Block:"Base-Ball" in 1744; Earliest Reference: Difference between revisions

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{{Block
{{Block
|Coordinates=51.4545306, -0.9773636
|Title=English Baseball in London/Berkshire in 1744
|Title=English Baseball in London/Berkshire in 1744
|Type of Date=Year
|Date=1744/01/01
|Block Game=English Baseball
|Block Game=English Baseball
|Date=1744/1/1
|Type of Date=Year
|Block Location=London/Berkshire
|Block Location=London/Berkshire
|Coordinates=51.4545306, -0.9773636
|Block Data=<p>"Base-Ball" is the title of a page in a children's book that also bears an illustration showing three youths (one holding a ball), and two bases. No bat is shown. A short poem follows: "The Ball once struck off, Away flies the Boy, To the next destin'd Post, And then Home with Joy."</p>
|Block Data=<p>"Base-Ball" is the title of a page in a children's book that also bears an illustration showing three youths (one holding a ball), and two bases. No bat is shown. A short poem follows: "The Ball once struck off, Away flies the Boy, To the next destin'd Post, And then Home with Joy."</p>
|Sources=<p>A Little Pretty Pocket-book, John Newbery, London, 1744 (presumed)</p>
|Block Notes=<p>No known copies of the 1744 edition have survived. The earliest known copy is a 1760 10th edition in the British Library; it is assumed, but not certain, that the base-ball page originated with the 1744 edition. The MCC Cricket Museum in London owns a children's handkerchief printed with images from A Little Pretty Pocket-book. It includes the base-ball poem and image, but the latter is a redrawn copy of the one that appears in the book. The handkerchief is undated but appears to date from the 18th century. John Newbery was born and raised in the small Berkshire village of Waltham St. Lawrence.</p>
|Block Notes=<p>No known copies of the 1744 edition have survived. The earliest known copy is a 1760 10th edition in the British Library; it is assumed, but not certain, that the base-ball page originated with the 1744 edition. The MCC Cricket Museum in London owns a children's handkerchief printed with images from A Little Pretty Pocket-book. It includes the base-ball poem and image, but the latter is a redrawn copy of the one that appears in the book. The handkerchief is undated but appears to date from the 18th century. John Newbery was born and raised in the small Berkshire village of Waltham St. Lawrence.</p>
|Sources=<p>A Little Pretty Pocket-book, John Newbery, London, 1744 (presumed)</p>
|Comment=<p>test</p>
|Query=
}}
}}

Revision as of 18:02, 18 October 2020

Block English Games
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English Baseball


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Data

"Base-Ball" is the title of a page in a children's book that also bears an illustration showing three youths (one holding a ball), and two bases. No bat is shown. A short poem follows: "The Ball once struck off, Away flies the Boy, To the next destin'd Post, And then Home with Joy."

Sources

A Little Pretty Pocket-book, John Newbery, London, 1744 (presumed)

Block Notes

No known copies of the 1744 edition have survived. The earliest known copy is a 1760 10th edition in the British Library; it is assumed, but not certain, that the base-ball page originated with the 1744 edition. The MCC Cricket Museum in London owns a children's handkerchief printed with images from A Little Pretty Pocket-book. It includes the base-ball poem and image, but the latter is a redrawn copy of the one that appears in the book. The handkerchief is undated but appears to date from the 18th century. John Newbery was born and raised in the small Berkshire village of Waltham St. Lawrence.

Comment

test

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