1822.1: Difference between revisions

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|Headline=Round Ball Played in Worcester
|Headline=Round Ball Played in Worcester
|Year=1822
|Year=1822
|Is in main chronology=yes
|Salience=2
|Location=New England
|Location=New England
|Text=<p>"Timothy Taft, who is living in Worcester, October 1897, played Round Ball in 1822.  The game was no new thing then.  I think Mr. Stoddard is right about the game being played directly after the close of the Revolutionary War [see entry #1780c.4].  At any rate, if members of your Commission question the antiquity of the game (Round Ball) we have Mr. Taft still living who played it 83 years ago, and we have corroborative testimony that it was played long before that time." </p>
|Text=<p>"Timothy Taft, who is living in Worcester, October 1897, played Round Ball in 1822.  The game was no new thing then.  I think Mr. Stoddard is right about the game being played directly after the close of the Revolutionary War [see entry #1780c.4].  At any rate, if members of your Commission question the antiquity of the game (Round Ball) we have Mr. Taft still living who played it 83 years ago, and we have corroborative testimony that it was played long before that time." </p>

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Round Ball Played in Worcester

Salience Noteworthy
Location New England
Text

"Timothy Taft, who is living in Worcester, October 1897, played Round Ball in 1822. The game was no new thing then. I think Mr. Stoddard is right about the game being played directly after the close of the Revolutionary War [see entry #1780c.4]. At any rate, if members of your Commission question the antiquity of the game (Round Ball) we have Mr. Taft still living who played it 83 years ago, and we have corroborative testimony that it was played long before that time."

Letter from Henry Sargent, Worcester MA, to Mills Commission, June 10, 1905. Henderson, on page 149, quotes the Commission's press release as referring to a Timothy Tait, which seems likely a reference to Taft. In this letter Sargent also reports that in Stoddard's opinion, "the game of Round Ball or Base ball is one and the same thing, and that it dates back before 1845."

Note: do we have that Mills Commission release that Henderson cites?

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