Club of Fort Scott: Difference between revisions
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{{Club | {{Club | ||
|Coordinates=37.8397626, -94.7082951 | |||
|Entry Origin=Sabrpedia | |||
|Name=Club of Fort Scott | |Name=Club of Fort Scott | ||
|Club Name=Fort Scott | |Club Name=Fort Scott | ||
|Type of Date=Year | |Type of Date=Year | ||
| | |Date=1866/01/01 | ||
|Date Note=No Later than 1866 | |Date Note=No Later than 1866 | ||
| | |Date of Dissolution Type=Day | ||
| | |Country=United States | ||
|State=KS | |||
|City=Fort Scott | |City=Fort Scott | ||
|Description=<p>The Fort Scott Club of Fort Scott KS is listed in Peverelly [1866]. </p> | |||
<p>The <em>Fort Scott Monitor</em>, July 25, 1906, reports that Fort Scott's first baseball team was organized in 1866, and says that a team photo has been found. Colonel W. A. Cormany is the only survivor of that team, whose members are named in the article.</p> | |||
<p>This may be the Lincoln Club of Fort Scott, which in July 1867 challenged any local club to play them. See the <em>Fort Scott Weekly Monitor</em>, July 24, 1867.</p> | |||
|Description=<p>The Fort Scott Club of Fort Scott KS is listed in Peverelly [1866]. | <p>The Fort Leavenworth or Fort Scott club may have been the first to form in Kansas.</p> | ||
</p><p>The Fort Leavenworth or Fort Scott club may have been the first to form in Kansas. | <p>Fort Scott is on the eastern Kansas border, about 100 miles S of Kansas City KS and about 100 miles NW of Springfield MO. Wikipedia: "After the Civil War, Fort Scott was a premier city of the frontier, one of the largest cities in eastern Kansas."</p> | ||
</p><p>Fort Scott is on the eastern Kansas border, about 100 miles S of Kansas City KS and about 100 miles NW of Springfield MO. | |Sources=<p>An irresistible chain of circumstances occasioned “S.C.'s” absence from Carthage during the late trial, wherein Fort Scott was plaintiff, and Carthage defendant, and which resulted in a verdict for the latter.</p> | ||
</p> | <p>The events just preceding that trial seemed to indicate that Base Ball was, not withstanding its nationality, a very unprophetable game, - meaning thereby that it was impossible to fortell how a game might end...</p> | ||
<p>-Carthage Weekly Banner (Carthage, Mo.), October 24, 1867</p> | |||
|Has Source On Hand=No | |||
|Reviewed=Yes | |Reviewed=Yes | ||
|First in Location=KS | |Submitted by=Bruce Allardice, Jeffrey Kittel, | ||
| | |Entered by=Bruce Allardice, Jeffrey Kittel | ||
|First in Location=Fort Scott, KS | |||
|Has Supplemental Text=No | |||
|Is No Later Than=Yes | |||
|First Newspaper Mention=1866/01/01 | |||
|First Newspaper Mention Date Type=Year | |||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 16:09, 5 December 2020
Nick Name | Fort Scott |
---|---|
Earliest Known Date | 1866 -- No Later than 1866 |
Last Known Game | |
Location | Fort Scott, KS, United States |
Modern Address | |
NABBP Status | |
Nine Class | |
Tags | |
Description | The Fort Scott Club of Fort Scott KS is listed in Peverelly [1866]. The Fort Scott Monitor, July 25, 1906, reports that Fort Scott's first baseball team was organized in 1866, and says that a team photo has been found. Colonel W. A. Cormany is the only survivor of that team, whose members are named in the article. This may be the Lincoln Club of Fort Scott, which in July 1867 challenged any local club to play them. See the Fort Scott Weekly Monitor, July 24, 1867. The Fort Leavenworth or Fort Scott club may have been the first to form in Kansas. Fort Scott is on the eastern Kansas border, about 100 miles S of Kansas City KS and about 100 miles NW of Springfield MO. Wikipedia: "After the Civil War, Fort Scott was a premier city of the frontier, one of the largest cities in eastern Kansas." |
Sources | An irresistible chain of circumstances occasioned “S.C.'s” absence from Carthage during the late trial, wherein Fort Scott was plaintiff, and Carthage defendant, and which resulted in a verdict for the latter. The events just preceding that trial seemed to indicate that Base Ball was, not withstanding its nationality, a very unprophetable game, - meaning thereby that it was impossible to fortell how a game might end... -Carthage Weekly Banner (Carthage, Mo.), October 24, 1867 |
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, Jeffrey Kittel |
Submission Note | |
Entered by | Bruce Allardice, Jeffrey Kittel |
First in Location | Fort Scott, KS |
First in Location Note | |
Entry Origin | Sabrpedia |
Entry Origin Url | |
Local-Origin Study Groups | |
Has Supplemental Text |
Ballgames
No games have been posted for this Club yet.
Players
No players have been associated with this Club yet.
Playing Fields
Comments
<comments voting="Plus" />