1863.4: Difference between revisions

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{{Chronology Entry
{{Chronology Entry
|Year=1863
|Year=1863
|Year Number=4
|Headline=MA Regiment Organizes a Baseball Club
|Headline=MA Regiment Organizes a Baseball Club
|Text=<p>“Not even regular guard and fatigue duty, drill and digging in the trenches could exhaust all of the energies of thee Massachusetts boys, so they must needs organize a baseball club, a thing they had never done in the month of January, and company rivalry ran high. The nine from Company I beat that of Company C to the tune of fifty to twenty-nine. It goes without saying that this was in the days of old-fashioned ball, when large scores were not unusual, and a phenomenally small one by no means argued a superior game.”</p><p>Alfred S. Roe, <u>The Fifth Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry</u> (Fifth Regiment Veteran Association, Boston, 1911) page 196 The book has no other reference to ballplaying. This passage appears in an account of late January 1863, and the camp was evidently near Newbern VA [a railroad terminus], about 45 miles SW of Roanoke in Southwest Virginia. Accessed at Google Books 6/609 via “fifth Massachusetts roe” search. The regiment comprised men from towns NW of Boston. </p>
|Salience=3
|Salience=3
|Tags=Civil War
|Tags=Civil War,
|Coordinates=35.108493, -77.04411429999999
|State=NC
|City=New Bern
|Text=<p>&ldquo;Not even regular guard and fatigue duty, drill and digging in the trenches could exhaust all of the energies of thee Massachusetts boys, so they must needs organize a baseball club, a thing they had never done in the month of January, and company rivalry ran high. The nine from Company I beat that of Company C to the tune of fifty to twenty-nine. It goes without saying that this was in the days of old-fashioned ball, when large scores were not unusual, and a phenomenally small one by no means argued a superior game.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Alfred S. Roe, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Fifth Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry</span> (Fifth Regiment Veteran Association, Boston, 1911) page 196 The book has no other reference to ballplaying. This passage appears in an account of late January 1863, and the camp was evidently near Newbern VA [a railroad terminus], about 45 miles SW of Roanoke in Southwest Virginia. Accessed at Google Books 6/609 via &ldquo;fifth Massachusetts roe&rdquo; search. The regiment comprised men from towns NW of Boston.</p>
<p>The unit was at New Bern, NC in January 1863. [ba]</p>
|External Number=37
|External Number=37
|Reviewed=Yes
|Reviewed=Yes
|Year Number=4
|Has Supplemental Text=No
}}
}}

Revision as of 04:38, 27 June 2018

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MA Regiment Organizes a Baseball Club

Salience Peripheral
Tags Civil War
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“Not even regular guard and fatigue duty, drill and digging in the trenches could exhaust all of the energies of thee Massachusetts boys, so they must needs organize a baseball club, a thing they had never done in the month of January, and company rivalry ran high. The nine from Company I beat that of Company C to the tune of fifty to twenty-nine. It goes without saying that this was in the days of old-fashioned ball, when large scores were not unusual, and a phenomenally small one by no means argued a superior game.”

Alfred S. Roe, The Fifth Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry (Fifth Regiment Veteran Association, Boston, 1911) page 196 The book has no other reference to ballplaying. This passage appears in an account of late January 1863, and the camp was evidently near Newbern VA [a railroad terminus], about 45 miles SW of Roanoke in Southwest Virginia. Accessed at Google Books 6/609 via “fifth Massachusetts roe” search. The regiment comprised men from towns NW of Boston.

The unit was at New Bern, NC in January 1863. [ba]

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External Number 37



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