket Rules That We All Played With! </span> </span> </br></br>"From screaming “outzaatttt” every time someone catches the ball to breaking the window glass of the neighbour’s house, it’s safe to say that gully cricket is an integral part of all our well-cherished childhood, especially in India! And I’m sure, all you cricket fanatics can relate to the same. So what makes gully cricket so much more enjoyable than the regular cricket that there are now gully cricket leagues being held that everyone oh so enjoys? As a gully cricket enthusiast myself, it’s safe to say, that as a kid from India, it’s the freedom that comes with making up your own rules in this game that makes this game so enjoyable.</br></br><br>So here are 10 gully cricket rules that most of us played with during our childhood that will leave us feeling nostalgic.</br>=== <span style="font-size: 10pt;">'''1) Pitch-catch is considered out if you catch the ball in one hand.'''</span> ===</br><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">When the fielding team member catches the ball after one bounce, but in one hand, the player who hit the ball is out!</span></p></br>=== <span style="font-size: 10pt;">'''2) First ball = Trial ball'''</span> ===</br><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">The first ball that every batsman will attempt will always be a trial ball just so they can warm up their batting skills and get used to the bowling.</span></p></br>=== <span style="font-size: 10pt;">'''3) If the ball hits the neighbour’s house, window, wall or car, the batsman is out!'''</span> ===</br><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">If the batsman hits the ball directly into the wall of the neighbour’s house, widow or the car, they will have to bear the expenses that follow and they are out!</span></p></br>=== <span style="font-size: 10pt;">'''4) The winning team will always get to bat first in the next match!'''</span> ===</br><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">The team that wins this match will automatically bat for the next match, cause who doesn’t love to bat.</span></p></br>=== <span style="font-size: 10pt;">'''5) ''''''The batsman should always leave some space for the wicket to be seen because there is no concept of LBW!'''</span> ===</br><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">The batsman should not cover the whole wicket while batting cause there is no LBW rule. And if you don’t, the bowler will throw a fit.</span></p></br>=== <span style="font-size: 10pt;">'''6) ''''''If the batsman thinks the ball is too fast, the bowler should re-bowl the ball!'''</span> ===</br><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">If the batsman feels the ball was too fast, it is too fast. Oh and that ball will not be counted because clearly, it’s unfair.</span></p></br>=== <span style="font-size: 10pt;">'''7) If the ball goes far out of reach or is lost, the batsman is held responsible.'''</span> ===</br><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">When the batsman hits the ball so far that it’s lost, he will have to replace the ball. Because well, he hit it!</span></p></br>=== <span style="font-size: 10pt;">'''8) The umpire is chosen from the batting team.'''</span> ===</br><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">The umpire will be a player from the batting team because he’ll be sitting on the sidelines. When it’s his turn to bat, someone else will replace him!</span></p></br>=== <span style="font-size: 10pt;">'''9) The last batsman will play without a non-striker batsman.'''</span> ===</br><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">The last man gets to bat without assistance from the other non-striker batsman. Because hey… we can make up their own rules.</span></p></br>=== <span style="font-size: 10pt;">'''10) The team with the extra player will have to lend him to play fielding for the other team!'''</span> ===</br><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">The extra player in the team, usually the worst player will be asked to play for both teams. Obviously because then the powers of both the team will be equal."</span></p>n></p> === <span style="font-size: 10pt;">'''10) The team with the extra player will have to lend him to play fielding for the other team!'''</span> === <p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">The extra player in the team, usually the worst player will be asked to play for both teams. Obviously because then the powers of both the team will be equal."</span></p>)
- Prairie Club of Schoolcraft v Champion Club of Kalamazoo on 2 October 1860 + (Hard to make out exactly the game played. The first game was 25 "innings" 12 a side with the final 30-17. The second game was 30 "innings" ending in a 1717 tie.)
- Alpine Club of Bradford + (Haverhill annexed Bradford in 1897. Bradford had 2014 residents in 1870.)
- In West Chester Circa 1827 + (Hazard of ball playing)
- In Hazardville in 1859 + (Hazardville vs. Hartford, at Hartford)
- Ten Position Baseball + (Henry Chadwick pushed for this variation See Mark Brunke's article on Ten-Position baseball https://protoball.org/Ten-Position_Base_Ball)
- In West Newton + (Henry Wallace (b 1836) recalled that when growing up in West Newton Township, Westmoreland County, PA in the 1840s, "we played town-ball, baseball and three-cornered cat.")
- In Poultney Circa 1823 + (Horace Greeley described playing ball in VT in the early 1820s.)
- Length of Games, 1860-1865 1.0 + (How Long Did Games Take 160 Years Ago?)
- Accounts + (How did game accounts evolve locally? What were local box-score summaries like?? Was quantification and/or statistics important in the local popularity of the game?)
- Patterns of Spread + (How do we explain the observed patterns of local propagation of base ball . . . population shifts, transportation technologies, news media effects, etc.)
- Franklin Club of New Bedford v Franklin Club of New Bedford on 24 November 1859 + (Howland's side 100, Nye's 55)
- In Lafayette in 1829 + (Hugh M. King, in the year 1829, taught sch … Hugh M. King, in the year 1829, taught school in a one story frame that stood on the lot now occupied by Handley's block, on the east side of Fourth street, between Columbia and South streets. These were sub. scription schools - the employers paying according to the number of pupils subscribed, at the rate stipulated in the articles, which was generally from one dollar and fifty cents to two dollars per scholar per quarter. The branches taught were spelling, reading, writing, arithmetic, English grammar and geography. In but few instances was the teacher called upon to instruct his pupils in more than the four first named branches. The athletic sports of the boys, at the noon play-time, consisted in playing corner ball (bull-pen), cat, town ball, and a game called shinny. Baseball, now so popular among grown-up boys, who go from city to city to play with other hopeful "nines " whose ages range from eighteen to forty five, is a perversion of town ball. It is a rough and dangerous game. The girls amused themselves jumping the rope, gathering flowers, swinging, and other healthful amusements. There were then no male and female Dolly Varden Croquet Clubs, playing out-door billiards on the green, with painted mallets and balls, large shoe buckles, and a stock of affectation to match. and a stock of affectation to match.)
- Black Hawk Club of Hunter's Point + (Hunter's Point is now a neighborhood in Brooklyn/NYC.)
- In Jacksonboro on 17 February 1782 + (In 1782 a Pennsylvania officer records "This day I was very much fatigued playing cricket." The officer was stationed at the Frazor farm, about 4 miles from Jacksonborough (as it was then known).)
- In Troy in 1839 + (In 1838 as well?)
- McKinstry vs. Brooklyn Daily Times + (In 1862, a baseball rules dispute played out between an umpire and a Brooklyn newspaper.)
- "A Good Many Different Kinds of Ball" + (In 1867 story, a father recollects boyhood ballplaying)
- Club of Rutgers University + (In 1869, Princeton defeated Rutgers in baseball 40-2.)
- In Concord Circa 1840 + (In 1892 Judge Milton McGee (b. 1828) reminisced about his early days in Concord, MI, which included choosing teams and playing ball after barn raising. The nature of the ball game is unspecified, but McGee played baseball later in life)
- In Bolivar Circa 1837 + (In 1897 a 70 year old reminisced about playing town ball in his boyhood)
- In Ottumwa Circa 1856 + (In 1903 J. A. Israel (born 1846, family moved to Wapello County in 1854) recalled that as a schoolboy in Wapello County, he played town ball, bull pen and three cornered cat)
- Harrison Club of Newark v Baltic Club of Belleville on 23 October 1860 + (In East Newark)
- In Concarneau in 1885 + (In their book ''Peintres Américains en Bretagne 1864-1914'', David Sellin and Catherine Puget mention that American artists staying in Pont Aven and Concarneau played baseball in 1885. These places are in Brittany.)
- In Beaufort in 1862 + (In the Spring of 1862, while in camp in Beaufort, SC, the 79th NY Infantry, a Scottish-American unit known as the Highlanders, played "Base Ball and Cricket" to "occupy some of our leisure moments.")
- In Boonton in 1858 + (Independence Cricket Club formed in Boonton in early 1858)
- Empire Club of New Orleans v Empire Club of New Orleans on 10 August 1859 + (Intersquad game)
- Empire Club of New Orleans on 26 April 1860 + (Intersquad game)
- Club of Pittsfield v Club of Pittsfield on 27 July 1859 + (Intersquad game)
- Tri-Mountain Club of Boston v Tri-Mountain Club of Boston on 11 August 1859 + (Intersquad game)
- Tri-Mountain Club of Boston v Tri-Mountain Club of Boston on 15 September 1859 + (Intersquad game)
- Olympic Club of Macon v Olympic Club of Macon on 24 March 1860 + (Intersquad game, 10 a side. Game umpired by "Mr. Warren of the New York Club.")
- Interviews + (Interviews with Diggers)
- Louisville Base Ball Club v Louisville Base Ball Club on 8 July 1858 + (Intrasqad "trial game")
- The Beneficiaries + (Is it clear who profited from the growth of the game in your area? Did that affect the game on the field? How?)
- Gymnasts Town Ball Club of Cincinnati v Gymnasts Town Ball Club of Cincinnati on 1 July 1858undefined + (J.S. Claypool's side 145, S. Robinson's side 71. (Porter’s Spirit of the Times: “Our correspondent says that the club designs to challenge the Excelsior Town Ballers to a grand public trial of skill.”))
- Capitol City Grounds + (Jeff Sackmann says that the Capital City B … Jeff Sackmann says that the Capital City BBC, the original organized BBC in Madison, had in 1865 its grounds on the shore of Lake Mendota, near the University of Wisconsin.</br></br>He also says an 1860 schoolboy game was played on a vacant lot 3 blocks from the capitol building. And that during the Civil War, baseball was played at Camp Randall, a union army training camp that today is the location of the University football stadiumocation of the University football stadium)
- Osceola Club of Berryville + (Jeffersons of Charlestown 58, Osceolas of Berryville 37)
- In Jersey City in 1867 + (Jersey City Cricket Club org. last Spring, vs.Paterson)
- In Channel Islands in 1861 + (Jersey and Guernsey have had a cricket rivalry since 1861)
- In Williamstown Circa 1847 + (John Bascom (1827-1911), an 1849 grad of W … John Bascom (1827-1911), an 1849 grad of Williams College, is said to have dominated the wicket-field at the college.Future President James Garfield (b. 1833) attended Williams, and played wicket at Hiram College after graduation. Did he learn wicket at Williams? on. Did he learn wicket at Williams? )
- In Delphi Circa 1848 + (Jonathan Lee Knight (1837-1915), a noted photographer, wrote to the Delphi Times in 1870 that as a boy in Delphi, IN, he played bull pen and three cornered cat, which he labeled the "immediate progenitor" of baseball.)
- Massasoit Club of Springfield v Johnson Club of Chicopee on 27 September 1860 + (Jonson 2nd nine)