1860.80: Difference between revisions
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|Salience=2 | |Salience=2 | ||
|Tags=Ball in the Culture, Newspaper Coverage, | |Tags=Ball in the Culture, Newspaper Coverage, | ||
|Location=Greater New York City, | |Location=Greater New York City, | ||
|Country= | |Country=United States | ||
|State=NY | |State=NY | ||
|City=NYC | |City=NYC | ||
|Game=Base Ball, | |Game=Base Ball, | ||
|Immediacy of Report=Contemporary | |Immediacy of Report=Contemporary | ||
|Age of Players=Adult | |Age of Players=Adult | ||
|Text=<p>"THE MUFFIN MATCH.-- </p> | |Text=<p>[A] "THE MUFFIN MATCH.-- The match between the muffs of the Putnam and Excelsior Clubs, of Brooklyn...was, as we anticipated, an extraordinary affair, and productive of much amusement...People who can hold a ball (except by accident) when it is thrown to them, reflect upon their associate muffs, and don't deserve to have a place...we may mention one striking tableau...(Clark), having struck the ball, set out with all his might and main for the first base, which was carefully guarded by the ever-vigilant Andriese. Clark overran the base, and the ball overran Andriese; each, however, ran for the object of his pursuit, and Clark picked up the base...and held it aloft as a trophy of victory; while Andriese, quickly grabbing up the ball from the ground, turned a double somerset, and landing on one leg, projected the hand which held the ball gracefully toward the base, high in air, and called for judgment. Inasmuch as Clark, though under the base, had two fingers and a thumb over it, the umpire decided that he 'had the base', and wasn't out."</p> | ||
<p>[B] "Muffin" was evidently new slang: </p> | |||
<p>"'MUFFIN.'-- Base Ball...bids fair to enrich the copious vocabulary of the English language by a new term-- the word 'muffin'. A 'muff' (is)...a ball-player noted for catching anything but the ball...'Muffin" is an elongation of the word, and 'the muffins' is understood to be a collection of individuals, whose fingers are pretty much all thumbs-- in other words a collection of muffs...The word will find its way into more general acceptance and may hereafter puzzle some future philologist."</p> | |||
|Sources=<p>[A]<em> New York Sunday Mercury, </em>July 1, 1860</p> | |||
<p>[B] <em>Brooklyn Daily Eagle, </em>Aug. 22, 1860</p> | |||
|Comment=<p>Interclub muffin matches were an occasional feature, mostly before the Civil War, between the larger clubs.</p> | |||
|Submitted by=Bob Tholkes | |||
|Submission Note=3/21/2014 | |||
|Has Supplemental Text=No | |Has Supplemental Text=No | ||
|Coordinates=40.7127837, -74.0059413 | |||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 18:09, 14 October 2015
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Most Aged |
Muffin Matches--Low Skills, High Comedy
Salience | Noteworthy |
---|---|
Tags | Ball in the Culture, Newspaper CoverageBall in the Culture, Newspaper Coverage |
Location | Greater New York CityGreater New York City |
City/State/Country: | NYC, NY, United States |
Modern Address | |
Game | Base BallBase Ball |
Immediacy of Report | Contemporary |
Age of Players | AdultAdult |
Holiday | |
Notables | |
Text | [A] "THE MUFFIN MATCH.-- The match between the muffs of the Putnam and Excelsior Clubs, of Brooklyn...was, as we anticipated, an extraordinary affair, and productive of much amusement...People who can hold a ball (except by accident) when it is thrown to them, reflect upon their associate muffs, and don't deserve to have a place...we may mention one striking tableau...(Clark), having struck the ball, set out with all his might and main for the first base, which was carefully guarded by the ever-vigilant Andriese. Clark overran the base, and the ball overran Andriese; each, however, ran for the object of his pursuit, and Clark picked up the base...and held it aloft as a trophy of victory; while Andriese, quickly grabbing up the ball from the ground, turned a double somerset, and landing on one leg, projected the hand which held the ball gracefully toward the base, high in air, and called for judgment. Inasmuch as Clark, though under the base, had two fingers and a thumb over it, the umpire decided that he 'had the base', and wasn't out." [B] "Muffin" was evidently new slang: "'MUFFIN.'-- Base Ball...bids fair to enrich the copious vocabulary of the English language by a new term-- the word 'muffin'. A 'muff' (is)...a ball-player noted for catching anything but the ball...'Muffin" is an elongation of the word, and 'the muffins' is understood to be a collection of individuals, whose fingers are pretty much all thumbs-- in other words a collection of muffs...The word will find its way into more general acceptance and may hereafter puzzle some future philologist." |
Sources | [A] New York Sunday Mercury, July 1, 1860 [B] Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Aug. 22, 1860 |
Warning | |
Comment | Interclub muffin matches were an occasional feature, mostly before the Civil War, between the larger clubs. Edit with form to add a comment |
Query | Edit with form to add a query |
Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
External Number | |
Submitted by | Bob Tholkes |
Submission Note | 3/21/2014 |
Has Supplemental Text |
Comments
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