Three-Cornered Cat: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{Game |Term=Three-Cornered Cat |Game Family=Baseball |Game Regions=US |Game Eras=Predecessor, 1800s |Invented Game=Yes |Description=<p>"Three-Corner Cat" is the name of a gam...")
 
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|Game Family=Baseball
|Game Family=Baseball
|Game Regions=US
|Game Regions=US
|Game Eras=Predecessor, 1800s
|Game Eras=1800s, Predecessor
|Invented Game=Yes
|Invented Game=Yes
|Description=<p>"Three-Corner Cat" is the name of a game recalled decades later by base ball founder William R. Wheaton, as having been played at a Brooklyn school in his youth.&nbsp; See <a href="../1849c.4">http://protoball.org/1849c.4</a> for a chronology entry on this game.&nbsp;</p>
|Description=<p>"Three-Corner Cat" is the name of a game recalled decades later by base ball founder William R. Wheaton, as having been played at a Brooklyn school in his youth.&nbsp; See <a href="1849c.4">http://protoball.org/1849c.4</a> for a chronology entry on this game.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Three-cornered cat was a boys' game, and did well enough for slight youngsters, but it was a dangerous game for powerful men, because the ball was thrown to put out a man&nbsp;between bases, and it had to hit&nbsp;the runner to put&nbsp;him out."</p>
<p>"Three-cornered cat was a boys' game, and did well enough for slight youngsters, but it was a dangerous game for powerful men, because the ball was thrown to put out a man&nbsp;between bases, and it had to hit&nbsp;the runner to put&nbsp;him out."</p>
<p>As is indicated in the 1849c.4 entry, the rules of this game, as recalled in 1905, were something of a hybrid between three old cat and modern baseball.&nbsp;&nbsp;Wheaton, who later had the job of writing new&nbsp;rules for the Gotham club, which were apparently a primary&nbsp;basis for the famous Knickerbocker rules of 1845.&nbsp;</p>
<p>As is indicated in the 1849c.4 entry, the rules of this game, as recalled in 1905, were something of a hybrid between three old cat and modern baseball.&nbsp;&nbsp;Wheaton, who later had the job of writing new&nbsp;rules for the Gotham club, which were apparently a primary&nbsp;basis for the famous Knickerbocker rules of 1845.&nbsp;</p>
<p>The Examiner article states: "<span>Baseball to-day is not by any means the game from which it sprang. Old men can recollect the time when the only characteristic American ball sport was three-cornered cat, played with a yarn ball and flat paddles."</span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
|Sources=<p>"How Baseball Began: A Member of the Gotham Club&nbsp;of Fifty Years Ago Tells About It," <em>San Francisco Examiner</em>, Nov. 27, 1887.&nbsp; Wheaton's role in early base ball is related in John Thorn, <em>Baseball in the Garden of Eden </em>(Simon and Schuster, 2011), pp. 36-42.&nbsp; See also Randall Brown, "How Baseball Began," <em>National Pastime</em>, volume 24 (2004), pages 51-54.&nbsp;</p>
|Sources=<p>"How Baseball Began: A Member of the Gotham Club&nbsp;of Fifty Years Ago Tells About It," <em>San Francisco Examiner </em>(date?), 1887.&nbsp; Wheaton's role in early base ball is related in John Thorn, <em>Baseball in the Garden of Eden </em>(Simon and Schuster, 2011), pp. 36-42.&nbsp; See also Randall Brown, "How Baseball Began," <em>National Pastime</em>, volume 24 (2004), pages 51-54.</p>
<p>See also Kuykendall reminiscences of Umpqua Academy, c. 1857, in Pre-pro. William Dean Howells, "A Boys Town" (1890) p. 83; Popular Science Monthly v. 37 (1890) p. 652-555; New Orleans Times-Democrat, Oct. 23, 1900; St. Louis Post-Dispatch, July 10, 1907 (Rems of Elbert Hubbard, of Hudson, IL in 1867); John M. Ward in Boston Globe, Sept. 30, 1888.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="1849c.4">http://protoball.org/1849c.4</a></p>
<p><a href="../1849c.4">http://protoball.org/1849c.4</a></p>
|Comment=<p>John Thorne says three-cornered-cat was just a variant name for three old cat. Cf <em>Baseball in the Garden of Eden</em>.</p>
<p>Edward Eggleston's 1882 novel "The Hoosier School-Boy" (stories of his growing up in southern Indiana c. 1850--he was born in Vevay, IN in 1837) contains on pages 11-12 mentions three and four cornered cat. See also the Troy <em>Kansas Chief</em>, Jan. 5, 1882, for a replay to Eggleston.</p>
|Has Supplemental Text=No
|Has Supplemental Text=No
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 05:43, 18 July 2023

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Game Three-Cornered Cat
Game Family Baseball Baseball
Regions US
Eras 1800s, Predecessor
Invented Yes
Description

"Three-Corner Cat" is the name of a game recalled decades later by base ball founder William R. Wheaton, as having been played at a Brooklyn school in his youth.  See http://protoball.org/1849c.4 for a chronology entry on this game. 

"Three-cornered cat was a boys' game, and did well enough for slight youngsters, but it was a dangerous game for powerful men, because the ball was thrown to put out a man between bases, and it had to hit the runner to put him out."

As is indicated in the 1849c.4 entry, the rules of this game, as recalled in 1905, were something of a hybrid between three old cat and modern baseball.  Wheaton, who later had the job of writing new rules for the Gotham club, which were apparently a primary basis for the famous Knickerbocker rules of 1845. 

The Examiner article states: "Baseball to-day is not by any means the game from which it sprang. Old men can recollect the time when the only characteristic American ball sport was three-cornered cat, played with a yarn ball and flat paddles."

 

Sources

"How Baseball Began: A Member of the Gotham Club of Fifty Years Ago Tells About It," San Francisco Examiner, Nov. 27, 1887.  Wheaton's role in early base ball is related in John Thorn, Baseball in the Garden of Eden (Simon and Schuster, 2011), pp. 36-42.  See also Randall Brown, "How Baseball Began," National Pastime, volume 24 (2004), pages 51-54. 

See also Kuykendall reminiscences of Umpqua Academy, c. 1857, in Pre-pro. William Dean Howells, "A Boys Town" (1890) p. 83; Popular Science Monthly v. 37 (1890) p. 652-555; New Orleans Times-Democrat, Oct. 23, 1900; St. Louis Post-Dispatch, July 10, 1907 (Rems of Elbert Hubbard, of Hudson, IL in 1867); John M. Ward in Boston Globe, Sept. 30, 1888.

http://protoball.org/1849c.4

Comment

John Thorne says three-cornered-cat was just a variant name for three old cat. Cf Baseball in the Garden of Eden.

Edward Eggleston's 1882 novel "The Hoosier School-Boy" (stories of his growing up in southern Indiana c. 1850--he was born in Vevay, IN in 1837) contains on pages 11-12 mentions three and four cornered cat. See also the Troy Kansas Chief, Jan. 5, 1882, for a replay to Eggleston.

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