1847.13
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"Boy's Treasury" Describes Rounders, Feeder, Stoolball, Etc.
Salience | Noteworthy |
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Game | RoundersRounders |
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Text | The Boy's Treasury, published in New York, contains descriptions of feeder [p. 25], Rounders [p. 26], Ball Stock [p. 27], Stool-Ball [p. 28], Northern Spell [p. 33] and Trap, Bat, and Ball [p 33]. The cat games and barn ball and town ball are not listed. In feeder, the ball is pitched from a distance of two yards, and he is the only member of the "out" team. There is a three-strike rule and a dropped-third rule. The Rounders description says "a smooth round stick is preferred by many boys to a bat for striking the ball." Ball Stock is said to be "very similar to rounders." In stool ball, "the ball must be struck by the hand, and not with a bat." The Boy's Treasury of Sports, Pastimes, and Recreations [Clark, Austin and Company, New York, 1850], fourth edition. |
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