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 "Sources" with value "<p>Sitka <em>Alaskan</em>, July 3, 1886</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

  • Junior Club of Shepherdstown  + (<p>Shepherdstown <em>Register</em>, June 29, 1867</p>)
  • 1871.8  + (<p>Sheppard (ed.),"History of Northwestern University and Evanston" p 154. Seymour, "The People's Game" also references this event.</p>)
  • Club of Sherbrooke  + (<p>Sherbrooke <em>Weekly Examiner</em>, May 28, 1880</p>)
  • Club of Fort McKinney  + (<p>Sheridan <em>Enterprise</em>, Sept. 29, 1888</p>)
  • Girard College  + (<p>Shiffert, "Base Ball in Philadelphia"</p> <p>The Philadelphia <em>Inquirer,</em> June 19, 1860</p>)
  • Camac Woods  + (<p>Shiffert, "Base Ball in Philadelphia"</p> <p>Jerrold Casway, "Locating Philadelphia's Historic Ballfields" at https://sabr.org/journal/article/locating-philadelphias-historic-ballfields/</p>)
  • Block:Pize Ball in West Yorkshire on May 28 1958  + (<p>Shipley Times and Express, May 28, 1958, p. 2</p>)
  • Hunkie Punkie Club of Shippensburg  + (<p>Shippensburg <em>News-Chronicle</em>, Jan. 11, 2020</p>)
  • Block:English Baseball in London on September 3 1898  + (<p>Shoreditch (Hackney) Observer, Sept. 3, 1898, p. 3</p>)
  • Blue Stockings Club of Shreveport  + (<p>Shreveport Daily Southwestern, July 11, 16, 1871</p>)
  • Arlington Club of Shreveport  + (<p>Shreveport Daily Southwestern, June 24, July 16, 1871</p>)
  • Stonewall Club of Marshall  + (<p>Shreveport Times, April 30, 1872</p>)
  • Club of Jefferson, Texas  + (<p>Shreveport Times, Oct. 17, 1875</p>)
  • Block:English Baseball in Shropshire on August 17 1900  + (<p>Shrewsbury Chronicle, Aug. 17, 1900</p>)
  • Hunyou-Shinyou  + (<p>Sidney Oldall Addy, A<span style="text-decoration: underline;"> Glossary of Words Used in the the Neighborhood of Sheffield</span> (English Dialect Society, London, 1888, page 31.</p> <p>Submitted by Tom Altherr, December 11, 2020.</p>)
  • Hittera Ball  + (<p>Sidney Oldall Addy, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">A Glossary of Words Used in the Neighborhood of Sheffield</span>, (English Dialect Society, 1888:  Supplement (1891), page 29.  (Submitted 12/11/2020 by Tom Altherr.)</p>)
  • Club of Hillsboro, NM  + (<p>Sierra County Advocate, June 3, 1887</p>)
  • Club of Querida  + (<p>Silver Cliff Herald, June 13, 1882</p>)
  • Live Oak Club of Dunnville  + (<p>Simcoe <em>Norfolk Reformer</em>, Aug. 27, 1868</p> <p>Buffalo <em>Express</em>, July 2, 1868</p>)
  • Club of Lynedoch  + (<p>Simcoe <em>Norfolk Reformer</em>, Aug. 19, 1869</p>)
  • Erie Club of Port Dover  + (<p>Simcoe <em>Norfolk Reformer</em>, Aug. 27, 1868</p>)
  • Club of Waterford, Ontario  + (<p>Simcoe <em>Norfolk Reformer</em>, July 29, 1869, Aug. 4, 1870</p>)
  • Club of Simcoe  + (<p>Simcoe <em>Norfolk Reformer</em>, Aug. 19, 1869, Aug. 4, 1870</p>)
  • 1850s.21  + (<p>Simon Rae, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">It's Not Cricket: A History of Skulduggery, Sharp Practice and Downright Cheating in the Noble Game</span> (Faber and Faber, 2001), page 215.</p>)
  • 1586c.1  + (<p>Sir Philip Sydney, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Arcadia</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;">: Sonnets</span> [1622], page 493. <strong>Note:</strong> citation needs confirmation.</p>)
  • 1864.92  + (<p>Smiley diary, at Civil War Diaries web site</p>)
  • 1864.93  + (<p>Smith and Larson, eds., "Dear Delia," p. 251, 253.</p>)
  • 1847.15  + (<p>Smith, Azariah, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Gold Discovery Journal of Azariah Smith</span> [Utah State University, Logan UT, 1996], page 78. Submitted by John Thorn, 10/12/2004.</p> <p>Email from Bill Swank, March 6, 2013</p>)
  • In Coloma on 6 March 1848  + (<p>Smith, Azariah, The Gold Discovery Journal of Azariah Smith [Utah State University, Logan UT, 1996], page 78.</p>)
  • 1786.1  + (<p>Smith, John Rhea, March 22 1786, <p>Smith, John Rhea, March 22 1786, in "Journal at Nassau Hall," Princeton Library MSS, AM 12800. Per Thomas L. Altherr, "A Place Leavel Enough to Play Ball," reprinted in David Block, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball Before We Knew It,</span> page 240 (ref # 45). Also found in Gerald S. Couzens, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">A Baseball Album</span> [Lippincott and Crowell, NY, 1980], page 15. Per Guschov, page 153.</p></br><p> </p>owell, NY, 1980], page 15. Per Guschov, page 153.</p> <p> </p>)
  • In Monterrey on 4 July 1884  + (<p>Snodgrass, "Deference and Defiance in Monterrey"</p>)
  • Club of Mascoutah  + (<p>Snyder, "Mascoutah" (2010), page 8</p>)
  • Ball in Little Rock in February 1864  + (<p>Soldier Boy: The Civil War Letters of Charles O. Musser, 29th Iowa, By Barry Popchock, 1995 </p>)
  • Block:English Baseball in Kent, London in 1879  + (<p>Some of Life's Lessons, by Mary Jefferis, London, 1879, Remington & Co., pp. 134-135</p>)
  • 1859.31  + (<p>Somers, Dale, <span>The Rise of Sports in New Orleans 1850-1900</span> (Louisiana State Press, Baton Rouge, 1972), footnote 73 on pages 49-50. </p>)
  • Henrietta Club of Basking Ridge  + (<p>Somerset Unionist, 7/11/1867</p>)
  • Pluckemin Club of Pluckemin  + (<p>Somerset Unionist, 7/25/1867</p>)
  • Jersey Blues Club of Somerville  + (<p>Somerset Unionist, 8/15/1867</p>)
  • Haymaker Club of Plainfield  + (<p>Somerset Unionist, 8/18/1870</p>)
  • Waxers Club of Somerville  + (<p>Somerset Unionist, 8/18/1870</p>)
  • Tuscarora Club of Somerville  + (<p>Somerset Unionist, 8/31/1865</p>)
  • 1861.21  + (<p>Sophronia E. Bucklin, <span st<p>Sophronia E. Bucklin, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">In Hospital and Camp: A Woman’s Record of Thrilling Incidents Among the Wounded in the Late War</span> (Potter and Company, Philadelphia, 1869), pp. 35-36. Viewed at Google Books 5/27/09, via the search <bucklin camp>.</p>ogle Books 5/27/09, via the search <bucklin camp>.</p>)
  • Emerson's Side v Price's Side in 1856  + (<p>Source and date unspecified in ne<p>Source and date unspecified in newspapers.com retrieval of January 2020.</p></br><p><strong><em>Note:</em></strong><em> </em>Chronology entry [[1856.34]] cites this wicket match, and cites the <span><em>Pittsfield Sun</em>, April 24, 1856, page 2.</span></p>, and cites the <span><em>Pittsfield Sun</em>, April 24, 1856, page 2.</span></p>)
  • 1857.23  + (<p>Source: "Baseball at Princeton," <span>Athletics at Princeton: A History</span> (Presbrey Company, New York, 1901), page 66. Available on Google Books. Original sources are not provided. </p>)
  • 1656.1  + (<p>Source: 13: Doc Hist., Volume Iv,<p>Source: 13: Doc Hist., Volume Iv, pp.13-15, and Father Jogues' papers in NY Hist. Soc. Coll., 1857, pp. 161-229, as cited in <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Manual of the Reformed Church in America (Formerly Ref. Prot. Dutch Church), 1628-1902</span>, E. T. Corwin, D.D., Fourth Edition (Reformed Church in America, New York, 1902.) Provided by John Thorn, email of 2/1/2008.</p></br><p>See also:Esther Singleton, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Dutch New York</span> (Dodd Mead, 1909), as cited in Thomas L. Altherr, “There is Nothing Now Heard of, in Our Leisure Hours, But Ball, Ball, Ball,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Cooperstown Symposium on Baseball and American Culture</span> 1999 (McFarland, 2000), pp. 190.  [Pages ix and 202 and 302 in Singleton touch on "ball-playing" in this period.] </p>02 and 302 in Singleton touch on "ball-playing" in this period.] </p>)
  • 1781.3  + (<p>Source: Harvard College Faculty Records (Volume IV, 1775-1781), call number UAIII 5.5.2, page 220 (1781).</p> <p>Posted to 19CBB by Kyle DeCicco-Carey [date?]</p>)
  • 1850s.20  + (<p>Source: Henry C. McCook, <span<p>Source: Henry C. McCook, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Senator: A Threnody</span> (George W. Jacobs, Philadelphia, 1905), page 208. This passage is excerpted from the annotations to a long poem written in honor the memory of Senator Marcus Hanna of OH. The likely location of the games was in Lisbon, in easternmost OH - about 45 miles northwest of Pittsburgh PA.. The verse itself: "Shinny and marbles, flying kite and ball, / Hat-ball and hand-ball and, best loved of all!-/ <strong>Town-ball</strong>, that fine field sport, that soon/ By natural growth and skilful change, became/ Baseball, by use and popular acclaim/ Our nation's favorite game" [<em>Ibid.</em> page 54].  McCook's note describes hat-ball as a plugging game, and hand-ball as a game for one sides of one, two, or three boys that was played "against a windowless brick gable wall."</p></br><p>Posted to 19CBB on 8/13/2007, by Richard Hershberger, supplemented by 8/14/2007 and 12/19/2008 emails.</p> on 8/13/2007, by Richard Hershberger, supplemented by 8/14/2007 and 12/19/2008 emails.</p>)
  • 1830s.22  + (<p>Source: Thomas Wentworth Higginso<p>Source: Thomas Wentworth Higginson, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Cheerful Yesterdays</span> (Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1898). Per Thomas L. Altherr, "Chucking the Old Apple: Recent Discoveries of Pre-1840 North American Ball Games," <em>Base Ball</em>, Volume 2, number 1 (Spring 2008), pages 33-34 and ref #29. Accessed 11/16/2008 via Google Books search for <cheerful yesterdays>.</p></br><p> </p>008 via Google Books search for <cheerful yesterdays>.</p> <p> </p>)
  • 1862.15  + (<p>Source: <em>Rochester</em> <em>Union and Advertiser,</em> April 24, 1862, page 2, column 2. PBall file: CW16.</p>)
  • Victoria Independents v University of Washington, Seattle on 24 May 1882 - 2  + (<p>Sources: [Original Source] Puget <p>Sources:</br>[Original Source] Puget Sound Argus, May 26, 182. Port Townsend, Washington. Page 1.</br></p><p>This game was a continuation of games played by teams from Victoria and Seattle on the Queen's birthday with a return game on July 4. The May 24 game had been played in Victoria, with the July 4 game in or near Seattle. It looks like the earliest game in this series is 1877, played to 1879 between the Seattle Alki's and a team from Victoria. Baseball in Victoria actually appears to be organized prior to ANY teams from the United States side of Puget Sound. According to this website dedicated to baseball in Victoria, their cricket club had travelled to San Francisco in 1849, and brought back baseball from there. See: <a href="http://www.vdba.ca/pages-added/beginning-of-baseball-.php" class="external free" title="http://www.vdba.ca/pages-added/beginning-of-baseball-.php" rel="nofollow">http://www.vdba.ca/pages-added/beginning-of-baseball-.php</a>. In addition, this website, which is just a general site on the history of Beacon Hill, Victoria, contains an image of what looks to be a baseball game, not cricket: <a href="http://www.beaconhillpark.ca/beacon_hill_park_photos.htm" class="external free" title="http://www.beaconhillpark.ca/beacon_hill_park_photos.htm" rel="nofollow">http://www.beaconhillpark.ca/beacon_hill_park_photos.htm</a>. This would seem to correspond with the other website's claim of a game from 1863 between the cricket club and the new base ball club, the Olympics.</br></p>ween the cricket club and the new base ball club, the Olympics. </p>)