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A list of all pages that have property "Headline" with value "The-20Thumb-20Comes-20into-20Play". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 239 results starting with #1.

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List of results

  • 1836c.11  + (Recollections of a Jersey City Boy -- And A Different Rule for Plugging)
  • 1870.16  + (Red Stocking Leader Explains Background for Club Decision to Exit Pro Base Ball Scene)
  • 1860.79  + (Regatta Cancelled Due To Base Ball)
  • 1861.34  + (Regiment Plays “Favorite Game” After Dress Parade in Elmira NY)
  • 1780.8  + (Regular Monday NYC Cricket Matches Planned Again.)
  • 1852.5  + (Religious Chapbook Shows Action in Ball Play at Recess)
  • 1830c.39  + (Report: "Groups of Full Grown Players At Base and Cricket" Recalled in New York)
  • 1672.1  + (Rev. Wilson Decries Sunday "Stool-Ball" and "Cricketts" Playing)
  • 1862.12  + (Reverend Beecher: Base-Ball is Best Form of Exercise)
  • 1776c.3  + (Revolutionary War Officer Plays Cricket, Picks Blueberries)
  • 1777.1  + (Revolutionary War Prisoner Watches Ball-Playing in NYC Area)
  • 1779.3  + (Revolutionary War Soldier H. Records Regimental Ball-Playing PA)
  • 1857.10  + (Rib-and-Ball Game in the Arctic: Baseball Fever Among the Chills?)
  • 1817.2  + (Riddle Game Cites "Fourteen Boys at Bat and Ball")
  • 1862.63  + (Right and Left wings of 13th NY in Suffolk, VA)
  • 1871.14  + (Rival Assn of Amateur Players Forms: Includes Clubs from NY, Philly, Baltimore, Boston.)
  • 1843.7  + (Robber Caught Again: "Third Time and Out")
  • 1851.5  + (Robert E. Lee Promotes Cricket at West Point?)
  • 1858.22  + (Rochester NY Editor: Base Ball to Curb Tobacco, Swearing (If Not Spitting))
  • 1825c.12  + (Rochester Senior: "How the Game of Ball Was Played")
  • 1850s.49  + (Round Ball Played North of Portland, Maine with "Cat Stick" and "Gools")
  • 1829.2  + (Round Ball Played in MA)
  • 1822.1  + (Round Ball Played in Worcester)
  • 1820.2  + (Round Ball played in Upton, MA)
  • 1850s.33  + (Round Ball, Old Cat Played in Northwest MA Town)
  • 1850s.55  + (Round Ball, Played Near Boston, As Recalled in 1870s Celebrations)
  • 1822.2  + (Round-Arm Bowling Disallowed at Lord's Cricket Ground)
  • 1835.2  + (Round-arm Bowling Officially Permitted in Cricket)
  • 1850c.56  + (Roundball Recalled in Maine)
  • 1857.31  + (Rounders "Now Almost Entirely Displaced by Cricket:" English Scholar)
  • 1842.11  + (Rounders Reported at Swiss School)
  • 1851.10  + (Rounders on the Ice)
  • 1857.40  + (Rules Experiment Suggested-- Six outs)
  • 1857.1  + (Rules Modified to Specify Nine Innings, 90-Foot Base Paths, Nine-Player Teams, but not the Fly Rule)
  • 1840s.29  + (Rural Boys "Played Bass Ball" in Western Ohio)
  • 1839.3  + (Rutherford Hayes Plays Ball as Student at Kenyon College, OH)
  • 1870c.17  + (Rutherford Hayes Sees Harm to Hearing in Ballplaying)
  • 1804.1  + (SC School Opens, Students Play Town Ball and Bull Pen)
  • 1863.115  + (SC soldier writes of chuck a luck and town ball in camp)
  • 1846.24  + (Saco bans "bat and ball")
  • 1854.15  + (Sacramento "Hombres" Play Ball Before Several Hundred, Break Stuff)
  • 1842.8  + (Sad Boy, Grounded, Misses His Recess Sports)
  • 370c.1  + (Saint Augustine Recalls Punishment for Youthful Ball Games)
  • 1791.3  + (Salem MA Diary Covers "Puerile Sports" Including Bat & Ball, and "Rickets")
  • 1762.2  + (Salem MA Ordinance Outlaws Bat-and-Ball, Cricket)
  • 1858.39  + (San Francisco Organizes for Base Ball . . . Again)
  • 1852.7  + (San Francisco Plaza Again Active, This Time with "Town Ball;")
  • 1755.4  + (Satirist Cites Base-Ball as "An Infant Game")
  • 1400c.1  + (Savior Son Wants "To Go Play at Ball")
  • 1821.3  + (Schenectady NY Bans "Playing of Ball Against the Building")
  • 1855.16  + (Scholar Deems 1855 the Peak of Cricket-playing in America)
  • 1853c.15  + (Scholar Ponders: Why Were the Knickerbockers So Publicity-Shy?)
  • 1830.4  + (School Boys Play Base Ball Regularly at Portsmouth NH Grammar School)
  • 1761.2  + (School Rule in PA; No Ballplaying in the College Yard, Especially in Front of Trustees and Profs)
  • 1761.3  + (School Trustees Prohibit Playing Ball and Other Diversions, Ignoring Advice of Ben Franklin)
  • 1840c.26  + (Schoolboy Game of "Three Base Ball" Recalled in Brooklyn)
  • 1827.5  + (Science of Trap Construction Revealed)
  • 1860.44  + (Score it 7-5-4: "Three Hands Out in a Jiffy")
  • 1818.6  + (Scots Ballplaying Variants -- Including 'Ba'-baises' -- Found to the North)
  • 1862.110  + (Scots Soldiers Play Base-Ball and Cricket)
  • 1836.7  + (Scots Still Play "Ball Paces," a Type of Trap Ball with Running)
  • 1819.2  + (Scott's <u>Ivanhoe</u> Mentions Stool-ball)
  • 1841.11  + (Scottish Dictionary Calls "Cat and Dog" a Game for Three)
  • 1857.25  + (Season Opens in Boston with May Olympics Victory, Best-of-Three Format)
  • 1861.72  + (Secesh and Unionists fraternize on ball field)
  • 1860.19  + (Second Annual Chadwick Guide Prints Season Stats for the Year)
  • 1861.27  + (Second NJ 27, First NJ 10, in Virginia Camp)
  • 1861.19  + (Second NJ Regiment Forms BB Club in Virginia Camp)
  • 1863.14  + (Sergeant from 15th MA Plays Round Ball with 34th NY)
  • 1858.5  + (Seven More Clubs Publish Their Rules)
  • 1864.93  + (Seventh Wisconsin Infantry plays baseball in Petersburg tranches)
  • 1856.4  + (Seventy Games Played, All in New York City Area.)
  • 1784.2  + (Seymour Notation Adverts to Evidence that Town Ball Was Exported to England)
  • 1855.5  + (Seymour Research Note: "7 Clubs Organized" [But We Now Know of 30])
  • 1857.6  + (Seymour: Cricket Groups Meet to Try to Form US [National] Cricket Club)
  • 1863.23  + (Sgt. in the 6th Maine Reports “Huge Game of Ball” in VA)
  • 1669.1  + (Shadwell Play Said to List Rural Games, including Stool-ball.)
  • 1600c.2  + (Shakespeare Mentions Rounders? Pretty Doubtful)
  • 1857.45  + (Sharon MA Victory in Boston Seen As State Championship)
  • 1865.34  + (Sherman's army plays base-ball in SC)
  • 1839.8  + (Shinty Played in Hoboken)
  • 1836.14  + (Shinty Played in Hoboken in 1836)
  • 1648.1  + (Short Herrick Poem Proposes a Wager on Stool-ball Game)
  • 1850c.11  + (Short Moral Tale Centers on Boy's Bat and Ball)
  • 1861.40  + (Shortstops to Soldiers)
  • 1831.3  + (Should Boys Prefer Bats over Books?)
  • 1861.45  + (Shrunken NABBP Meeting Does Little)
  • 1860.42  + (Shut Out Reported as the First Ever; Excelsiors 25, St. George Nine 0)
  • 1864.40  + (Signals for Throwing to Base)
  • 1867.8  + (Signs Go Back To At Least 1867)
  • 1815.4  + (Six-Hour "Wicket" Match Played in Canada)
  • 1857.29  + (Six-Player Town-ball Teams Play for Gold in Philly)
  • 1859.8  + (Sixty Play for Their Suppers)
  • 1854.19  + (Sixty-foot Liner Breaks Schoolhouse Window in "Game of Bass")
  • 1533.1  + (Skelton Poem Traces Cricket to Flemish Immigrants?)
  • 1869.6  + (Slugging Stat Arrives in Early Form)
  • 1829.3  + (Small Cambridge MA Schoolground Crimps Base and Cricket Play)
  • 1863.139  + (Soildiers play "Baste ball" in Virginia)
  • 1863.156  + (Soldier Play in KY)
  • 1847.8  + (Soldier Recalls Town-ball)
  • 1847.2  + (Soldier Sees January Ball Games at Camp at Saltillo)
  • 1863.15  + (Soldier Under General Rosecrans Sees Ballplaying in Tennessee)
  • 1812.2  + (Soldier Van Smoot's Diary Notes Playing Catch at New Orleans LA)
  • 1775.1  + (Soldier in CT "Played Ball All Day")
  • 1775.2  + (Soldier in MA Played Ball)
  • 1864.71  + (Soldier in TN asks sister to send him a baseball)
  • 1863.20  + (Soldier: “Our Camp is Alive with Ball-Players”)
  • 1847.15  + (Soldiers Play Ball During Western Trip)
  • 1865.40  + (Soldiers Play Baseball while waiting to be mustered out)
  • 1862.84  + (Soldiers Play Philadelphia Champs)
  • 1863.121  + (Soldiers Play Wicket in Little Rock)
  • 1863.143  + (Soldiers Play cricket in Virginia)
  • 1863.72  + (Soldiers confront idleness with ball playing)
  • 1864.55  + (Soldiers on leave play ball in Chicago)
  • 1862.111  + (Soldiers play Round Town Ball in camp)
  • 1861.56  + (Soldiers play ball in Denver)
  • 1863.149  + (Soldiers play the "New York game")
  • 1862.23  + (Soldiers' Christmas in Virginia - Ballplaying "on Many a Hillside")
  • 1867c.17  + (Some First Female teams and games in US cities)
  • 1621.1  + (Some Pilgrims "Openly" Play "Stoole Ball" on Christmas Morning: Governor Clamps Down)
  • 1862.114  + (Some interesting games of ball)
  • 1850s.43  + (South Carolina College Students Make Do with Town Ball, "Cat")
  • 1802c.1  + (South Carolina Man Lists Ball-Playing Among Local Amusements)
  • 1864.85  + (South Carolina soldiers Play Ball near Petersburg)
  • 1862.53  + (Southern Brigade’s Play Base . . . Somewhere)
  • 1859.7  + (Southern Game Takes Place in Aristocratic Setting)
  • 1863.114  + (Southern Girls Play Town Ball and Cat in Clarksville)
  • 1859.73  + (Southern Militia Members Visit Elysian Fields on NY Tour)
  • 1862.27  + (Southern Newspaper Urges: “More Manly Sports Like Cricket and Base Ball, Less Cardplay”)
  • 1864.23  + (Southern Officers Play Ball in Ohio Prison)
  • 1790s.4  + (Southern Pols Calhoun and Crawford: Ballplaying Schoolmates?)
  • 1864.1  + (Southern Soldier Notes Repeated Ballplaying, Including Game of Cat)
  • 1860.70  + (Space Wanted)
  • 1255.1  + (Spanish Drawing Seen as Early Depiction of Ballplaying)
  • 1842.5  + (Spelling Book Seems to Show a Fungo Game)
  • 1830s.32  + (Spiked Egg-Nog Between Innings?)
  • 1860.3  + (Split Doubleheader:Mass Game, NY Game)
  • 1851.1  + (Sport of Cricket Gets its First Comprehensive History Book)
  • 1855.34  + (Sporting Press Notices Base Ball, Regularizes Reporting)
  • 1800c.1  + (Sports at Exeter Academy include "Old-Fashioned Bat and Ball". . . and Football)
  • 1846.13  + (Spring Sports at Harvard: "Bat & Ball" and Cricket)
  • 1844.18  + (Springtime Ballplaying on the Common -- by Girls)
  • 1853.22  + (St. Augustine bans Shinny and any "game of ball")
  • 1838.2  + (St. George Cricket Club Forms in NYC)
  • 1845.21  + (St. George's Cricket Club Plays Series with All-Canada Eleven)
  • 1840.10  + (St. George, NY Cricket Club, [Accidentally] Plays Toronto for a $250 Side Bet)
  • 1862.4  + (State Championship Base Ball Game in PA)
  • 1871.9  + (State-wide Base Ball Association for California?)
  • 1855.18  + (Stodgy Novel Makes Brief Mention of Former Ballplaying)
  • 1831.7  + (Stool ball, Cricket, Bread, and Beer for Crowd of 500)
  • 1640.1  + (Stoolball Attracts Gentry, Rascals, Boys)
  • 1450.2  + (Stoolball Dated by NSA to 1450 in "Don Quixote")
  • 1630c.2  + (Stoolball Play Makes Maidstone a "Very Profane Town")
  • 1789.3  + (Stoolball Played at Brighthelmstone in Sussex)
  • 1630.4  + (Stoolball Played in Sherston, England)
  • 1861.2  + (Stoolball Played, in Co-ed Form)
  • 1300s.3  + (Stoolball Said to Originate Among Sussex Milkmaids)
  • 1866.18  + (Stoolball in Selmeston)
  • 1615.1  + (Stoole Ball Goes North with Early Explorer)
  • 1585c.1  + (Stoole-ball, Nine Holes Included Among Country Sports)
  • 1600.3  + (Stooleball popular in 1600)
  • 1827.2  + (Story Places Baseball in Rochester NY)
  • 1853.9  + (Strolling Past a Ballgame in Elysian Fields)
  • 1855.12  + (Students Bring Cricket to Saint John and Fredericton NB)
  • 1823.6  + (Students Play Ball Game at Progressive School in Northampton MA)
  • 1808.3  + (Students get 10 lashes for playing bandy)
  • 1659.1  + (Stuyvesant: No Tennis, Ball-Playing, Dice on Fast Day)
  • 1801.5  + (Sunday Ballplaying Eyed Everywhere: "Is This a Christian Country?")
  • 1858.64  + (Sunday Mercury Acknowledges English Origin of Base Ball)
  • 1857.14  + (Sunrise Base Ball)
  • 1773.1  + (Surrey/Kent Cricket Match Draws 12,000, Spawns Poetic Duel)
  • 1737.1  + (Surreymen Play Londoners in Cricket for 500 Pounds a Side)
  • 1795.2  + (Survey Reports Cricket in New England, Playing at Ball in TN)
  • 1846.11  + (Suspicious Rochester NY Idler Observed Playing Wicket)
  • 1855.41  + (Swift and Wild)
  • 1586c.1  + (Sydney Cites Stoolball)
  • 1820s.18  + (Syracuse NY Ball Field Remembered as Base Ball Site)
  • -2500.2  + (Tale of Game in Sumer, Possibly Using Ball and Mallet.)
  • 1869.15  + (Teams Hassle Over Choice of Game Ball -- The Redstockings Liked the Less-elastic Variety)
  • 1778.2  + (Teamster Sees Soldiers Play Ball.)
  • 1848.3  + (Teen Diarist in NY/NJ Records Ballplaying)
  • 1781.1  + (Teen Makes White Leather Balls for British Officers' Ball-Playing)
  • 1860.2  + (Ten Thousand Players!)
  • 1874.2  + (Tennessee Visitor Lauds Local "Base-ball, Shinny, Baste Grounds")
  • 1864.34  + (Tenth MA Plays Inter-regimental Games of Base Ball and Wicket in VA)
  • 1865.33  + (Texas Confederate Plays Town Ball Near Petersburg)
  • 1862.50  + (Texas Ranger Plugs Waaay Too Hard)
  • 1855.25  + (Text Perceives Rounders and Cricket, in Everyday French Conversations)
  • 1862.37  + (Thanksgiving and Foot-ball . . . and Base-Ball)
  • 1861.63  + (Thanksgiving game of 25th Massachusetts)
  • 1855.28  + (Thanksgiving is for Football? Not in Gotham, Not Yet)
  • 1634.1  + (That Archbishop Laud, He Certainly Doesn't Laud Stoolball)
  • 1694.2  + (Thaw Arrives; Cricket Added to Old List of "Evening" English Pastimes)
  • 1676.1  + (The "Citty of New Yorke" Sets a Fine for Sunday "Gameing or Playing: Ten Guilders)
  • 1865.19  + (The "Slide Game" Protested)
  • 1857.42  + (The "X" Letters)
  • 1861.54  + (The "best players" of NYC and Brooklyn play in the army)
  • 1862.19  + (The 39<sup>th</sup> Massachusetts Plays Ball)
  • 1865.9  + (The Abolition of Suppers to Clubs)
  • 1850s.59  + (The Antiquarian Knicks -- Purveyors of "The Greatest Game of Base Ball Ever Played")
  • 1840s.46  + (The Balk -- From the Knicks, Prior US Games, or Abroad?)
  • 1830s.33  + (The Balk Rule Existed Before the 1845 Knick Rules?)
  • BC2000 to 1000ADc.1  + (The Ball in Ancient Play)
  • 1836c.4  + (The Ballgames "Old Cat" and "Base" Played in Concord MA)
  • 1871.13  + (The Beginning of Base Ball Trivia?)
  • 1851.9  + (The Beginning of Match Play Between Organized Clubs)
  • 1840c.37  + (The Boyhood of Fallen Ohio Union Officer Had Included "Touch the Base")
  • 1863.87  + (The Colonel umpired the game)
  • 1855.1  + (The Confidence Game Frustrated)
  • 1862.2  + (The Death of Jim Creighton at 21)
  • 1873.14  + (The Delayed Double Steal -- New or Familiar?)
  • 1854.16  + (The Eagle Club's Field Diagram - A <u>Real</u> Diamond)
  • 1867.25  + (The End for the Massachusetts Game?)
  • 1853.10  + (The First Base Ball Reporters - Cauldwell, Bray, Chadwick)
  • 1844.20  + (The First Baseball Card, Arguably?)
  • 1860.64  + (The First Enclosed Ballpark)
  • 1857.13  + (The First Game Pic?)
  • 1859.30  + (The First Triple Play, Maybe?)
  • 1837.14  + (The First Uniforms in US Baserunning Games?)
  • 1857.12  + (The First Vintage Games?)
  • 1854.11  + (The Game in Ontario Resembled the MA Game, with Variations)
  • 1860.65  + (The Grand Excursion, Part II)
  • 1864.25  + (The Hothead Union Captain and the Foul Ball)
  • 1848.4  + (The Knicks' Defensive Deployment, Thanksgiving Day Game)
  • 1858.28  + (The MA Ball: Smaller, Lighter, "Double 8" Cover Design)
  • 1868c.5  + (The Manufactured "Figure 8" Base Ball Appears?)
  • 1861.83  + (The Mozart Regiment Plays Baseball)
  • 1859.64  + (The Old Hidden Ball Trick)
  • 1869.2  + (The Only Blemish)
  • 1844.4  + (The Popular <u>McGuffey's Reader</u> Adds a New Woodcut of Ball Play)
  • 1855.22  + (The Search for Base Ball Supremacy Begins? (It's the Knicks, For Now))
  • 1870.1  + (The Streak Ends -- Reds Fall to Atlantic, 8-7, in 11 Innings)
  • 1805.5  + (The Term "Bace" Not Related to Ballplaying, in Cornwall)
  • 1860.94  + (The Term "Foul Line" Appears in Sunday Mercury Report on Excelsior-Atlantic Game)
  • BC 3500000 c.1  + (The Thumb Comes into Play)
  • 1857.5  + (The Tide Starts Turning in New England - Trimountain Club Adopts NY Game)
  • 1863.62  + (The Times Calls a Spade a Spade-- Base Ball is Obliterating Cricket)
  • 1780c.7  + (The Young Josiah Quincy of MA: "My Heart was in Ball")
  • 1863.119  + (The officers mingled with the men)
 (The-20Thumb-20Comes-20into-20Play)
  • 1862.55  + (They Do It Differently in Philadelphia)
  • 1863.66  + (They didn't know the rules!)
  • 1862.59  + (Thirsty Baserunning)
  • -1000s.1  + (Thirty Century-Old Leather-Covered Hardballs Found)
  • 1857.49  + (Thirty Four Ball Clubs listed on Long Island)
  • 1785.1  + (Thomas Jefferson: Hunting is Better for Character-building Than Ballplaying)
  • 1830c.2  + (Thoreau Associates "Fast Day" with Base-Ball Played in Russet Fields)
  • 1858.68  + (Thoreau Ponders Manliness in the Church and Base Ball)
  • 1863.79  + (Thousands of soldiers playing ball)
  • 1860.43  + (Three Ball Clubs Form in VT Village)
  • 1860.56  + (Three Hartford CT Base Ball Clubs on the Move)
  • 1865.25  + (Three Mutuals Banned for "Heaving" Game to Eckfords for $100)
  • 1854.1  + (Three NY Clubs Meet: Agreed Rules Now Specify Pitching Distance "Not Less Than 15 Paces"")
  • 1858.48  + (Three Youth Clubs in Rochester NY Disdain the NY Game)
  • 1770.2  + (Three-on-Three Cricket Match Played on 100-Guinea Bet)
  • 1743.2  + (Three-on-Three Cricket Match, A Close One, Draws Reported 10,000 Fans)
  • 1868.8  + (Throwback ('Old-Fashioned') Game Planned in Rochester)
  • 1866.10  + (Throwback Game of Cat-and-Dog Seen in Pittsburgh)
  • 1825c.1  + (Thurlow Weed Recalls Baseball in Rochester NY)
  • 1847.3  + (Tiny Book Has Odd Description of "Bat and Ball.")
  • 1855.26  + (Tolland CT 265, Otis-Sandisfield MA 189 In Wicket Match)
  • 1861.48  + (Too Cold for Baseball in Confederate Camp)
  • 1820s.23  + (Town Ball Came to Central IL in the 1820s.)
  • 1840s.42  + (Town Ball Club Finds Spot in NYC For Playing)
  • 1860.13  + (Town Ball Hangs on in Philadelphia)
  • 1863.110  + (Town Ball Played by 28th Alabama)
  • 1856.39  + (Town Ball Played in Chicago in 1856?)
  • 1855c.2  + (Town Ball Played in South Carolina)
  • 1850s.31  + (Town Ball Played in Southeast MO)
  • 1840s.41  + (Town Ball Recalled in Central IL)
  • 1820s.5  + (Town Ball Recalled in Eastern IL)
  • 1844.19  + (Town Ball Reported Among Cape May Attractions and "Mischief")
  • 1829.5  + (Town Ball Takes Off in Philadelphia?)
  • 1850s.30  + (Town Ball Well Known in Illinois)
  • 1840c.17  + (Town Ball and Ballmaking in OH)
  • 1750s.2  + (Town Ball and Cat Played in NC Lowlands?)
  • 1862.74  + (Town Ball at Shiloh Battlefield)
  • 1862.72  + (Town Ball club formed by Ohio Regiment in West Virginia)
  • 1846.9  + (Town Ball in Rockford IL)
  • 1830s.36  + (Town Ball, Bull Pen, Tip Cat Played in the Antebellum South)
  • 1834.9  + (Town Ball, Other Games on Sabbath Subject to Dollar Fine in Springfield IL)
  • 1850s.20  + (Town-ball Played in Ohio with "Lazarus" Rule)
  • 1845c.13  + (Town-ball in IN Later [and Vaguely?] Recalled)
  • 1860.76  + (Trade Games Proliferate)
  • 1862.82  + (Trainees of 13th MA and 51st PA)
  • 1616c.1  + (Translation of Homer Depicts Virgins Playing Stool-Ball, Disturbing Ulysses' Snooze)
  • 1822.4  + (Trap Ball Advertised at Inn)
  • 1828.10  + (Trap Ball Scam Reported!)
  • 1850s.13  + (Trap Ball, Stool Ball, Well Established in Louisville KY)
  • 1719.1  + (Trap and Stool-ball Help Set the Mood . . . <i>Again</i>)
  • 1837.4  + (Trap-ball Found in Book of "Many Exercises and Exercises for Ladies")
  • 1300s.1  + (Trapball Played in the British Isles)
  • 1704.1  + (Traveler Observes Ball-Playing in CT)
  • 1652.1  + (Traveler in Wales Reports "Laudable" Sunday Games of "Trap, Cat, Stool-ball, Racket &c")
  • 1860.77  + (Treat Us Special)
  • 1856.21  + (Trenton Club Forms for "Invigorating Amusement")
  • 1864.31  + (Trophy Ball Kept in 22nd MA Regiment)
  • 1816.8  + (Troy NY Bans Ballplaying)
  • 1860.49  + (Troy NY Writer: "Every Newspaper" Covers Base Ball Games, Some Showing Regrettable "Petty Meanness")
  • 1850c.34  + (Tut-ball Played at Young Ladies School in England)
  • 1863.33  + (Twenty Sixth NJ 20, Second NY 12, in Virginia)
  • 1850c.44  + (Twenty or So Cricket Clubs Dot the US)
  • 1862.112  + (Twenty-First CT plays baseball in camp)
  • 1860.85  + (Twist That Ball)
  • 1860.41  + (Two Base Ball Tourneys in California)
  • 1849.16  + (Two Eight-player Teams Play Bass Ball at Elysian Fields)
  • 1656.2  + (Two English Counties Agree: Stoolball Gets "Too Much Attention.")
  • 1859.20  + (Two More BB Clubs Issue Rules)
  • 1864.29  + (Two NY Regiments Play “Grand Game on the Parade Ground” in VA)
  • 1832c.2  + (Two NYC Clubs Known to Play Pre-modern Base Ball -- Use the Plugging of Runners)
  • 1738.1  + (Two New Yorkers Get Guard House Sentence for Ballplaying At Time of Religious Rites)
  • 1712.1  + (Two Noblemen Blasted for Sunday Cricket Play, and for Betting Too)
  • 1852.16  + (Two Wicket Groups Vie in Litchfield CT)
  • 1850c.35  + (U. of Michigan Alum Recalls Baseball, Wicket, Old-Cat Games)
  • 1784.1  + (UPenn Bans Ball Playing Near Open University Windows)
  • 1835.6  + (US Book Describes "Barn Ball," "Base, or Goal Ball.")
  • 1834.3  + (US Chapbook in German Reprises 1832 Woodcut)
  • 1862.3  + (US Cricket Enters Steeper Decline)
  • 1857.15  + (US Editor Promotes Cricket as the "National Game")
  • 1848.21  + (US General Swats at Cannonball with Sword During Mexican American War Calling it Baseball)
  • 1850.29  + (US Has Twenty Cricket Clubs)
  • 1815c.1  + (US Prisoners in Ontario at End of War of 1812 Play Ball)
  • 1815c.2  + (US Prisoners of War in England Play Ball - at Great Peril, It Turned Out)
  • 1787.4  + (US Publisher Offers Books "More Pleasurable Than Bat and Ball")
  • 1847.17  + (US Traveler Sees Baseball-Like Game in Northeastern France)
  • 1835c.10  + (Ubiquitous Woodcut Pops Up in Cincinnati)
  • 1846.15  + (Umpires 1, Players 0)
  • 1872.6  + (Umpiring Evolves As A Profession: Certification, Bipartisan Pay)
  • 1866c.1  + (Umps Finally Begin to Call Strikes and Balls)
  • 1860.78  + (Unenforced Rules Get Chadwick's Goat)
  • 1863.42  + (Union Army Captain Sees Base Ball Good for Morale, and Health Too)
  • 1864.57  + (Union Army Parolees Play Baseball in Camp)
  • 1862.94  + (Union Army Parolees Play baseball at Camp Douglas)
  • 1867.27  + (Union Club Offers Season Tickets in Washington Paper)
  • 1870.4  + (Union Club of Morrisania Disbands)
  • 1859.11  + (Union College Forms Base Ball Team)
  • 1810c.4  + (Union College [Upstate NY] Students Play Baseball-Like Game)
  • 1830s.24  + (Union Cricket Club Gains Strength in Philadelphia PA)
  • 1832.1  + (Union Cricket Club of Philadelphia Forms)
  • 1830.3  + (Union General Joseph Hooker Plays Baseball as a Boy)
  • 1861.32  + (Union General Refers to “Long Ball”)
  • 1865.28  + (Union Guards at Elmira Prison Play Baseball with Confederate POWs)
  • 1863.49  + (Union Men Celebrate Thanksgiving with “Grand Game of Townball”)
  • 1864.59  + (Union POWs Play Town Ball)
  • 1864.22  + (Union POWs in SC Given “Plot of Ground Where They Could Play Ball”)
  • 1864.90  + (Union POWs play base ball in Macon POW Camp)
  • 1862.80  + (Union POWs seen playing ball in Macon)
  • 1864.30  + (Union Prisoner Reported Shot While Playing Ball in Texas Pen)
  • 1864.26  + (Union Prisoners in Texas Given a Ball Ground – For a While)
  • 1864.95  + (Union army garrison plays baseball at Fort Bartow)
  • 1864.86  + (Union artillerists play baseball in Texas)
  • 1862.116  + (Union occupiers play in Lexington MO)
  • 1863.96  + (Union soldiers play ball in California)
  • 1865.31  + (Union soldiers play baseball with Confederates)
  • 1863.90  + (Union soldiers watch Confederates play ball)
  • 1820.16  + (Union vs. Mechanics - First Mention of Club Cricket?)
  • 1855.45  + (Unitarians' Christian Register Defends Base Ball on Fast Day)
  • 1872.10  + (Unofficial Scoresheets Evolve, K's Not Reported Yet)
  • 1833.8  + (Untitled Drawing of Ball Game [Wicket?] Appears in US 1830s Songbook)
  • 1840.24  + (Unusual Georgia Townball Described in Unusual Detail)
  • 1860.66  + (Unwanted Walk-Off)
  • 1867.3  + (Upset Gives Western Clubs First win vs. the East)
  • 1828c.3  + (Upstate Author Carried Now-Lost 1828 Clipping on Base Ball in Rochester)
  • 1842.12  + (Use in VA of "Base Ball")
  • 1862.81  + (VA Artillerymen play town ball)
  • 1840s.36  + (VA Lad Plays Chermany at Recess)
  • 1787.2  + (VT Man's Letter to Brother Says "Three Times is Out at Wicket")
  • 1854.9  + (Van Cott Letter Summarizes Year in Base Ball in NYC; Foresees "Higher Position" for 1855 Base Ball)
  • 1835.3  + (Van Cott Source Recalls Diamond-Shaped Field in 1835)
  • 1856.36  + (Variant Schoolboy Ballgames Described North of NYC)
  • 1866.15  + (Vassar has First female Base ball club?)
  • 1861.8  + (Vermont Club Forms)
  • 1803.5  + (Vermont Paper Associates Adult Tradesmen with Ballplaying)
  • 1864.7  + (Vermont Regiment Plays in Louisiana)
  • 1828c.5  + (Vermont Schoolboy Recalls Playing Goal, With Elm Trees as Goals)
  • 1863.88  + (Vermont soldiers play base and foot ball)
  • 1863.16  + (Vermonters Play Ball in Virginia)
  • 1862.39  + (Vermonters Play Manly Sport of Football, (and Base Ball) in Virginia)
  • 1610.1  + (Very Early Cricket Match)
  • 1550c.2  + (Very Early Cricket Play Recalled at Southern England School.)
  • 1851.4  + (Very Early Game in Illinois Involves Joliet, Lockport?)
  • 1846.20  + (Very Early Knicks Game Washed Out . . . in Brooklyn)
  • 1330.1  + (Vicar of Winkfield Advises Against Bat/Ball Games in Churchyards; First Stoolball Reference?)
  • 1828.8  + (View of NYC Ballplayers "A Worse Menace Than Traffic")
  • 1660c.1  + (Village Life: The Men to Foot-Ball, Maids and Kids to Stoolball)
  • 1859.46  + (Visiting English Cricketers View the Bound Rule as "Childish")
  • 1817.1  + (Visitor to Philly Tells of Cricket Play There)
  • 1861.39  + (WAR!)
  • 1864.19  + (Waiting for Sherman, and Playing, in Georgia)
  • 1808.1  + (Wall Streeters Are Bearish on Ballplaying "and Other Annoyances")
  • 1846.6  + (Walt Whitman Sees Boys Playing "Base" in Brooklyn: "Glorious")
  • 1861.23  + (War Sinks Silver Balls)
  • 1813.2  + (War of 1812 General in OH Said to Play Ball with "Lowest" Soldiers)
  • BC2400c.1  + (Was Egypt the Well-Spring of Ballplaying? Text Has “Strike the Ball” Reference)
  • 1854.4  + (Was Lewis Wadsworth the First Paid Player?)
  • 1830s.12  + (Watching Wicket Ball in Buffalo NY)
  • 1820c.24  + (Waterbury CT Jaws Drop as Baptist Deacon Takes the Field)
  • 1863.27  + (Weary Soldier Plays Ball a Little While)
  • 1861.42  + (Welcome Back)
  • 1837.8  + (Well, As Goes Canton, So Goes Indianapolis)
  • 1747.2  + (Well-Advertised Women's Cricket Match Held, with 6-Pence Admission)
  • 1849.14  + (Westfield Upsets Granville in Wicket)
  • 1849.9  + (Westfield Whips Granville in Wicket)
  • 1859.63  + (What Must I Do to Be Physically Saved?)
  • 1853.6  + (When Boys Collect, A Spontaneous Game of Ball is Possible)
  • 1743.3  + (When Cricket Still Had Foul Ground?)
  • 1844.15  + (Whigs 81 Runs, Loco Focos 10 Runs, in "Political" Contest Near Canadian Border)
  • 1829.7  + (While Playing Peacefully, "Wisdom Stole His Bat and Ball")
  • 1704.2  + (While the Rurals Had Stool-ball and Cricket, the Londoner Had "Blood-Stirring Excitement")
  • 1861.77  + (White House Secretaries watch Zouaves play ball)
  • 1871.15  + (White Stockings Choose New Orleans for Extended Preseason Play)
  • 1855.9  + (Whitman Puts "Good Game of Base-Ball" Among Favorite Americana)
  • 1859.36  + (Why Cover Sports?)
  • 1844.11  + (Why Fast Day Comes Only Once a Year?)
  • 1850c.36  + (Wicket Ball in Amherst MA)
  • 1825.8  + (Wicket Bat Reportedly Long [and Still?] Held in Deerfield MA Collection)
  • 1836.10  + (Wicket Challenge Issued in Granby CT)
  • 1855.33  + (Wicket Club Plays in Ohio -- Ladies Bestow MVP Prize)
  • 1865.42  + (Wicket Club Switches to Baseball)
  • 1859.48  + (Wicket Club and Base Ball Club Play Demo Matches for Novelty's Sake)
  • 1857.19  + (Wicket Described in February <u>Porter's</u>)
  • 1870.17  + (Wicket Losing Out to Baseball)
  • 1864.94  + (Wicket Match)
  • 1864.46  + (Wicket Match-- Baseballers vs. Cricketers)
  • 1844.13  + (Wicket Play in New Orleans LA?)
  • 1850s.16  + (Wicket Play in Rochester NY)
  • 1857c.34  + (Wicket Played at Eastern OH College; Future President Excels)
  • 1830s.5  + (Wicket Played in The Western Reserve [OH])
  • 1725c.1  + (Wicket Played on Boston Common at Daybreak)
  • 1840c.25  + (Wicket Played with "Huge Bat" at Barkhamsted CT)
  • 1851.3  + (Wicket Players in MA Found Liable)
  • 1848.12  + (Wicket Reported as Fashionable in Western MA)
  • 1700c.2  + (Wicket Seen on Boston Common . . . But Never on Sunday (No Strolling, Either))
  • 1860.25  + (Wicket and Base Ball at Kenyon College, OH)
  • 1858.26  + (Wicket, as Well as Cricket and Base Ball, Reported in Baltimore MD)
  • 1799.3  + (Will Satan Snag the Sunday Player?)
  • 1800c.7  + (William Cullen Bryant Remembers Base-Ball)
  • 1805.1  + (Williams College Bans Dangerous Ball-playing)
  • 1796.2  + (Williams College Student Notes Ballplaying in Winter Months)
  • 1861.57  + (Wilson's Zouaves play base ball)
  • 1862.64  + (Winter Baseball in West Virginia)
  • 1862.20  + (Wisconsin Man's Diary Included a Dozen References to Ballplaying)
  • 1864.8  + (Wisconsin Soldier Plays Wicket Ball)
  • 1863.8  + (Wisconsin Soldier Reportedly “Died While Playing Wicket”)
  • 1867.21  + (Wisconsin's First State Base Ball Tourney Lists $1500 in Prizes)
  • 1850s.14  + (With Rise of Overarm Bowling, Padding Becomes Regular Part of Cricket)
  • 1858c.44  + (Wolverines and Wicket)
  • 1811.6  + (Women Cricketers Play for Large Purse)
  • 1835.9  + (Woodcut from <u>Mary's</u> is Inked Up Again)
  • 1847.19  + (Woodsfield fines ball players 25 cents)
  • 1816.2  + (Worcester MA Ordinance Bans "Frequent and Dangerous" Ball Playing and Hoops")
  • 1850c.46  + (Worcester Man Recalls Round Ball in the 1850s)
  • 1851.6  + (Word-man Noah Webster Acknowledges Only Wicket)
  • 1802.2  + (Wordsworth Seems to Laud "Englishness" of Cricket)
  • 1856.9  + (Working Men Play at Dawn on Boston Common)
  • 1825.3  + (Writer Follows Strutt's Theory That Club-ball Was the Source Game)
  • 1805.8  + (Yale Grad Compares Certain English Ballgames to New England's)
  • 1818.1  + (Yale Student Reports Cricket on Campus)
  • 1837.3  + (Yale Student Sees College Green Covered With Ballplaying)
  • 1864.66  + (Yankees on the Rapidan form Baseball Clubs)
  • 1836.5  + (Yanks and British Play Baserunning Game with Plugging . . . in Canton, China)
  • 1833.5  + (Yes, Another Chapbook from Mister Babcock, with That Same Old Woodcut)
  • 1860.54  + (Yes, The Game Would Move Right Along . . . But Would it be Cricket?)
  • 1838.6  + (Yikes, Here it is <i>Again!</i>)
  • 1853.15  + (You've Got to Play Along to Get Along?)
  • 1812c.1  + (Young Andrew Johnson Plays Cat and Bass Ball and Bandy in Raleigh NC)
  • 1848c.9  + (Young Benjamin Harrison Plays Town Ball, Baste in OH)
  • 1856.22  + (Young Brooklyn Clubs Play, But Reporter is Unimpressed)
  • 1755.3  + (Young Diarist Goes to "Play at Base Ball" in Surrey)
  • 1823c.4  + (Young Man Recalls "More Active Sports of 'Playing Ball' or 'Goal.'")
  • 1858.25  + (Your Base Ball Stringer, Mr. W. Whitman)
  • 1867.9  + (Your Tax Dollars At Work/Play)
  • 1598.1  + (Youth Ball Games Widespread at London Schools.)
  • 1856.26  + (Youths Are "Playing Ball" in San Francisco)
  • 1862.52  + (Zouave Pitcher Baffles Batters With “Weak, Puzzling” Delivery)
  • 1845.3  + ([Item removed from version 10; John Thorn advises that contemporary accounts confirm)
  • 1697.1  + (“A Great Match at Cricket" for a Tidy Purse)
  • 1800c.11  + (“Sky-ball”, “Cat and Ball” Remembered in Southern PA)
  • BC2500c.1  + (“Tip Cats" Found in Egyptian Ruins?)