Feeder: Difference between revisions

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|Invented Game=No
|Invented Game=No
|Description=<p>per &ldquo;The Boy&rsquo;s Own Book.&rdquo; A non-team form of rounders using three bases in which a player who is put out then takes on the role of feeder [pitcher]. An 1859 handbook describes feeder as a game with four or five stones or marks for bases. Plugging is permitted.</p>
|Description=<p>per &ldquo;The Boy&rsquo;s Own Book.&rdquo; A non-team form of rounders using three bases in which a player who is put out then takes on the role of feeder [pitcher]. An 1859 handbook describes feeder as a game with four or five stones or marks for bases. Plugging is permitted.</p>
<p>As of 2023, the Protoball chronology has 10 items of the game of feeder.</p>
<p>One, found at [[1841.1]], refers to clockwise baserunning.&nbsp; David Block's&nbsp;<span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball before We Knew It,</span> cites the game at pages 24,138-9, 153, 205,, 207, 284-5.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
|Sources=<p><em>The Boy's Own Book</em><span>,&nbsp;</span>(London: D. Bogue, 1852)<span>, page 29. See also Elliott, <em>The Playground and the Parlour</em> (1868), p. 53.</span></p>
|Sources=<p><em>The Boy's Own Book</em><span>,&nbsp;</span>(London: D. Bogue, 1852)<span>, page 29. See also Elliott, <em>The Playground and the Parlour</em> (1868), p. 53.</span></p>
|Comment=<p>See also&nbsp;[[Feeder_and_Rounders,_1841]], contributed by Bill Hicklin.</p>
|Comment=<p>See also&nbsp;[[Feeder_and_Rounders,_1841]], contributed by Bill Hicklin.</p>
|Has Supplemental Text=No
|Has Supplemental Text=No
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Latest revision as of 08:37, 14 August 2023

Glossary of Games
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Game Feeder
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Invented No
Description

per “The Boy’s Own Book.” A non-team form of rounders using three bases in which a player who is put out then takes on the role of feeder [pitcher]. An 1859 handbook describes feeder as a game with four or five stones or marks for bases. Plugging is permitted.

As of 2023, the Protoball chronology has 10 items of the game of feeder.

One, found at 1841.1, refers to clockwise baserunning.  David Block's Baseball before We Knew It, cites the game at pages 24,138-9, 153, 205,, 207, 284-5.

 

 

Sources

The Boy's Own Book(London: D. Bogue, 1852), page 29. See also Elliott, The Playground and the Parlour (1868), p. 53.

Comment

See also Feeder_and_Rounders,_1841, contributed by Bill Hicklin.

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