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This page provides a simple browsing interface for finding entities described by a property and a named value. Other available search interfaces include the page property search, and the ask query builder.
List of results
- Street Games of Boys in Brooklyn + (4)
- Rural Games in Libya + (4)
- Games Played with a Ball + (4)
- The History of Baseball in Buffalo + (4)
- Baseball in the Seventeenth Century + (5)
- Considerazioni ed Ipotesi Sull'origine del 'Om el Mahag' + (5)
- Battingball Games + (5)
- 1609 -- Polish Workers Play Ball at Jamestown, Virginia: An Early Hint of Europe's Influence On Base Ball + (5)
- 1609: Polish WorkersPlat Ball at Jamestown, Virginia: An Early Hint of Europe's Influence On Base BallCountry=United States + (5)
- 1621 -- Pilgrim Stolball an the Profusion of American Safe-Haven BallgamesCountry=United States + (5)
- 1672 -- The Amazing Francis Willugby, and the Role of Stoolball in the Evolution of Baseball and Cricket + (5)
- 1726 -- Ballplaying and Boston Common: A Town Playground for Boys . . . And Men + (5)
- 1744 -- 'How Is It, Umpire?' The 1744 Laws of Cricket and Their Influence on the Development of Baseball in America + (5)
- 1755 -- 'The Bat and Ball;' A Distinct Game or a Generic Term? + (5)
- 1781 -- Protoball at Harvard: From Pastime to Contest + (5)
- 1791 -- The Pittsfield 'Baseball' Bylaw -- What it Means + (5)
- German Book Describes Das Englisch Base-ball: But Was It Baseball or Rounders?Country=United States + (5)
- 1805 -- An Enigmatic 1805 'Game of Bace' in New York + (5)
- 1821 -- New York Mansion Converted to Venue Suitable for Ballplaying + (5)
- 1825 -- Thurlow Weed and the Growth of Baseball in Rochester, New York + (5)
- 1829 -- The Rise and Fall of New England-Style Ballplaying + (5)
- 1830 -- Thoreau's Diary Entry and Other Tiny Clues as to Who Played Early Ball + (5)
- 1831 -- The Olympic Ball Club of Philadelphia + (5)
- 1837 -- William Wheaton and the Evolution of the New York Game + (5)
- 1841 -- Barn Ball + (5)
- 1843 -- Magnolia Club Predates the Knickerbocker + (5)
- 1845 -- The Knickerbocker Rules, and the Long History of the One-Bounce Fielding Rule + (5)
- 1850 -- Southern Ball-Games + (5)
- 1853 -- The Baseball Press Emerges + (5)
- 1854 -- William Van Cott Writes a Letter to the Sporting Press + (5)
- 1856 -- The New York Game in 1856: Poised for a National Launch + (5)
- 1857 -- Nine Innings, Nine Players, Ninety Feet and Other Changes: The Recodification of Baseball Rules in 1857 + (5)