Pellet: Difference between revisions

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|Term=Pellet
|Term=Pellet
|Game Family=Baseball
|Game Family=Baseball
|Description=<p>Scotland (Cat&rsquo;s Pellet, Cat&rsquo;s Pallet, Gidigadie) - per MacLagan. This game is played like Tip-Cat, but with a ball and a one-handed bat, and with plugging instead of crossing to put runners out. An Orkney game. Elsewhere MacLagan described the game as using four small holes in a twelve-foot square. An 1882 source finds a usage of &ldquo;cat&rsquo;s pellet&rdquo; in 1648, and defines it as &ldquo;a game, perhaps the same as tip-cat.&rdquo; Court records from 1583 seem to indication that the game &ldquo;Cat&rsquo;s Pallet&rdquo; was also called Gidigadie, at least in the Manchester area.</p>
|Location=Scotland
|Description=<p>(Cat&rsquo;s Pellet, Cat&rsquo;s Pallet, Gidigadie) - per MacLagan. This game is played like Tip-Cat, but with a ball and a one-handed bat, and with plugging instead of crossing to put runners out. An Orkney game. Elsewhere MacLagan described the game as using four small holes in a twelve-foot square. An 1882 source finds a usage of &ldquo;cat&rsquo;s pellet&rdquo; in 1648, and defines it as &ldquo;a game, perhaps the same as tip-cat.&rdquo; Court records from 1583 seem to indication that the game &ldquo;Cat&rsquo;s Pallet&rdquo; was also called Gidigadie, at least in the Manchester area.</p>
|Sources=<div>
|Sources=<div>
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Revision as of 13:06, 5 June 2012

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Game Pellet
Game Family Baseball Baseball
Location Scotland
Description

(Cat’s Pellet, Cat’s Pallet, Gidigadie) - per MacLagan. This game is played like Tip-Cat, but with a ball and a one-handed bat, and with plugging instead of crossing to put runners out. An Orkney game. Elsewhere MacLagan described the game as using four small holes in a twelve-foot square. An 1882 source finds a usage of “cat’s pellet” in 1648, and defines it as “a game, perhaps the same as tip-cat.” Court records from 1583 seem to indication that the game “Cat’s Pallet” was also called Gidigadie, at least in the Manchester area.

Sources
  • MacLagan, "Additions to 'the Games of Argyleshire'", page 87.
  • R. C. MacLagan, The Perth Incident of 1396 from a Folk-lore Point of View (Blackwood and Son, 1905), page 54.
  • The Encyclopedic Dictionary (Cassel, Peter and Galpin, 1882), page 625.
  • J. Harland, A Volume of Court Leet Records of the Manor of Manchester in the Si xteenth Century (Chetham Society, 1864), page 156.
 
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