1852.1: Difference between revisions
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{{Chronology Entry | {{Chronology Entry | ||
|Year=1852 | |Year=1852 | ||
|Year Number=1 | |||
|Headline=Claim: Cartwright Laid First Base Ball Field in Hawaii, Taught Baseball Widely | |||
|Salience=2 | |Salience=2 | ||
|Text=<p> | |Location=Hawaii, | ||
<p>< | |Country=United States | ||
|State=hi | |||
|Game=Base Ball, | |||
|Text=<p>[After he moved to Hawaii] "Cartwright never forgot baseball . . . As early as 1852 [he] measured out by foot the dimensions of Hawaii's first baseball field. . . . [He] organized teams and taught the game all over the island."</p> | |||
|Sources=<p>Harold Peterson, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Man Who Invented Baseball</span> (Scribner's, 1969), page 172.</p> | |||
<p>This story is also carried in Frederick Ivor-Campbell, "Alexander Joy Cartwright, Jr. (Alick)", in Frederick Ivor-Campbell, et. al, eds., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball's First Stars</span> [SABR, Cleveland, 1996], page 24, and in Jay Martin, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Live All You Can: Alexander Joy Cartwright and the Invention of Modern Baseball</span> (Columbia U Press, 2009), pp. 62-63. None of these authors provides a source, but Peterson seems to imply that Cartwright's son may have written of the incident in 1909.</p> | |||
|Warning=<p>This story has been seriously questioned by recent scholarship, which has found nothing in Cartwright's own papers, or his family's, that confirm it. The two claims -- that Cartwright laid out a ballfield and that he taught base ball widely -- are thus not found in Monica Nucciarone's thorough <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Alexander Cartwright: The Life Behind the Baseball Legend</span> (U of Nebraska Press, 2009).</p> | |||
|Reviewed=Yes | |Reviewed=Yes | ||
| | |Has Supplemental Text=No | ||
|Coordinates=19.8967662, -155.5827818 | |||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 09:57, 16 June 2019
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Claim: Cartwright Laid First Base Ball Field in Hawaii, Taught Baseball Widely
Salience | Noteworthy |
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Location | HawaiiHawaii |
City/State/Country: | hi, United States |
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Game | Base BallBase Ball |
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Text | [After he moved to Hawaii] "Cartwright never forgot baseball . . . As early as 1852 [he] measured out by foot the dimensions of Hawaii's first baseball field. . . . [He] organized teams and taught the game all over the island." |
Sources | Harold Peterson, The Man Who Invented Baseball (Scribner's, 1969), page 172. This story is also carried in Frederick Ivor-Campbell, "Alexander Joy Cartwright, Jr. (Alick)", in Frederick Ivor-Campbell, et. al, eds., Baseball's First Stars [SABR, Cleveland, 1996], page 24, and in Jay Martin, Live All You Can: Alexander Joy Cartwright and the Invention of Modern Baseball (Columbia U Press, 2009), pp. 62-63. None of these authors provides a source, but Peterson seems to imply that Cartwright's son may have written of the incident in 1909. |
Warning | This story has been seriously questioned by recent scholarship, which has found nothing in Cartwright's own papers, or his family's, that confirm it. The two claims -- that Cartwright laid out a ballfield and that he taught base ball widely -- are thus not found in Monica Nucciarone's thorough Alexander Cartwright: The Life Behind the Baseball Legend (U of Nebraska Press, 2009). |
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