In Halifax on 1 July 1841: Difference between revisions

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{{Predecessor Game
{{Predecessor Game
|Name=Game of Ball and Bat in Halifax (Nova Scotia) on 7 January 1841
|Name=in Halifax on 1 July 1841undefined
|Date=1/7/1841
|Coordinates=44.64876350000001, -63.5752387
|Entry Origin=Sabrpedia
|Entry Origin Url=
|NY Rules=
|Borough=
|Type of Date=Day
|Type of Date=Day
|City=Halifax (Nova Scotia)
|Date=1841/07/01
|Date Note=
|Country=Canada
|Country=Canada
|Coordinates=44.6488625, -63.5753196
|State=Nova Scotia
|Description=<p>From William Humber's "Early Baseball in Canada" Manuscript, 9/14/12:  
|City=Halifax
</p><p>A newspaper reference to "games of ball and bat" from Joseph Howe's the Nova Scotian from 1 July 1841, (p. 203), described the actions of  800 members of the St. Mary's Total Abstinence Society of Halifax who had sailed to nearby Dartmouth and participated in folk activities such as Quadrille and Contra dances on the green. Its validity rests on its timing. It is not cricket, which was well known and would have been described as such. It is a legitimate account of the earliest, recorded at the time, baseball-type games. The influence for the play is likely British.
|Field=
</p><p>Halifax, Nova Scotia (1841 pop. about 14,400)is way out east of most everything.
|Modern Address=
</p>
|Number of Players=
|Sources=<p>Joseph Howe, The Nova Scotian, July 1, 1841, p. 203.
|Game="Game of Ball and Bat"
</p>
|Innings=
|Innings Note=
|Home Team=
|Home Score=
|Away Team=
|Away Score=
|Description=<p>From William Humber's "Early Baseball in Canada" Manuscript, 9/14/12: </p><p>A newspaper reference to "games of ball and bat" from Joseph Howe's the Nova Scotian from 1 July 1841, (p. 203), described the actions of  800 members of the St. Mary's Total Abstinence Society of Halifax who had sailed to nearby Dartmouth and participated in folk activities such as Quadrille and Contra dances on the green. Its validity rests on its timing. It is not cricket, which was well known and would have been described as such. It is a legitimate account of the earliest, recorded at the time, baseball-type games. The influence for the play is likely British.</p><p>Halifax, Nova Scotia (1841 pop. about 14,400)is way out east of most everything.</p>
|Sources=<p>Joseph Howe, The Nova Scotian, July 1, 1841, p. 203.</p>
|Source Image=
|Has Source On Hand=No
|Comment=
|Query=
|Submitted by=Bill Humber
|Submission Note=
|Reviewed=Yes
|Reviewed=Yes
|Submitted by=Bill Humber
|First in Location=
|Entry Origin=Sabrpedia
|First in Location Note=
|Game="Game of Ball and Bat"
|Players Locality=
|class=championship=
}}
}}

Revision as of 14:18, 15 November 2020

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Awaiting Review
Date of Game Thursday, July 1, 1841
Game "Game of Ball and Bat"
Location Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Has Source On Hand No
Description

From William Humber's "Early Baseball in Canada" Manuscript, 9/14/12:

A newspaper reference to "games of ball and bat" from Joseph Howe's the Nova Scotian from 1 July 1841, (p. 203), described the actions of 800 members of the St. Mary's Total Abstinence Society of Halifax who had sailed to nearby Dartmouth and participated in folk activities such as Quadrille and Contra dances on the green. Its validity rests on its timing. It is not cricket, which was well known and would have been described as such. It is a legitimate account of the earliest, recorded at the time, baseball-type games. The influence for the play is likely British.

Halifax, Nova Scotia (1841 pop. about 14,400)is way out east of most everything.

Sources

Joseph Howe, The Nova Scotian, July 1, 1841, p. 203.

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Submitted by Bill Humber
Entry Origin Sabrpedia



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