1840c.39: Difference between revisions

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{{Chronology Entry
{{Chronology Entry
|Headline=Cricket [or Maybe Wicket] Played by Harvard Class of 1841
|Year=1840
|Year=1840
|Year Suffix=c
|Year Suffix=c
|Year Number=39
|Headline=Cricket [or Maybe Wicket?] Played by Harvard Class of 1841
|Salience=2
|Salience=2
|Location=Harvard
|Tags=College, Harvard College,
|Country=United States
|Coordinates=42.3736158, -71.1097335
|State=MA
|City=Cambridge
|Game=Cricket
|Game=Cricket
|Tags=College
|Immediacy of Report=Retrospective
|Text=<p>"Games of ball were played almost always separately by the classes, and in my case cricket prevailed. There were not even matches between classes, so far as I remember, and certainly not between colleges. . . . The game was the same then played by boys on Boston Common, and was very unlike what is now [1879] called cricket. Balls, bats, and wickets were all larger than in the proper English game; the bats especially being much longer, twice as heavy, and three-cornered instead of flat. . . . What game was it? Whence it came? It seemed to bear the same relation to true cricket that the old Massachusetts game of base-ball bore to the present 'New York' game, being less artistic, but more laborious."</p>
|Age of Players=Youth
<p>Member of the Class of 1841, "Harvard Athletic Exercises Thirty Years Ago," <u>Harvard Advocate</u> [Cambridge MA], Volume 17, number 9 (June 12, 1879), page 131. Accessed 2/9/10 via Google Books search ("wickets were all larger" "harvard advocate").</p>
|Text=<p>"Games of ball were played almost always separately by the classes, and in my case cricket prevailed. There were not even matches between classes, so far as I remember, and certainly not between colleges. . . . The game was the same then played by boys on Boston Common, and was very unlike what is now [1879] called cricket. Balls, bats, and wickets were all larger than in the proper English game; the bats especially being much longer, twice as heavy, and three-cornered instead of flat. . . . What game was it? Whence it came? It seemed to bear the same relation to true cricket that the old Massachusetts game of base-ball bore to the present 'New York' game, being less artistic, but more laborious."</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
|Sources=<p>Member of the Class of 1841, "Harvard Athletic Exercises Thirty Years Ago," <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Harvard Advocate</span> [Cambridge MA], Volume 17, number 9 (June 12, 1879), page 131. Accessed 2/9/10 via Google Books search &lt;"wickets were all larger" "harvard advocate"&gt;.</p>
|Reviewed=Yes
|Has Supplemental Text=No
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 17:44, 4 November 2016

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Cricket [or Maybe Wicket?] Played by Harvard Class of 1841

Salience Noteworthy
Tags College, Harvard College
City/State/Country: Cambridge, MA, United States
Game Cricket
Immediacy of Report Retrospective
Age of Players Youth
Text

"Games of ball were played almost always separately by the classes, and in my case cricket prevailed. There were not even matches between classes, so far as I remember, and certainly not between colleges. . . . The game was the same then played by boys on Boston Common, and was very unlike what is now [1879] called cricket. Balls, bats, and wickets were all larger than in the proper English game; the bats especially being much longer, twice as heavy, and three-cornered instead of flat. . . . What game was it? Whence it came? It seemed to bear the same relation to true cricket that the old Massachusetts game of base-ball bore to the present 'New York' game, being less artistic, but more laborious."

 

Sources

Member of the Class of 1841, "Harvard Athletic Exercises Thirty Years Ago," Harvard Advocate [Cambridge MA], Volume 17, number 9 (June 12, 1879), page 131. Accessed 2/9/10 via Google Books search <"wickets were all larger" "harvard advocate">.

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