1868c.5: Difference between revisions
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|Year Suffix=c | |Year Suffix=c | ||
|Year Number=5 | |Year Number=5 | ||
|Headline=The "Figure 8" Base Ball Appears? | |Headline=The Manufactured "Figure 8" Base Ball Appears? | ||
|Salience=2 | |Salience=2 | ||
|Tags=Equipment | |Tags=Equipment, | ||
|Country=United States | |Country=United States | ||
|Coordinates=42.2775281, -71.34680909999997 | |Coordinates=42.2775281, -71.34680909999997 | ||
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|Age of Players=Adult | |Age of Players=Adult | ||
|Text=<p> </p> | |Text=<p> </p> | ||
<p>"I inclose a clipping relating to base ball. I am the inventor of the base ball cover referred to. Fifty-five years ago, when a boy of ten years, my mother gave me yarn enough, of her own spinning, for a ball. Next thing was leather for a cover. I was a poor boy and couldn't buy. An old shoemaker gave me two small pieces, and said perhaps I could piece them up. My efforts resulted in the exact shape now in universal use. About twenty years ago I showed to a nephew of mine the cover of my boyhood. He was working for Harwood, the great ball maker, of Natick, Mass. Harwood adopted this cover at once, as it takes much leather and has but one seams, instead of five or six. Well, I didn't reap the fortunate, as I didn't get it patented, but no matter, I've “got there all the same.” (The Sporting Life November 14, 1888)</p> | <p>"I inclose a clipping relating to base ball. I am the inventor of the base ball cover referred to. Fifty-five years ago, when a boy of ten years, my mother gave me yarn enough, of her own spinning, for a ball. Next thing was leather for a cover. I was a poor boy and couldn't buy. An old shoemaker gave me two small pieces, and said perhaps I could piece them up. My efforts resulted in the exact shape now in universal use. About twenty years ago I showed to a nephew of mine the cover of my boyhood. He was working for Harwood, the great ball maker, of Natick, Mass. Harwood adopted this cover at once, as it takes much leather and has but one seams [seam?], instead of five or six. Well, I didn't reap the fortunate [fortune?], as I didn't get it patented, but no matter, I've “got there all the same.” (The Sporting Life November 14, 1888)</p> | ||
<p><br /><br /><br /></p> | <p><br /><br /><br /></p> | ||
|Sources=<p>Letter to <em>The Sporting Life</em> from C.H. Jackson, West Brookfield, MA, November 4, 1888 -- printed November 14, 1888.</p> | |Sources=<p>Letter to <em>The Sporting Life</em> from C.H. Jackson, West Brookfield, MA, November 4, 1888 -- printed November 14, 1888.</p> |
Latest revision as of 11:15, 13 September 2017
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The Manufactured "Figure 8" Base Ball Appears?
Salience | Noteworthy |
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Tags | EquipmentEquipment |
Location | |
City/State/Country: | Natick, MA, United States |
Modern Address | |
Game | Base BallBase Ball |
Immediacy of Report | Retrospective |
Age of Players | AdultAdult |
Holiday | |
Notables | |
Text |
"I inclose a clipping relating to base ball. I am the inventor of the base ball cover referred to. Fifty-five years ago, when a boy of ten years, my mother gave me yarn enough, of her own spinning, for a ball. Next thing was leather for a cover. I was a poor boy and couldn't buy. An old shoemaker gave me two small pieces, and said perhaps I could piece them up. My efforts resulted in the exact shape now in universal use. About twenty years ago I showed to a nephew of mine the cover of my boyhood. He was working for Harwood, the great ball maker, of Natick, Mass. Harwood adopted this cover at once, as it takes much leather and has but one seams [seam?], instead of five or six. Well, I didn't reap the fortunate [fortune?], as I didn't get it patented, but no matter, I've “got there all the same.” (The Sporting Life November 14, 1888) |
Sources | Letter to The Sporting Life from C.H. Jackson, West Brookfield, MA, November 4, 1888 -- printed November 14, 1888. |
Warning | |
Comment |
Richard Hershberger notes, 9/12/2017: "My opinion has been that this is unsubstantiated, but plausible. I want to focus here on the bit about the writer's nephew working for Harwood. I just made the connection with this description of baseball manufacture, from four years earlier:
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Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
External Number | |
Submitted by | Richard Hershberger |
Submission Note | 19CBB Posting, September 12, 2017 |
Has Supplemental Text |
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