Block:"Base-ball" Cited in 1833 Juvenile Story: Difference between revisions

From Protoball
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Block English Games Import)
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Block
{{Block
|Title=English Baseball in London in 1833
|Coordinates=51.5073509, -0.1277583
|Title="Base-ball" Cited in 1833 Juvenile Story
|Type of Date=Year
|Date=1833/01/01
|Block Game=English Baseball
|Block Game=English Baseball
|Date=1833/1/1
|Type of Date=Year
|Block Location=London
|Block Location=London
|Coordinates=51.5073509, -0.1277583
|Block Data=<p>"Base-ball" is mentioned in a story entitled "Robert Wilmot" published as part of a book of similar juvenile stories: "After this they were rather at a loss for a game. They had played at base-ball and leap-frog; and rival coaches, with six horses at full speed, and had been driven several times around the garden, to the imminent risk of box-edgings and the corners of flowerbeds: what were they to do next?"</p>
|Block Data=<p>"Base-ball" is mentioned in a story entitled "Robert Wilmot" published as part of a book of similar juvenile stories: "After this they were rather at a loss for a game. They had played at base-ball and leap-frog; and rival coaches, with six horses at full speed, and had been driven several times around the garden, to the imminent risk of box-edgings and the corners of flowerbeds: what were they to do next?"</p>
|Sources=<p>"Robert Wilmot," anon., appearing in The Parent's Cabinet of Amusement and Instruction, London, 1833, Smith Elder and Co., p. 106</p>
|Sources=<p>"Robert Wilmot," anon., appearing in The Parent's Cabinet of Amusement and Instruction, London, 1833, Smith Elder and Co., p. 106</p>
|Block Notes=
|Comment=
|Query=
}}
}}

Revision as of 15:28, 28 October 2020

Block English Games
Baseball 1833.gif

English Baseball


Add a Block Game
Data

"Base-ball" is mentioned in a story entitled "Robert Wilmot" published as part of a book of similar juvenile stories: "After this they were rather at a loss for a game. They had played at base-ball and leap-frog; and rival coaches, with six horses at full speed, and had been driven several times around the garden, to the imminent risk of box-edgings and the corners of flowerbeds: what were they to do next?"

Sources

"Robert Wilmot," anon., appearing in The Parent's Cabinet of Amusement and Instruction, London, 1833, Smith Elder and Co., p. 106

Comment Edit with form to add a comment
Query Edit with form to add a query