1855.16: Difference between revisions
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|Headline=Scholar Deems 1855 the Peak of Cricket-playing in America | |Headline=Scholar Deems 1855 the Peak of Cricket-playing in America | ||
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Latest revision as of 17:26, 14 October 2015
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Scholar Deems 1855 the Peak of Cricket-playing in America
Salience | Noteworthy |
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Location | USUS |
City/State/Country: | United States |
Modern Address | |
Game | American CricketAmerican Cricket |
Immediacy of Report | |
Age of Players | AdultAdult |
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Text | "By 1855, Cricket was clearly the leading ball game . . . . Clearly, there was no opposition to cricket because it was English . . . . However, the growth of cricket between 1855 and 1861 was minor compared to the advances made in baseball. The Spirit summarized the general attitude of the press in 1859 when it wrote that 'cricket has its admirers, but it is evident that it will never have the universality that baseball will.' [page 107] "In essence, cricket failed because it was too advanced and too institutionalized for a society that lacked a manly ball-playing tradition. Americans drew from the only heritage they had -- that of a child's game." [page 110]
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Sources | Melvin Adelman, "Chapter 5 --The Failure of Cricket as an American Sport," A Sporting Time: New York City and the Rise of Modern Athletics, 1820-1870 (U Illinois Press, 1986) 97 - 120. Adelman cites the Spirit source as December 3, 1859, issue 29, page 505. |
Warning | |
Comment | Adelman bases his analysis on the premise that base ball's predecessor games were played mainly be juveniles. This premise can be questioned. Even discounting play by university youths up to 1845, adult play in the military and elsewhere was hardly rare before the Gothams and Knickerbockers formed in New York around 1840, as many entries in this chronology indicate. Edit with form to add a comment |
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