1858.7: Difference between revisions

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{{Chronology Entry
{{Chronology Entry
|Year=1858
|Year Number=7
|Headline=Newly Reformed Game of Town Ball Played in Cincinnati OH
|Headline=Newly Reformed Game of Town Ball Played in Cincinnati OH
|Year=1858
|Salience=2
|Is in main chronology=yes
|Tags=Newspaper Coverage,
|Country=United States
|Coordinates=39.1031182, -84.51201960000003
|State=OH
|City=Cincinnati
|Game=Town Ball
|Game=Town Ball
|Text=<p>Clippings from Cincinnati in 1858 report on the Gymnasts' Town Ball Club match of July 22, 1858: "They played for the first time under their new code of bye laws, which are more stringent than the old rules." The game has five corners [plus a batter's position, making the basepaths a rhombus in general shape], sixty feet apart, meaning 360 feet to score. The fly rule was in effect, and plugging was disallowed, and the rules carefully require that a batsman run every time he hits the ball.</p>
|Immediacy of Report=Contemporary
<p><u>The Clipper</u>carried at least four reports of Cincinnati town ball play between June and October of 1858. The earliest is in the edition of June 26, 1858 - Volume 6, number 10, page 76. Coverage suggests that teams of eight players were not uncommon, although teams of 13 and 11 were also reported. <b>Note:</b> An oddity: in a July intramural contest, batter Bickham claimed 58 runs of his team's 190 total, while the second most productive batsman mate scored 30, and 5 of his 10 teammates scored fewer than 6 runs each. One wonders what rule, or what typo, would lead to that result.</p>
|Age of Players=Adult
|Text=<p>Clippings from Cincinnati in 1858 report on the Gymnasts' Town Ball Club match of July 22, 1858: "They played for the first time under their new code of bye laws, which are more stringent than the old rules." The game has five corners [plus a batter's position, making the basepaths a rhombus in general shape], sixty feet apart, meaning 360 feet to score. The fly rule was in effect, and plugging was disallowed, and the rules carefully require that a batsman run every time he hits the ball.</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">The New York Clipper&nbsp;</span>carried at least four reports of Cincinnati town ball play between June and October of 1858. The earliest is in the edition of June 26, 1858 - Volume 6, number 10, page 76. Coverage suggests that teams of eight players were not uncommon, although teams of 13 and 11 were also reported.&nbsp;</p>
|Comment=<p>An oddity: in a July intramural contest, batter Bickham claimed 58 runs of his team's 190 total, while the second most productive batsman mate scored 30, and 5 of his 10 teammates scored fewer than 6 runs each. One wonders what rule, or what typo, would lead to that result.</p>
|Reviewed=Yes
|Has Supplemental Text=No
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 06:55, 21 June 2015

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Newly Reformed Game of Town Ball Played in Cincinnati OH

Salience Noteworthy
Tags Newspaper Coverage
City/State/Country: Cincinnati, OH, United States
Game Town Ball
Immediacy of Report Contemporary
Age of Players Adult
Text

Clippings from Cincinnati in 1858 report on the Gymnasts' Town Ball Club match of July 22, 1858: "They played for the first time under their new code of bye laws, which are more stringent than the old rules." The game has five corners [plus a batter's position, making the basepaths a rhombus in general shape], sixty feet apart, meaning 360 feet to score. The fly rule was in effect, and plugging was disallowed, and the rules carefully require that a batsman run every time he hits the ball.

The New York Clipper carried at least four reports of Cincinnati town ball play between June and October of 1858. The earliest is in the edition of June 26, 1858 - Volume 6, number 10, page 76. Coverage suggests that teams of eight players were not uncommon, although teams of 13 and 11 were also reported. 

Comment

An oddity: in a July intramural contest, batter Bickham claimed 58 runs of his team's 190 total, while the second most productive batsman mate scored 30, and 5 of his 10 teammates scored fewer than 6 runs each. One wonders what rule, or what typo, would lead to that result.

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