In Honolulu on 6 April 1860: Difference between revisions
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|Innings=9 | |Innings=9 | ||
|Description=<p><em>The Polynesian</em>, Honolulu, April 7, 1860: "Game of Ball. Quite an interesting game of ball came off yesterday afternoon on the Esplanade between the | |Description=<p><em>The Polynesian</em>, Honolulu, April 7, 1860: "Game of Ball. Quite an interesting game of ball came off yesterday afternoon on the Esplanade between the Punahou Boys and the Town Boys... The boys of a larger growth, among whom were some of the leading merchants and their clerks, had a game of good old-fashioned base ball on Sheriff Brown's premises, makai..."</p> | ||
<p>"makai" is a Hawaiian word for "sea-ward side". Brown was sheriff of Honolulu in 1860. | <p>The first, Punahoa, game mentioned was probably wicket. The <em>Pacific Commercial Advertiser</em>, March 29, 1860: "Sport--A wicket club has been organized among the young men of this city and the students of Punahou College. They will play their first game on the Esplanade Friday, at 4 p.m. ..."</p> | ||
<p>"makai" is a Hawaiian word for "sea-ward side". Brown was sheriff of Honolulu in 1860. Punahou School was founded in 1841. Many of Hawaii's leading families sent their children there.</p> | |||
<p>The memoirs of Hawaiian pioneer William Castle (cited in Nucciarone, "Alexander Cartwright" p. 198) says that before he (Castle) introduced the new baseball game to Hawaii in 1866, the bat-ball games played there were "two o-cat" and "three o-cat".</p> | |||
|Sources=<p><em>The Polynesian</em> [Honolulu], April 7, 1860</p> | |Sources=<p><em>The Polynesian</em> [Honolulu], April 7, 1860</p> | ||
|Has Source On Hand=No | |Has Source On Hand=No |
Latest revision as of 04:44, 20 December 2018
Date of Game | Friday, April 6, 1860 |
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Location | Honolulu, HI, United States |
Modern Address | |
Field | Add Field Page |
Home Team | Add Club Page |
Away Team | Add Club Page |
Score | |
Game Number | |
Innings | 9 |
Number of Players | |
Game Officials | |
NY Rules | Yes |
Tags | |
Description | The Polynesian, Honolulu, April 7, 1860: "Game of Ball. Quite an interesting game of ball came off yesterday afternoon on the Esplanade between the Punahou Boys and the Town Boys... The boys of a larger growth, among whom were some of the leading merchants and their clerks, had a game of good old-fashioned base ball on Sheriff Brown's premises, makai..." The first, Punahoa, game mentioned was probably wicket. The Pacific Commercial Advertiser, March 29, 1860: "Sport--A wicket club has been organized among the young men of this city and the students of Punahou College. They will play their first game on the Esplanade Friday, at 4 p.m. ..." "makai" is a Hawaiian word for "sea-ward side". Brown was sheriff of Honolulu in 1860. Punahou School was founded in 1841. Many of Hawaii's leading families sent their children there. The memoirs of Hawaiian pioneer William Castle (cited in Nucciarone, "Alexander Cartwright" p. 198) says that before he (Castle) introduced the new baseball game to Hawaii in 1866, the bat-ball games played there were "two o-cat" and "three o-cat". |
Sources | The Polynesian [Honolulu], April 7, 1860 |
Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
Has Source On Hand | No |
Comment | Edit with form to add a comment |
Query | Edit with form to add a query |
Found by | Bruce Allardice |
Submission Note | |
Entered by | |
First in Location | |
Players Locality | |
Entry Origin | |
Entry Origin Url | |
Local-Origins Study Groups |
Comments
<comments voting="Plus" />