In Honolulu in 1840: Difference between revisions
Bsallardice (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
m (Bot moved page In Honolulu in 1840undefined to In Honolulu in 1840 without leaving a redirect: Prune undefined from In Honolulu in 1840undefined name) |
||
(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Predecessor Game | {{Predecessor Game | ||
|Name= | |Name=In Honolulu in 1840 | ||
|Coordinates=21. | |Coordinates=21.3098845, -157.8581401 | ||
|Entry Origin= | |||
|Entry Origin Url= | |||
|NY Rules=No - Predecessor | |NY Rules=No - Predecessor | ||
|Borough= | |||
|Type of Date=Year | |Type of Date=Year | ||
|Date=1840/ | |Date=1840/01/01 | ||
|Date Note= | |||
|Country=United States | |Country=United States | ||
|State=HI | |State=HI | ||
|City=Honolulu | |City=Honolulu | ||
|Game=Bat and Ball | |Field= | ||
|Description=<p>The <em>Honolulu Polynesian</em>, Dec. 26, 1840: "Sports in Honolulu. One evidence of the increasing civilization of this place, and not the least gratifying, is to see the ardor with which the native youth of both sexes engage in the same old games which used to warm our blood not long since. There's good old bat and ball, just the same as when we ran from the school-house to the "Common" to exercise our skill that way..."</p> | |Modern Address= | ||
<p>An interesting item is in the New London (CT) <em>People's Advocate</em>, June 17, 1846: a letter, dated Nov. 12, 1845 from students at the "School for young chiefs" on Oahu, thanking the nutmeggers for their gifts of school equipment, and noting that "for exercise, we ... sometimes play ball or engage in other sports." The letter is signed by Lot Kamehameha and Alexander Liholiho--two future kings of Hawaii.</p> | |Number of Players= | ||
|Game=Bat-and-Ball | |||
|Innings= | |||
|Innings Note= | |||
|Home Team= | |||
|Home Score= | |||
|Away Team= | |||
|Away Score= | |||
|Description=<p>The <em>Honolulu Polynesian</em>, Dec. 26, 1840: "Sports in Honolulu. One evidence of the increasing civilization of this place, and not the least gratifying, is to see the ardor with which the native youth of both sexes engage in the same old games which used to warm our blood not long since. There's good old bat and ball, just the same as when we ran from the school-house to the "Common" to exercise our skill that way..."</p><p>An interesting item is in the New London (CT) <em>People's Advocate</em>, June 17, 1846: a letter, dated Nov. 12, 1845 from students at the "School for young chiefs" on Oahu, thanking the nutmeggers for their gifts of school equipment, and noting that "for exercise, we ... sometimes play ball or engage in other sports." The letter is signed by Lot Kamehameha and Alexander Liholiho--two future kings of Hawaii.</p> | |||
|Sources=<p>The <em>Honolulu Polynesian</em>, Dec. 26, 1840</p> | |Sources=<p>The <em>Honolulu Polynesian</em>, Dec. 26, 1840</p> | ||
|Source Image= | |||
|Has Source On Hand=No | |Has Source On Hand=No | ||
|Comment=<p>See Chronologies 1840.38. The article was probably taken from Jarves' writings, later turned into a book.</p> | |||
|Query= | |||
|Submitted by=Bruce Allardice | |Submitted by=Bruce Allardice | ||
|Submission Note= | |||
|Reviewed=Yes | |Reviewed=Yes | ||
|First in Location= | |||
|First in Location Note= | |||
|Players Locality= | |||
|class=championship= | |||
|class=championship= | |||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 13:34, 27 February 2024
Date of Game | 1840 |
---|---|
Game | Bat-and-Ball |
Location | Honolulu, HI, United States |
Modern Address | |
Field | Add Field Page |
Home Team | Add Club Page |
Away Team | Add Club Page |
Score | |
Has Source On Hand | No |
Innings | |
Number of Players | |
NY Rules | No - Predecessor |
Tags | |
Description | The Honolulu Polynesian, Dec. 26, 1840: "Sports in Honolulu. One evidence of the increasing civilization of this place, and not the least gratifying, is to see the ardor with which the native youth of both sexes engage in the same old games which used to warm our blood not long since. There's good old bat and ball, just the same as when we ran from the school-house to the "Common" to exercise our skill that way..." An interesting item is in the New London (CT) People's Advocate, June 17, 1846: a letter, dated Nov. 12, 1845 from students at the "School for young chiefs" on Oahu, thanking the nutmeggers for their gifts of school equipment, and noting that "for exercise, we ... sometimes play ball or engage in other sports." The letter is signed by Lot Kamehameha and Alexander Liholiho--two future kings of Hawaii. |
Sources | The Honolulu Polynesian, Dec. 26, 1840 |
Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
Has Source On Hand | No |
Comment | See Chronologies 1840.38. The article was probably taken from Jarves' writings, later turned into a book. Edit with form to add a comment |
Query | Edit with form to add a query |
Submitted by | Bruce Allardice |
Submission Note | |
First in Location | |
Players Locality | |
Entry Origin | |
Entry Origin Url |
Comments
<comments voting="Plus" />