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A list of all pages that have property "Query" with value "<p>Is there any indication of what Tompkins' source might have been?</p>". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

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  • 1840s.46  + (<p>Is it obvious why a balk is in so<p>Is it obvious why a balk is in some way considered comparable to a "flagrant outrage?"</p></br><p>Was the balk known in earlier baserunning games in England, or elsewhere?</p></br><p>Do histories of cricket shed further light on the origin, nature, or rationale for, automatic batter-runner advances despite catches of balls hit when a "no ball" has been called?</p></br><p>Do we often see early rule variants for players of different ages?</p>> <p>Do we often see early rule variants for players of different ages?</p>)
  • 1860.6  + (<p>Is it possible that English rounders itself had evolved from English base ball as played in the eighteenth century?</p>)
  • 1863.1  + (<p>Is it possible that a collection of trophy balls, at the Hall of Fame or elsewhere, would provide more evidence of the prevalence of base ball in the Civil War?</p>)
  • 1837.13  + (<p>Is it possible that this entry re<p>Is it possible that this entry reflects the 1796 report by Gutsmuths that English and German forms of base-ball coexisted?  Protoball wonders if the 1837 book mistakenly dropped a word following the term "mit" (with).  Gutsmuths called English game "ball "mit freystaten." The Protoball entry for Gutsmuths is at [[1796.1]]</p></br><p>Is there a way to locate the German-to-English version of this 1837 book?</p></br><p> </p></br><p> </p>of this 1837 book?</p> <p> </p> <p> </p>)
  • 1853.4  + (<p>Is it possible that this is a fungo-style game?  Is it possible that may other "plaing ball" references denote fungo games? </p> <p>Do we know of any other fungo games in which more than a single bat is used?</p>)
  • 1550c.2  + (<p>Is it possible that this source is the basis for the claim (see  [[1550c.1]]) that the term cricket ("crekett") is not known prior to 1550?</p>)
  • Chippawa v Penetergushene in Chippawa on 29 May 1815  + (<p>Is it possible, given the set  team size of eleven players, that this game was actually played by the rules of cricket? [lm]</p>)
  • 1840.16  + (<p>Is it safe to infer that Cape Island is on the NJ shore, near Cape May?</p>)
  • 1856.10  + (<p>Is it significant that this book features games for adolescents, not younger children?</p> <p>Answer: the articles cited in the comment make clear that Grand Theque, at least, was played by adults as well as children. [ba]</p>)
  • 1844.20  + (<p>Is it time to define "baseball card" a bit more narrowly in declaring a first?? </p>)
  • 1818c.7  + (<p>Is more known about Schubert's interest in ballplaying (if any)?</p> <p>Do we know of baserunning games in the Vienna area in this era?</p>)
  • In Wellington on 17 November 1888  + (<p>Is the "newly-established" Wellington club" the NZ Pioneer Club?</p> <p> </p>)
  • 1785.3  + (<p>Is the Homestall Lane ref meant to convey that the competing sides within the county are to be determined by a player's residence on one or the other of the lane? [See Block reply above.]</p> <p> </p> <p> </p>)
  • 1630.4  + (<p>Is the Wiltshire County website's URL available? Is it still operative?</p> <p>Is the original source of the data given?</p>)
  • 1833.8  + (<p>Is the drawing associated with a song that may offer a clue? </p>)
  • Banana Ball  + (<p>Is the history of this variant to be found somewhere?</p>)
  • 1864.58  + (<p>Is the reported date correct?  A July 24 match was reported on July 10? </p>)
  • 1856.5  + (<p>Is there a claim that this is the earliest appearance of the term "national pastime" to denote base ball?</p>)
  • 1859.35  + (<p>Is there a good account of this negotiation and its outcome in the literature? How and when was the issue resolved?</p>)
  • 1873.12  + (<p>Is there a good source for Elizabeth Cady Stanton's interest in 19C base ball? </p>)
  • 1861.1  + (<p>Is there a primary source for this claim?</p> <p>Yes, NYC 3-30-61. [ba]</p>)
  • Stoolball  + (<p>Is there a recent publication that covers evidence concerning stoolball's earliest playing rules?</p>)
  • 1800c.1  + (<p>Is there a way to check the approximate year that the historian is depicting in this passage? </p>)
  • Knickerbocker Base Ball Club of New York v Knickerbocker Base Ball Club of New York on 22 May 1856  + (<p>Is there ambiguity about whether this intramural game was played in Hoboken NJ or Manhattan NY?  Did baseballchronology.com give a source for this game?  Was it played at Elysian Fields?</p>)
  • 1854.2  + (<p>Is there any detailed indication, or educated guess, as to what rules the Olympics uses in 1854?</p>)
  • 1847.7  + (<p>Is there any indication of what Tompkins' source might have been?</p>)
  • 1859.4  + (<p>Is there any indication that Association rules were used by the reported base bal club?</p>)
  • 1835.6  + (<p>Is there any indication that girls could or did play base ball in this text?</p>)
  • 1862.113  + (<p>Is there further evidence on the suggestion that evidence for Cartwright's base ball leadership was lost in a fire after his death? </p>)
  • Hildegarde  + (<p>Is there further evidence that this game was actually played, or was it publicized mainly to sell equipment?  What features does Hildegard have that contemporary stoolball lacked?</p> <p>Do we know what years and what locations saw this game?</p>)
  • 1850s.18  + (<p>Is there some way to discover the documentary basis for this report?</p>)
  • 1852.14  + (<p>Is this a recollection or a work of fiction?</p>)
  • 1862.22  + (<p>Is this crowd estimate reasonable? Are other contemporary or reflective accounts available?</p> <p>The crowd estimate is exaggerated. There weren't anywhere near 40,000 troops on the island at that time. [ba]</p>)
  • Hit the Bat  + (<p>Is this game known by other names other than those collected above?</p>)
  • 1867.1  + (<p>Is this game properly thought of as a national championship?</p>)
  • Onondaga Longball  + (<p>Is this game related to European forms of long ball?</p>)
  • 1886.1  + (<p>Is this indeed the first such trophy in base ball history?</p>)
  • 1857.32  + (<p>Is this item newsworthy because it is an early Providence ballclub, because it is a pioneering daybreak club, or neither?</p>)
  • Adjutant General's Office of Washington  + (<p>Is this just a one-time club?</p>)
  • Club of Granby  + (<p>Is this the Granby Club of Neosho?</p>)
  • Rough and Ready Club of South Walpole  + (<p>Is this the club that played the Massapoag of Sharon in June 1857?</p>)
  • 1854.5  + (<p>Is this the first base ball club organized in Brooklyn?</p>)
  • 1858.39  + (<p>Is this the first club established in CA since 1851? [Cf #1851.2, #1852.7, #1859.5]</p>)
  • 1856.21  + (<p>Is this the first known NJ club well outside the NY metropolitan area?</p>)
  • 1855.36  + (<p>Is this the first known report of African American club play of the New York game?</p> <p>See Supplemental Text, below, for John Zinn's view on this question. </p>)
  • 1859.51  + (<p>Is this the first time, as far as we know, that females played base ball by modern rules?</p>)
  • BC2400c.1  + (<p>It would be good to confirm details in an academic source and to see whether Egyptologists have any other interpretations of this text – and how Egyptian rites employed the ball as a symbol of fertility. </p>)
  • 1850s.14  + (<p>It would be interesting to know how much velocity of deliveries increased with the change to overhand throwing. </p>)
  • 1854.11  + (<p>It would be interesting to know if this game included outs made by the plugging baserunners.</p>)
  • BC100.1  + (<p>It would be interesting to know what particular features of Irish lore gave Lang the feeling that cricket stemmed from ancient Irish sources.</p>)
  • 1800s.11  + (<p>It would be useful to know when a<p>It would be useful to know when and where the author's youth was spent; Hugh points out that the clip's reference to "muster day" implies that writer is likely depicting New England practices. If the "father" was in his thirties [pure conjecture] he is here reflecting on bat and ball play from the 1800-1810 period.</p>bat and ball play from the 1800-1810 period.</p>)