Search by property

Jump to navigation Jump to search

This page provides a simple browsing interface for finding entities described by a property and a named value. Other available search interfaces include the page property search, and the ask query builder.

Search by property

A list of all pages that have property "Query" with value "<p>Can the actual text be retrieved?</p>". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 26 results starting with #1.

View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)


    

List of results

  • 1871.1  + (<p>Are Carthage and Dallas and Ft. Madison nearby towns?</p>)
  • Cat (Kat)  + (<p>Are Twentieth Century forms of Old-Cat know in New York City or other US locations? </p>)
  • 1823.6  + (<p>Are any reports available on the rules of the game as played at Round Hill?</p> <p>Beck didn't give the game a particular name?</p>)
  • 1867.22  + (<p>Are earlier cases known?</p> <p>Is it known whether these press accommodations were normally granted by a ball club, like the Eureka, or by the owner of the ballfield?</p>)
  • 1867.26  + (<p>Are other baserunning games known that were to be played on horseback?</p> <p>Do we know what "Comic Monthlies" were?</p> <p> </p>)
  • Scrub  + (<p>Are other forms of Scrub remembered.  Have rules been published authoritatively somewhere?</p>)
  • 1868.8  + (<p>Are other post-War throwback games seen in the area?</p>)
  • 1000c.1  + (<p>Are the Sagas taken as accurate by scholars of Viking exploits?</p> <p>When did the three siblings live in Vinland?  Were the houses built in what is now US or Canada?</p> <p>When were the Sagas written? </p> <p> </p>)
  • 1835c.11  + (<p>Are the players children?</p>)
  • 1835c.18  + (<p>Are there any contemporary references to "base ball" in CT before this?</p>)
  • Wiffle ball  + (<p>Are there documented forms of wiffle ball that use live baserunners?</p> <p>Has anyone done a directory of known variant games played with a wiffle ball? </p>)
  • 1859.41  + (<p>Are there earlier claims for the first Knicks-style game in Canada? Item #1856.18 above was likely a predecessor game, right?</p>)
  • 1818.4  + (<p>Are there other sightings of this 1818 cricket account?</p>)
  • 1830s.12  + (<p>Are these Welch's own recollections? </p>)
  • 1862c.56  + (<p>Are these the only two other known collection of entry fees in the middle 1860s?</p>)
  • 1824.6  + (<p>Are we sure we haven't got Holmes<p>Are we sure we haven't got Holmes <em>pere et fils</em> confused?  OWH Sr (1809-1894), the poet and novelist, attended Andover and Harvard in the 1820s.  OWH Jr (1841-1935) attended Harvard in the 1850s, served in the Civil War and became a justice of the US Supreme Court.--WCH</p></br><p> </p>US Supreme Court.--WCH</p> <p> </p>)
  • 1867.28  + (<p>As a set, do these rules resemble<p>As a set, do these rules resemble contemporary rules for cricket in the 1860s?  Do they align with cricket rules in 1800?</p></br><p>Do we know what the ball was like?  Presumably, tennis balls were hand-wound string in this era, and the ball may have resembled cricket balls and base balls for the era.  </p> balls and base balls for the era.  </p>)
  • 1872.4  + (<p>Asking, 3/18/2022:</p> <<p>Asking, 3/18/2022:</p></br><p>Was it common for pro league clubs to play amateur clubs?  (see BA response, above)</p></br><p>Did the game come off?</p></br><p>Asking, 3/19/2022:</p></br><p>Was the Boston club known as the Red Stockings in 1872?</p></br><p> </p></br><p>Was the proposed game to amount to a pre-season warmup for the Boston pros?</p> <p> </p> <p>Was the proposed game to amount to a pre-season warmup for the Boston pros?</p>)
  • 1666.1  + (<p>Bunyan was born in 1628.  Are we sure that this event can be dated 1666, when he was nearly forty years old?</p>)
  • 1844.16  + (<p>Can anyone make a guess at the me<p>Can anyone make a guess at the meaning of "hurra for Connecticut" for a game played in the far north of NYS?  Was the area known for its emigres from CT?</p></br><p>Answer: I believe the reference is to the gains the Whig Party made in the recent CT elections. Just as the local Whigs beat the Loco-Focos (Democrats) at base ball, the CT Whigs beat the Democrats at the polls. [ba]</p> the CT Whigs beat the Democrats at the polls. [ba]</p>)
  • 370c.1  + (<p>Can historians identify the "game of ball" that Augustine might have played in the fourth Century? Are the translations to "game of ball," "games," and "sport" still deemed accurate?</p>)
  • BC700c.1  + (<p>Can other readers throw any more light on this ancient (and, to Protoball, handsomely <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em>obscure</em></span>) text?</p>)
  • 1854.22  + (<p>Can readers provide insight as to what game was played on Boston Common in 1854, whether there was a post Civil War league in this area, and otherwise help us interpret this account? </p>)
  • 1828.17  + (<p>Can someone help us obtain the text of this newspaper piece?</p>)
  • Block:London Dictionary Defines "Baseball" in 1768  + (<p>Can the Shakespeare citation be l<p>Can the Shakespeare citation be located?</p></br><p>Yes. The cite is to Cymbeline, Act 5, Scene 3. [ba] </p></br><div id="copyPaste"><span id="line-5.3.22" title="5.3.22">"He with two striplings—lads more like to run</span><br/><span id="line-5.3.23" title="5.3.23">The country base than to commit such slaughter,"</span></div></br><div class="post-inner section-inner"> </div>mmit such slaughter,"</span></div> <div class="post-inner section-inner"> </div>)
  • 1538.1  + (<p>Can the actual text be retrieved?</p>)
  • 1758.1  + (<p>Can the date of the diary entry be traced?</p>)
  • 1860.1  + (<p>Can this estimate be reconciled with #1859.40 above? The number of clubs doubled in one year?</p>)
  • 1870.4  + (<p>Can we add any indication of why the club disbanded?</p>)
  • 1867.5  + (<p>Can we add something about the first game, and the sites of each game?  A bit more about interim game scoring?</p>)
  • BC1500c.1  + (<p>Can we add specific sources for these points?</p>)
  • 1840s.45  + (<p>Can we assess the accuracy of his<p>Can we assess the accuracy of his summary?  Is wicket known to be played in   the vicinity or in other colleges?</p></br><p>Cutting p. 113 says the "wicket ground was in the rear of the chapel" thus confirming that wicket was played on the campus. [ba]</p>hat wicket was played on the campus. [ba]</p>)
  • 1828.20  + (<p>Can we assume that 'pedal members' pertained to the feet, and that it was thus foot ball, and not the two base-running games that caused the bruises? </p>)
  • 1815c.2  + (<p>Can we be certain that this was a base-running game?  Can we rule out that the game was a vigorous 1800's form of handball?</p>)
  • 1836.5  + (<p>Can we clarify what game Forbes p<p>Can we clarify what game Forbes played (rounders? round ball?). </p></br><p> Reader Reply: I would suggest that this is reasonably persuasive evidence that Brits and Yanks were playing effectively the same game, under whatever name. No mention of rules disputes or confusion arises; and one gets the distinct impression, in parallel with ca. 1830s rules descriptions, that both national contingents set to without fuss and that there was little if any difference between English "rounders" and American "X-ball." --WCHicklin (date unspecified).</p>ican "X-ball." --WCHicklin (date unspecified).</p>)
  • 1700.1  + (<p>Can we confirm this citation, and that it refers to cricket? Do we know of any earlier public announcements of safe-haven games?</p>)
  • 1807.3  + (<p>Can we determine from biographica<p>Can we determine from biographical information where and when Barry attended college? Is it significant that Barry reprises the phrase "urge the flying ball," seen as a cricket phrase in Pope [see #1730.1] and Gray [#1747.1]? Did Barry live/play in MD?</p>d Gray [#1747.1]? Did Barry live/play in MD?</p>)
  • 1802c.1  + (<p>Can we determine the SC location recalled, why Tom dated it as circa 1802, or what form the ballplaying took? </p>)
  • 1850s.3  + (<p>Can we determine the year the club formed?  Was it a junior clcub?</p>)
  • 1866.11  + (<p>Can we determine what original sources Zingg and Medeiros used?</p>)
  • 1660c.3  + (<p>Can we determine whether 17th-cen<p>Can we determine whether 17th-century balslaen was a batting/baserunning game, or was it in the field-hockey, or handball, or golf, families of games?</p></br><p>Was "New Netherland" confined to the Manhattan area or did it extend northward into the Hudson River valley?</p></br><p>Is "circa 1660" a defensible approximation for this find?</p></br><p>Was balslaen played in Holland?  Could it have influenced English ballplaying, including cricket and English base ball??</p></br><p> </p>nglish ballplaying, including cricket and English base ball??</p> <p> </p>)
  • 1858.67  + (<p>Can we determine whether this game was played by the emerging Massachusetts rules or traditional local custom?</p> <p> </p>)
  • 1787.1  + (<p>Can we determine why this "shiny" inference was made?</p>)
  • Clipping:Traditional Easter Ballplaying . . . Where Fast Day Play was Born?  + (<p>Can we discover more details on the tradition of mature women being central to early Easter ballplaying festivities?</p> <p> </p> <p> </p>)
  • Aleut Baseball  + (<p>Can we discover the geographic range of play of this game?  Do local variations exist in Alaska?</p>)
  • 1858.10  + (<p>Can we either verify or disprove the accuracy of this recollection?</p>)
  • 1630c.3  + (<p>Can we find and inspect the 1935 Boas edition of the diary?</p>)
  • 1858.58  + (<p>Can we find any clear basis for t<p>Can we find any clear basis for the report of 1856 establishment of modern base ball? </p></br><p>[ba] Yes. </p></br><p>Andreas' Chicago, p. 613, says that the Union Base Ball Club organized Aug. 12, 1856.</p></br><p>Andreas' book claim is obviously referencing a notice in the <em>Chicago Daily Democratic Press</em>, Aug. 12, 1856, p. 3, col. 1:</p></br><p>"Union Base Ball Club.--A company of young men will meet this (Tuesday) evening at the Hope Hose Carriage House at 8 o'clock, to organize under the above name and elect officers for the year.</p></br><p>All active young men who need exercise and good sport, are invited to be present."</p>> <p>All active young men who need exercise and good sport, are invited to be present."</p>)
  • 1845.16  + (<p>Can we find more hints about the rules that may have governed this match game?</p>)
  • 1850s.1  + (<p>Can we find out details on the content of the Wiggins monograph>?</p>)
  • 1805.8  + (<p>Can we find out more about the lo<p>Can we find out more about the long, low wicket reportedly used in earliest forms of English cricket, and when the higher and narrower  wicket evolved there?</p></br><p>Can we find out more about Silliman's life and his age when touring England? </p>iman's life and his age when touring England? </p>)