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- {{All Fields|Country=United States|State=DE|City=Dover}}56 bytes (9 words) - 05:18, 14 October 2014
- {{All Games|Country=United States|State=DE|City=Dover}}55 bytes (9 words) - 05:17, 14 October 2014
- {{All Clubs|Country=United States|State=DE|City=Dover}}55 bytes (9 words) - 05:17, 14 October 2014
- {{Firsts|Country=United States|State=DE|City=Dover}}52 bytes (8 words) - 05:17, 14 October 2014
- {{All Predecessor Games|Country=United States|State=DE|City=Dover}}67 bytes (10 words) - 05:18, 14 October 2014
Page text matches
- |Name=in Dover in June 1867 |State=DE682 bytes (106 words) - 05:18, 14 October 2014
- |Name=Capital Club of Dover |State=DE1 KB (163 words) - 14:05, 15 November 2022
- |Name=Unity Club of Dover |State=DE672 bytes (95 words) - 10:43, 14 February 2022
- ...e that curls, that sound/Of bells; those boys that in yonder meadow-ground/In white-sleev'd shirts are playing; and the roar/Of the waves breaking on the <p>From Wordsworth's sonnet "Composed in the valley near Dover on the day of Landing," [1802 and 1807] <u>The Complete Poetical Works of W2 KB (272 words) - 17:35, 6 September 2012
- ...hich included the rules of rounders and also the first printed description in English of a bat and ball base-running game played on a diamond. Alice Gomme, in her 1894 work on British games,1 writes that Rounders was generally played37 KB (6,000 words) - 08:36, 24 February 2022
- ...fore another military man, one Abner Doubleday allegedly invented the game in the sleepy east central New York village of Cooperstown.</p> ...s march might have been fifteen miles, to locate a spot flat enough to get in the game. Clearly this game meant something more to Henry Dearborn and his92 KB (15,359 words) - 17:54, 9 February 2013