1853c.1
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"Rounders" Said to be Played at Phillips Andover School
Salience | Noteworthy |
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Tags | |
Location | New HampshireNew Hampshire |
City/State/Country: | [[{{{Country}}}]] |
Modern Address | |
Game | Rounders, Massachusetts Game, Round BallRounders, Massachusetts Game, Round Ball |
Immediacy of Report | |
Age of Players | YouthYouth |
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Text | "The game of "rounders," as it was played in the days before the Civil War, had only a faint resemblance to our modern baseball. For a description of a typical contest, which took place in 1853, we are indebted to Dr. William A. Mowry:" [Nine students had posted a challenge to play "a game of ball," and that challenge was accepted by eleven other students.] "The game was a long one. No account was made of 'innings;' the record was merely of runs. When one had knocked the ball, had run the bases, and had reached the 'home goal,' that counted one 'tally.' The game was for fifty tallies. The custom was to have no umpire, and the pitcher stood midway between the second and third bases, but nearer the center of the square. The batter stood midway between the first and fourth base, and the catcher just behind the batter, as near or as far as he pleased. 'Well, we beat the eleven [50-37].' [Mowry then tells of his success in letting the ball hit the bat and glance away over the wall "behind the catchers," which allowed him to put his side ahead in a later rubber game after the two sides had each won a game.]
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Sources | Claude M. Fuess, An Old New England School: A History of Phillips Academy, Andover [Houghton Mifflin, 1917], pp. 449-450. Researched by George Thompson, based on partial information from reading notes by Harold Seymour. Accessed 2/11/10 via Google Books search ("history of phillips"). A note-card in the Harold Seymour archive at Cornell describes the Mowry recollection. |
Warning | It appears that Fuess, the 1917 author, viewed this game as rounders, but Mowry's description did not itself use that name. It is possible that Fuess was an after-the-fact devotee of he rounders theory of base ball. The game as described is indistinguishable from round ball as played in New England, and lacks features [small bat, configuration of bases] used in English rounders during this period. The placement of the batter, the use of "tallies" for runs, and the 50-inning game length suggests that the game played may have been a version of what was to be encoded as the Massachusetts Game in 1858. |
Comment | Wikipedia has an entry for prolific historian William A Mowry (1829-1917). A Rhode Islander, his schooling is not specified, but he entered Brown University in 1854, and thus might have been a Phillips Andover senior in 1853. Edit with form to add a comment |
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Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
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