Punchball: Difference between revisions
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|Sources=<p><span><span>G. E. Johnson, </span><em>What to Do at Recess</em><span> (Ginn, Boston, 1910), page 32.</span></span></p> | |Sources=<p><span><span>G. E. Johnson, </span><em>What to Do at Recess</em><span> (Ginn, Boston, 1910), page 32.</span></span></p> | ||
<p><a href="http://www.myrecollection.com/christianog/games.html" target="_blank"><span>http://www.myrecollection.com/christianog/games.html</span></a></p> | <p><a href="http://www.myrecollection.com/christianog/games.html" target="_blank"><span>http://www.myrecollection.com/christianog/games.html</span></a></p> | ||
<p>A brief 4/30/1989 letter to the New York Times argued that stickball was a "sissyfied" sport in comparison to punchball. "We played with six or seven players, nickel a player. We had one-sewer homers and two-sewer homers. The game was so popular in Brooklyn that a daily newspaper, The Graphic, sponsored a punchball tournament, pitting one street against another." The players used a spaldeen, and chalked in foul lines and first and third bases.</p> | |||
<p>A brief 4/30/1989 letter to the New York Times argued that stickball was a "sissyfied" sport in comparison to punchball. "We played with six or seven players, nickel a player. We had one-sewer homers and two-sewer homers. The game was so popular in Brooklyn that a daily newspaper, The Graphic, sponsored a punchball tournament, pitting one street against another." The players used a spaldeen, and chalked in foul lines and first and third bases. | |||
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Revision as of 10:47, 23 June 2012
Game | Punchball |
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Game Family | Kickball |
Location | |
Regions | |
Eras | |
Invented | |
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Description | This is a variation of baseball in which a rubber ball is punched, and not hit with a bat, to start a play. One set of modern rules is at http://www.spaldeen.com/punchball.html. Johnson (1910) lists Punch Ball under “Baseball games.” An urban form of this game is recalled by Gregory Christiano. |
Sources | G. E. Johnson, What to Do at Recess (Ginn, Boston, 1910), page 32. http://www.myrecollection.com/christianog/games.html A brief 4/30/1989 letter to the New York Times argued that stickball was a "sissyfied" sport in comparison to punchball. "We played with six or seven players, nickel a player. We had one-sewer homers and two-sewer homers. The game was so popular in Brooklyn that a daily newspaper, The Graphic, sponsored a punchball tournament, pitting one street against another." The players used a spaldeen, and chalked in foul lines and first and third bases. |
Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
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