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A list of all pages that have property "Comment" with value "<p>1882 African American ball club</p>". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 11 results starting with #1.

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List of results

  • Austin Base Ball Club  + (<p> It had 2039 residents in 1870.</p>)
  • Seabury Base Ball Club of Faribault  + (<p> It had 3045 residents in 1870.</p>)
  • 1850s.33  + (<p> It is interesting that the game <p> It is interesting that the game of wicket is not mentioned, given Ashland's location in western MA.</p></br><p>As of Jan 2013, this is one of three uses of "gool" instead of "goal" in ballplaying entries, all in the 1850s and found in western MA and ME.  [To confirm/update, do an enhanced search for "gool".]  This is the only entry that uses "gool" as the actual name of the game.</p>es "gool" as the actual name of the game.</p>)
  • 1853.11  + (<p> Pownal ME is about 20 miles north of Portland.</p>)
  • 1828c.3  + (<p> Priscilla Astifan has looked hard for such an article, and it resists finding.  She suspects the article appeared in a newspaper whose contents were not preserved.</p>)
  • 1861.13  + (<p> Ravenna OH is about 35 miles SE of Cleveland in eastern Ohio.</p>)
  • 1861.12  + (<p> Sanford ME is about 30 miles N of Portsmouth NH, near the NH border.</p>)
  • 1840c.26  + (<p> See also 1837c.12</p> <p>Craig reported that Oakey, 65 years old in 1894, had attended Erasmus Hall from 1838 to 1845.</p> <p>David Dyte added details in a July 3, 2009 19CBB posting. </p> <p> </p>)
  • 1660c.3  + (<p>(Jacobs) says that unfortunately "balslaen" has been translated as cricket but it simply means hitting the ball.</p>)
  • Eagle Base Ball Club of New York v Eckford Club of Brooklyn on 23 July 1861  + (<p>17 total home runs hit in the match, 11 by the Eckford and 6 by the Eagle.  Josh Snyder, SS for the Eckford, hit four.</p> <p>Eckford CF, John Snyder, hurt his knee in the ninth inning and was replaced by Wm. Brown.</p>)
  • 1867.8  + (<p>19cbb post by Peter Morris, Nov. 8, 2002</p>)
  • Old Dominion Club of Alexandria v Mt. Vernon Club of Alexandria on 15 October 1866  + (<p>2nd nines for both teams.  Game started at 2:15 PM and ended at 5:30 PM.  Old Dominion played without a shortstop for most of the game as he was delayed for some reason.  See clipping for more detail, including boxscore.</p>)
  • 1857.38  + (<p><br/>"For President Buchana<p><br/>"For President Buchanan in 1857, a new reverse to the (latest "Indian Peace") Medal was commissioned from engraver Joseph Wilson . . . .  [The medal showed] in the distance, a simple home with a woman standing in the doorway -- <em>and a baseball game being playing in the foreground. . . . </em></p></br><p>"No matter what some gentlemen were saying in New York at the "national" conventions of area clubs, the frontier game of baseball, in all its variety, was already perceived as the national game."</p></br><p>-- John Thorn, "Our Baseball Presidents," Our Game posting, February 2018.</p></br><p><strong> </strong></p></br><p><strong> </strong></p>ary 2018.</p> <p><strong> </strong></p> <p><strong> </strong></p>)
  • 1807.3  + (<p><em>2008 update</em>:<p><em>2008 update</em>: John Thorn [email of 2/3/2008] discovers that others have been unable to determine exactly who the poet was, as there were three people with the name Garrett Barry in that area at that time. One of the three, who died at thirty in 1810, attended St. Mary's College in Baltimore.</p>hirty in 1810, attended St. Mary's College in Baltimore.</p>)
  • 1840.6  + (<p><em><strong>Note: <<p><em><strong>Note: </strong> </em>John Thorn traces the Eagle Club further on pages 35 and 51-53.  In 1852, It was to join  the Knickerbockers and to arrive at a revisin of the Knickerbocker Rules.</p></br><p> </p></br><p>On January 7, 2021, Richard Hershberger advised the following:  </p></br><div dir="ltr">"The entry currently states that William Wood says the Eagle Club originally played in the old fashioned way.  Wood says no such thing.  He says that there were two clubs in New York City that date as far back as 1832 and which played in the old fashioned way.  He does not identify the Eagle Club with either.  This is a strictly modern supposition.  I'm not saying it is wrong, but there is no evidence for it, and the entry as it stands is misleading."  This error was corrected 1/16/2021.  Thanks RRH!</div>orrected 1/16/2021.  Thanks RRH!</div>)
  • 1835.19  + (<p><em><strong>Note</<p><em><strong>Note</strong>: </em>In the following paragraph, the man is called "Joseph Haywood". This is a reminisce of a fellow student in boyhood, Jos. Haywood, at a school where one Ephraim Johnson was the teacher. It is probably fictional. Haywood loved to spout Greek and Latin and inspired his fellow students to apply Greek and Latin phrases to their schoolboy games. I've searched both names and can't find anything suitable in NY.</p></br><p>David Block, 6/1/2021: An "article extolling fellow student at an unnamed school."</p>lock, 6/1/2021: An "article extolling fellow student at an unnamed school."</p>)
  • Velocipedes Club of Wauseon  + (<p><em>Defiance</em> Democrat, July 27, 1867; Wauseon <em>New Republican</em>, June 24, 1869</p>)
  • Potomac Club of Washington v National Club of Washington on 5 May 1860  + (<p><em>Evening Star</em>, May 7, 1860 has the Potomac scoring 35 runs, not 37.</p>)
  • 1867.6  + (<p><em>Note: </em>for a <p><em>Note: </em>for a 1916 account of the history of the "hit," see the supplemental text below.</p></br><p><span style="font-family: Calibri;"><span style="font-size: medium;">For a short history of batting measures, see Colin Dew-Becker, “Foundations of Batting Analysis,”  </span><span style="font-size: medium;">p 1 – 9:</span></span></p></br><p><span style="font-family: Calibri; font-size: medium;"><a href="https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B0btLf16riTacFVEUV9CUi1UQ3c/">https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B0btLf16riTacFVEUV9CUi1UQ3c/</a> </span></p>Lf16riTacFVEUV9CUi1UQ3c/">https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B0btLf16riTacFVEUV9CUi1UQ3c/</a> </span></p>)
  • Forest City Club of Ithaca v Mechanic Club of Groton on 5 September 1866  + (<p><em>Note: </em>The lo<p><em>Note: </em>The location of this game is not specified.</p></br><p><em>Note:</em>  Tom Shieber of the Baseball Hall of Fame writes:  </p></br><p>"[T]his gilded [trophy] ball unquestionably features a figure-eight seam pattern. Of course, there’s no guarantee that a trophy ball is the actual ball used in the game it commemorates. Conceivably, a trophy ball might be damaged/lost/disposed/etc. and later replaced with a replacement trophy ball. Thus, this ball might commemorate the 9/5/1866 game, but actually have been made and gilded many years later. If I am not mistaken, I recall having run into this scenario once before (though details escape me), but I would say this is a rare occurrence at best.  Anyway, I thought I had better mention it".</p>e occurrence at best.  Anyway, I thought I had better mention it".</p>)