1836.2: Difference between revisions
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|Headline=German Book of Games Copies Gutsmuths' Base-ball Piece | |Headline=German Book of Games Copies Gutsmuths' Base-ball Piece | ||
|Year=1836 | |Year=1836 | ||
| | |Salience=2 | ||
|Text=<p>Werner, Johann A. L., <u>Die reinst Quelle jugendlicher Freuden</u> (The Purest Source of Joy for Youngsters) [Dresden and Leipzig, Arnoldi], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 200. This survey of 300 games, called "notably unoriginal" by Block, repeats Gutsmuths' (see entry #1796.1, above) material on base-ball, explaining "This game originates by way of England, where it bears the name base-ball, and it played there very frequently." <b>Note:</b> Is this last comment also derivative of the Gutsmuths text, or does it confirm "base-ball" play in England in the 1820s and 1830s?</p> | |Text=<p>Werner, Johann A. L., <u>Die reinst Quelle jugendlicher Freuden</u> (The Purest Source of Joy for Youngsters) [Dresden and Leipzig, Arnoldi], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 200. This survey of 300 games, called "notably unoriginal" by Block, repeats Gutsmuths' (see entry #1796.1, above) material on base-ball, explaining "This game originates by way of England, where it bears the name base-ball, and it played there very frequently." <b>Note:</b> Is this last comment also derivative of the Gutsmuths text, or does it confirm "base-ball" play in England in the 1820s and 1830s?</p> | ||
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German Book of Games Copies Gutsmuths' Base-ball Piece
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Text | Werner, Johann A. L., Die reinst Quelle jugendlicher Freuden (The Purest Source of Joy for Youngsters) [Dresden and Leipzig, Arnoldi], per David Block, Baseball Before We Knew It, page 200. This survey of 300 games, called "notably unoriginal" by Block, repeats Gutsmuths' (see entry #1796.1, above) material on base-ball, explaining "This game originates by way of England, where it bears the name base-ball, and it played there very frequently." Note: Is this last comment also derivative of the Gutsmuths text, or does it confirm "base-ball" play in England in the 1820s and 1830s? |
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1836. German Book of Games Copies Gutsmuths' Base-ball Piece"
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