Straight Town: Difference between revisions

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|Sources=<p><span style="font-family: Arial Black;">Dennis Reedy, ed., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">School and Community History of Dickenson County, Virginia</span></span></p>
|Sources=<p><span style="font-family: Arial Black;">Dennis Reedy, ed., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">School and Community History of Dickenson County, Virginia</span></span></p>
|Comment=<p>Found by Bill Hicklin, email of February 6, 2016.</p>
|Comment=<p>Found by Bill Hicklin, email of February 6, 2016.</p>
|Has Supplemental Text=No
|Has Supplemental Text=No}}
}}
}}

Revision as of 19:40, 6 February 2016

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Game Straight Town
Game Family Baseball Baseball
Location VA
Regions US
Eras 1800s
Invented No
Description

19th-century reflections from essays by schoolboys in rural Virginia: 

[William Ayers Dyer essay:] "I was born May 10, 1880 at Stratton, Dickenson County, Virginia and started to school to Johnson Skeen at the Buffalo School in 1885 when I was 5 years old... The games we played at the Buffalo were straight town, round town, base, bull pen and antnee over." (Bull pen was dodgeball, but played with a baseball. Ouch!)

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 [Hampton Osborne (b. 1894) essay: "'Round-town' and 'straight-town' were popular games. Round-town had four bases in a circle, as baseball does today. If the batter was caught or crossed-off both ways, he was out. Straight-town had four bases in a row and you used the same rules as round-town."There were three or four base games, but 'Stink-base' was the most popular..." (describes game effectively identical to prisoner's base, which we take to be a form of capture-the-flag)=

 

Sources

Dennis Reedy, ed., School and Community History of Dickenson County, Virginia

Comment

Found by Bill Hicklin, email of February 6, 2016.

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