1854.16: Difference between revisions

From Protoball
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
(Change Country from us to United States)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 6: Line 6:
|Tags=Club Constitutions/Bylaws,  
|Tags=Club Constitutions/Bylaws,  
|Location=Greater New York City,  
|Location=Greater New York City,  
|Country=us
|Country=United States
|State=ny
|State=ny
|City=nyc
|City=nyc
Line 22: Line 22:
|Reviewed=Yes
|Reviewed=Yes
|Has Supplemental Text=No
|Has Supplemental Text=No
|Coordinates=40.7127837, -74.0059413
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 09:57, 16 June 2019

Chronologies
Scroll.png

Prominent Milestones

Misc BB Firsts
Add a Misc BB First

About the Chronology
Tom Altherr Dedication

Add a Chronology Entry
Open Queries
Open Numbers
Most Aged

The Eagle Club's Field Diagram - A Real Diamond

Salience Noteworthy
Tags Club Constitutions/Bylaws
Location Greater New York City
City/State/Country: nyc, ny, United States
Game Base Ball
Immediacy of Report Contemporary
Age of Players Adult
Text

John Thorn has supplied an image of the printed "Plan of the Eagle Ball Club Bases" from its 1854 rulebook.

 

Sources

"Revised Constitution, by-laws and rules of the Eagle Ball Club," (Oliver and Brother, New York, 1854).

Comment

It seems possible that he who designed this graphic did not intend it to be taken literally, but it sure is different. Folks around MIT here would call it a squashed rhombus. Using the diagram's own scale for 42 paces, and accepting the questionable guess that most people informally considered a pace to measure 3 feet, the four basepaths each measure 132 feet. But the distance from home to 2B is just 79 feet, and from 1B to 3B it's 226 feet (for football fans: that's about 75 yards). Foul ground ("Outside Range" on the diagram) leaves a fair territory that is not marked in a 90 degree angle, but at . . . wait a sec, I'll find a professor and borrow a protractor, ah, here . . . a 143 degree angle.

Edit with form to add a comment
Query

Do we have evidence that the Eagle preferred, at least initially, a variant playing field? Or did the Eagle Club just assign this diagramming exercise to some Harvard person?

Is this image published in some recent source?

Edit with form to add a query
Submitted by John Thorn
Submission Note Emails of 9/2/2009 and 2/11/2010



Comments

<comments voting="Plus" />