1825c.6: Difference between revisions

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|Text=<p>In the South, "cricket was played even at the end of house raisings and trainings.  The game was played along with quoits and other games of skill and strength.  Parties were formed to go on fishing trips and picnics, and during the outing, cricket was one of the games played."  Jennie Holliman, <u>American Sports 1785 - 1835</u> (Porcupine Press, Philadelphia, 1975), page 68.</p>
|Text=<p>In the South, "cricket was played even at the end of house raisings and trainings.  The game was played along with quoits and other games of skill and strength.  Parties were formed to go on fishing trips and picnics, and during the outing, cricket was one of the games played."  Jennie Holliman, <u>American Sports 1785 - 1835</u> (Porcupine Press, Philadelphia, 1975), page 68.</p>
<p>Holliman here cites <u>The American Farmer, vol. 8, no 143 (1825)</u>, which John Thorn found online [email of 2/9/2008], and which does not make a strong case for cricket's ubiquity.  This piece suggests that an ideal way to spend a Saturday near Baltimore is to have a fishing contest until dinnertime, and "after dinner pitch quoits, or play at cricket, or bowl at nine-pins."  "Sporting Olio,"  <u>American Farmer, Containing Original Essays and Selections on Rural Economics</u>, July 22, 1825, page 143.  </p>
<p>Holliman here cites <u>The American Farmer, vol. 8, no 143 (1825)</u>, which John Thorn found online [email of 2/9/2008], and which does not make a strong case for cricket's ubiquity.  This piece suggests that an ideal way to spend a Saturday near Baltimore is to have a fishing contest until dinnertime, and "after dinner pitch quoits, or play at cricket, or bowl at nine-pins."  "Sporting Olio,"  <u>American Farmer, Containing Original Essays and Selections on Rural Economics</u>, July 22, 1825, page 143.  </p>
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Cricket Played at Southern Outings

Salience Noteworthy
Location South
Game Cricket
Text

In the South, "cricket was played even at the end of house raisings and trainings. The game was played along with quoits and other games of skill and strength. Parties were formed to go on fishing trips and picnics, and during the outing, cricket was one of the games played." Jennie Holliman, American Sports 1785 - 1835 (Porcupine Press, Philadelphia, 1975), page 68.

Holliman here cites The American Farmer, vol. 8, no 143 (1825), which John Thorn found online [email of 2/9/2008], and which does not make a strong case for cricket's ubiquity. This piece suggests that an ideal way to spend a Saturday near Baltimore is to have a fishing contest until dinnertime, and "after dinner pitch quoits, or play at cricket, or bowl at nine-pins." "Sporting Olio," American Farmer, Containing Original Essays and Selections on Rural Economics, July 22, 1825, page 143.

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