1855.28: Difference between revisions
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|Headline=Thanksgiving is for Football? Not in Gotham, Not Yet | |Headline=Thanksgiving is for Football? Not in Gotham, Not Yet | ||
|Year=1855 | |Year=1855 | ||
| | |Salience=2 | ||
|Game=Base Ball | |Game=Base Ball | ||
|Tags=Holidays | |Tags=Holidays |
Revision as of 10:17, 3 August 2012
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Thanksgiving is for Football? Not in Gotham, Not Yet
Salience | Noteworthy |
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Tags | HolidaysHolidays |
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Text | "[Thanksgiving] day was unpleasantly raw and cold; but various out of door amusements were greatly in vogue. Target companies looking blue and miserable were every where. Every vacant field in the out skirts was filled with Base Ball Clubs; a wonderfully popular institution the past season, but vastly inferior to the noble game of Cricket in all respects." "Viola," "Men and Things in Gotham," Milwaukee Daily Sentinel, December 10, 1855, page 2. Contributed August 29, 2009 by Dennis Pajot. This traveler's report preceding the advent of Association base ball in Milwaukee by years. Responding to Dennis' find, Craig Waff, posting to the 19CBB listserve, cited two accounts that confirm the holiday hubbub. The Clipper wrote, "There seemed to be a general turn-out of the Base Ball Clubs in this city and vicinity, on Thursday, 29th Nov. Among those playing were the Continental, Columbia, Putnam, Empire, Eagle, Knickerbocker, Gotham, Baltic, Pioneer, and Excelsior Clubs." [source: undated clip in the Mears Collection]. The Spirit of the Times (December 8, 1855, page 511) caught the same, er, spirit, noting that the Continentals played from 9am to 5pm, and that the Putnams "commenced at 9 o'clock with the intention of playing 63 aces, but found it impossible to get through; they played twelve innings, and made 31 and 36 . . . ." |
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