1609.1: Difference between revisions
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{{Chronology Entry | {{Chronology Entry | ||
|Year=1609 | |||
|Year Number=1 | |||
|Headline=Polish Origins of Baseball Perceived in Jamestown VA Settlement | |Headline=Polish Origins of Baseball Perceived in Jamestown VA Settlement | ||
|Salience=1 | |||
|Salience= | |||
|Location=US South | |Location=US South | ||
|Game=Xenoball | |Game=Xenoball, Pilka Palantowa | ||
|Text=<p>"Soon after the new year [1609], [we] initiated a ball game played with a bat . . . . Most often we played this game on Sundays. | |Text=<p>"Soon after the new year [1609], [we] initiated a ball game played with a bat . . . . Most often we played this game on Sundays. We rolled up rags to make balls . . . Our game attracted the savages who sat around the field, delighted with this Polish sport."</p> | ||
<p>The source is Zbigniew Stefanski, < | <p>The source is Zbigniew Stefanski, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Memorial Commercatoris</span> [A Merchant's Memoirs], (Amsterdam, 1625), as cited in David Block's <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball Before We Knew It</span>, page 101. Stefanski was a skilled Polish workingman who wrote a memoir of his time in the Jamestown colony: an entry for 1609 related the Polish game of <em>pilka palantowa</em> (bat ball). Another account by a scholar reported adds that "the playfield consisted of eight bases not four, as in our present day game of baseball." If true, this would imply that the game involved running as well as batting.</p> | ||
<p>"For your information and records, I am pleased to inform you that after much research I have discovered that baseball was introduced to America by the Poles who arrived in Jamestown in 1609. . . . | <p>"For your information and records, I am pleased to inform you that after much research I have discovered that baseball was introduced to America by the Poles who arrived in Jamestown in 1609. . . . Records of the University of Krakow, the oldest school of higher learning in Poland show that baseball or batball was played by the students in the 14<sup>th</sup> century and was part of the official physical culture program."</p> | ||
<p>Letter from Matthew Baranski to the Baseball Hall of Fame, March 23, 1975. | <p>Letter from Matthew Baranski to the Baseball Hall of Fame, March 23, 1975. [Found in the Origins file at the Giamatti Center.] Matthew Baranski himself cites <span style="text-decoration: underline;">First Poles in America 1608-1958</span>, published by the Polish Falcons of America, Pittsburgh and unavailable online as of 7/28/09. We have not confirmed that sighting. <strong>Note: </strong>Per Maigaard's 1941 survey of "battingball games" includes a Polish variant of long ball, but does not mention pilka</p> | ||
<p>See also David Block, "Polish Workers Play Ball at Jamestown Virginia: An Early Hint of Continental Europe's Influence on Baseball," <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Base Ball (Origins Issue)</span>, Volume 5, number 1 (Spring 2011), pp.5-9.</p> | |||
<p>palantowa. <strong>Query:</strong> The next Protoball reader finding himself/herself in Krakow might drop by the University and find out more? And could a Polish speaker try some online searches for pilka palantowa and its history?</p> | |||
|Reviewed=Yes | |Reviewed=Yes | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 15:00, 7 November 2012
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Polish Origins of Baseball Perceived in Jamestown VA Settlement
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Location | US SouthUS South |
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Game | Xenoball, Pilka PalantowaXenoball, Pilka Palantowa |
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Text | "Soon after the new year [1609], [we] initiated a ball game played with a bat . . . . Most often we played this game on Sundays. We rolled up rags to make balls . . . Our game attracted the savages who sat around the field, delighted with this Polish sport." The source is Zbigniew Stefanski, Memorial Commercatoris [A Merchant's Memoirs], (Amsterdam, 1625), as cited in David Block's Baseball Before We Knew It, page 101. Stefanski was a skilled Polish workingman who wrote a memoir of his time in the Jamestown colony: an entry for 1609 related the Polish game of pilka palantowa (bat ball). Another account by a scholar reported adds that "the playfield consisted of eight bases not four, as in our present day game of baseball." If true, this would imply that the game involved running as well as batting. "For your information and records, I am pleased to inform you that after much research I have discovered that baseball was introduced to America by the Poles who arrived in Jamestown in 1609. . . . Records of the University of Krakow, the oldest school of higher learning in Poland show that baseball or batball was played by the students in the 14th century and was part of the official physical culture program." Letter from Matthew Baranski to the Baseball Hall of Fame, March 23, 1975. [Found in the Origins file at the Giamatti Center.] Matthew Baranski himself cites First Poles in America 1608-1958, published by the Polish Falcons of America, Pittsburgh and unavailable online as of 7/28/09. We have not confirmed that sighting. Note: Per Maigaard's 1941 survey of "battingball games" includes a Polish variant of long ball, but does not mention pilka See also David Block, "Polish Workers Play Ball at Jamestown Virginia: An Early Hint of Continental Europe's Influence on Baseball," Base Ball (Origins Issue), Volume 5, number 1 (Spring 2011), pp.5-9. palantowa. Query: The next Protoball reader finding himself/herself in Krakow might drop by the University and find out more? And could a Polish speaker try some online searches for pilka palantowa and its history? |
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