1820s.19: Difference between revisions

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|Location=Canada
|Location=Canada
|Text=<p>"Contrary to the once commonly held belief that Abner Doubleday invented baseball in 1839, a form of the game existed in Oxford County [ON] during the early decades of the nineteenth century that used a square playing field with four bases and eleven players a side." Nancy B. Bouchier, <u>For the Love of the Game: Amateur Sport in Small-Town Ontario, 1838-1895</u> (McGill-Queens University Press, 2003), page 100.  <b>Note:</b> Dating this item to the 1820's is a best guess [we are asking the author for input], based on additional evidence from N. Bouchier and R. Barney, "A Critical Evaluation of a Source on Early Ontario Baseball: The Reminiscence of Adam E. Ford," <u>Journal of Sport History</u>, Volume 15 number 1 (Spring 1988).  Players remembered as attending  the 1838 event included older "greyheaded" men who reflected back on earlier play - one of whom was on the local assessment roll in 1812.</p>
|Text=<p>"Contrary to the once commonly held belief that Abner Doubleday invented baseball in 1839, a form of the game existed in Oxford County [ON] during the early decades of the nineteenth century that used a square playing field with four bases and eleven players a side." Nancy B. Bouchier, <u>For the Love of the Game: Amateur Sport in Small-Town Ontario, 1838-1895</u> (McGill-Queens University Press, 2003), page 100.  <b>Note:</b> Dating this item to the 1820's is a best guess [we are asking the author for input], based on additional evidence from N. Bouchier and R. Barney, "A Critical Evaluation of a Source on Early Ontario Baseball: The Reminiscence of Adam E. Ford," <u>Journal of Sport History</u>, Volume 15 number 1 (Spring 1988).  Players remembered as attending  the 1838 event included older "greyheaded" men who reflected back on earlier play - one of whom was on the local assessment roll in 1812.</p>
|Reviewed=Yes
|Year Number=19
}}
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Latest revision as of 17:38, 6 September 2012

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Ball-Playing in Ontario

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"Contrary to the once commonly held belief that Abner Doubleday invented baseball in 1839, a form of the game existed in Oxford County [ON] during the early decades of the nineteenth century that used a square playing field with four bases and eleven players a side." Nancy B. Bouchier, For the Love of the Game: Amateur Sport in Small-Town Ontario, 1838-1895 (McGill-Queens University Press, 2003), page 100. Note: Dating this item to the 1820's is a best guess [we are asking the author for input], based on additional evidence from N. Bouchier and R. Barney, "A Critical Evaluation of a Source on Early Ontario Baseball: The Reminiscence of Adam E. Ford," Journal of Sport History, Volume 15 number 1 (Spring 1988). Players remembered as attending the 1838 event included older "greyheaded" men who reflected back on earlier play - one of whom was on the local assessment roll in 1812.

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