1830s.20

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In GA, Men Played Fives, Schoolboys Played Base and Town Ball

Salience Noteworthy
Location US South
City/State/Country: GA, United States
Game Town Ball
Age of Players Youth, Adult
Text

"Men as well as boys played the competitive games of 'Long Bullets' and 'Fives,' the latter played against a battery built by nailing planks to twenty-foot poles set to make the  'battery' at least fifty feet wide. The school boys played 'base,' 'bull-pen,' 'town ball' and 'shinny' too." 

Sources

Jessie Pearl Rice, J. L. M. Curry: Southerner, Statesman, and Educator (King's Crown Press, New York, 1949), pages 6-7.  Per Thomas L. Altherr, "Chucking the Old Apple: Recent Discoveries of Pre-1840 North American Ball Games," Base Ball, Volume 2, number 1 (Spring 2008), pages 31-32.

The full text of the Rice biography is unavailable via Google Books as of 11/15/2008. 

Comment

Long-bullets involved distance throwing, often along roadsides. Fives is a team game resembling one-wall hand-ball.

Curry's school was in Lincoln County GA, about 30 miles NW of Augusta.

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Query

Team hand-ball?  Really? Wasn't it usually a one-on-one game?

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