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A person known by this person (indicating some level of reciprocated interaction between the parties).  +
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The property that determines that two given individuals are different.  +
1
<p>“After [the camp’s dress] parade, which generally lasted about an hour, the camp was alive with fun and frolic . . . leap-frog, double-duck, foot and base-ball or sparring, wrestling, and racing, shared their attention.”</p> <p>J. Harrison Mills, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Chronicles of the Twenty-First Regiment, New York Volunteers</span> (21<sup>st</sup> Veteran Assn., Buffalo, 1887), page 42. The newly-formed regiment, evidently raised in the Buffalo area, was at camp in Elmira in May 1861 in this recollection, and would deploy to Washington in June. A visitor to the camp wrote the next day, “I was not surprised . . . to see how extensively the amusements which had been practiced in their leisure hours in the city [Buffalo?], were continued in camp. Boxing with gloves, ball-playing, running and jumping, were among these. The ball clubs were well represented here, and the exercise of their favorite game is carried on spiritedly by the Buffalo boys.” [page 43.]</p>  +
<p>1861: While the regiment trained at an Albany facility in September, a local newspaper noted: “They are under drill six hours during the day . . . Their leisure hours are devoted in great part to athletic exercises, fencing, boxing, and ball-playing, while their evenings are passed in singing, a glee club having been formed.” [page 17]. In a Virginia camp near Washington, “Christmas day of 1861 was given up to the enlisted men. They played ball in the morning and in the afternoon organized a burlesque parade which was very comical” [page 56].</p> <p>1863: The regiment was near Culpepper in September. “Capt. B. K. Kimberly was an experienced and skillful base ball player and took the lead in inaugurating a series of games of base ball” [page166].</p> <p>Captain Eugene A. Nash, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">A History of the Forty-fourth Regiment, New York Infantry</span> (Donnelley and Sons, Chicago, 1911).</p> <p>1864: In a May 25<sup>th</sup> letter to his sister from “Near White’s Tavern,” Sgt Orsell Brown noted “Monday [May] 2d I felt poorly. . . . The officers of the Brigade had a great game of ball in the afternoon, in front of our Reg’t.” Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009.</p>  +
<p>At the very outset of war, Sophronia Bucklin [born 1828] felt herself driven to serve future wounded soldiers in the Union Army: “From the day on which the first boom of the first cannon rolled over the startled waters in Charleston harbor, it was my constant study how I cold with credit to myself get into military service to the Union.” She does not cite a date for this scene.</p> <p>She subsequently got her chance. “Sitting at a window at a window in the Orphan Asylum at Auburn, New York, conversing with Mrs. Reed, the kindly matron, and watching the newly enlisted soldiers of the adjacent area, at a game of ball near the camp, I said, ‘I wish I knew of some way to get into the military service just to take care of boys such as those, when they shall need it.’” It turned out that Mrs. Reed knew a way [via the Soldier’s Aid Society], and Bucklin became a nurse in July 1862, serving through the war.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"(advertisement) JOHN C. WHITING, 87 FULTON STREET, N. Y., manufacturer of BASE BALLS and Wholesale and Retail Dealer in everything appertaining to BASE BALL and CRICKET. Agent for Chicester's Improved SELF-FASTENING BASES, and the PATENT CONCAVE PLATES for Ball Shoes, which are free from all the danger, and answer all the purposes, of spikes."</p>  +
<p>[A] "CONTESTS FOR THE CHAMPIONSHIP.-- Additional interest will be imparted to the ensuing base ball season by the playing of a series of contests between the senior, as well as between the junior clubs, for a silver champion ball (and)...will initiate a new system of general rivalry, which will, we hope, be attended with the happiest results to the further progress and popularity of the game of base ball.</p> <p>[B] "We learn from Daniel Manson, chairman <em>pro tem</em>. of the Junior National Association, that the Committee on Championship have resolved to postpone the proposed match games for the championship...Among the reasons...is the fact that quite a number of the more advanced players, from the clubs selected for the championship, have enlisted for the war."</p> <p>[C] The senior-club silver ball competition, offered not by the national association but by the Continental BBC, a non-contender, was also not held due to the war. In 1862, with the war then appearing to be of indefinite duration, the Continental offered it as a prize to the winner of the informal championship matches, with those games played as a benefit for the families of soldiers.</p>  +
<p>"Friend SPIRIT: A meeting for the purpose of organizing a base ball club in this city, was held on Thursday evening last, April 4, when eighteen of the most respectable young men of this city met and adopted a constitution, by-laws, rules and regulations for playing the game, and elected their officers...The club adopted the name of 'Houston Base Ball Club'...They play their first match game among themselves, on Saturday, the 27th of this month. The result you can expect immediately thereafter."</p>  +
<p>“In October 1861 a ‘bold soldier boy’ sent the <em>Clipper</em> an account of a baseball game played by prominent Brooklyn club members on the parade ground of the ‘Mozart Regiment, now in Secessia.’” The Mozart Regiment was the 40<sup>th</sup> NY volunteers, and originally comprised men [mostly] from the NYC area. The writer added that the were times when the men were “engaged in their old familiar sports, totally erasing from their minds the all-absorbing topic of the day.” It appears that the regiment was in northernmost Virginia in October 1861, defending Washington.</p> <p>Attributed to a soldier, apparently, in an article in the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">New York Clipper</span>, October 26, 1861, page 220, (per Kirsch book).</p> <p>A more extensive report of the Mozart regiment's play (same games?) is in the New York Sunday Mercury, Oct. 20, 1861, Oct. 27, 1861.</p>  +
<p>“The troops enjoyed a variety of sports, ‘some of which are harder than any work I ever saw,’ observed a Louisiana soldier at Columbus. Among them were footraces, several kinds of ball, wrestling, climbing trees and a herculean game in which a cannonball was hurled into one of nine holes in the ground.”</p> <p>Larry J. Daniel, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Soldiering in the Army of the Tennessee: A Portrait of Life in a Confederate Army</span> (U of North Carolina Press, 1991), page 90. Daniel evidently attributes this to the <em>New Orleans Crescent</em>, October 29, 1861. He does not give the location or regiment involved.<strong> Note:</strong> There was a juvenile English game called None Holes.</p>  +
<p>“Confederate troops played townball as well as more modern versions of the game in their army camps. In November 1861 the <em>Charleston Mercury</em> of South Carolina reported that Confederate troops were stuck in soggy camps near Centreville, Fairfax County, [northern] Virginia. Heavy rains created miserably wet conditions so that ‘even the base ball players find the green sward in front of the camp, too boggy for their accustomed sport.’” Centreville is adjacent to Manassas/Bull Run. 40,000 Confederate troops under Gen. Johnson had winter quarters there [the town’s population had been 220] in 1861/62.</p> <p>Source: <em>Charleston</em><em> Mercury,</em> November 4, 1861, page. 4, column 5. Mentioned without citation in Kirsch, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball in Blue and Gray</span> (Princeton U, 2003), page 39.</p>  +
<p>A six-inning game of base ball was played at Camp Seminary on Saturday November 16, 1861. The 2<sup>nd</sup> NJ challenged the 1<sup>st</sup> NJ and prevailed. A member of the 2<sup>nd</sup> NJ sent a short report and box to the Newark newspaper.</p> <p>Source: “A Game of Ball in the Camp,” <em>Newark</em><em> Daily Advertiser</em>, November 20 1861. Facsimile submitted by John Zinn, 3/10/09. Camp Seminary was located near Fairfax Seminary in Alexandria VA, near Washington DC.</p>  +
<p>Members of the 2<sup>nd</sup> New Jersey regiment formed the Excelsior club, evidently named for the Newark Excelsior [confirm existence?] in late November 1861. A report of an intramural game between Golder’s side and Collins’ side appeared in a Newark paper. The game, won 33-20 by the Golder contingent, lasted 6 innings and took four hours to play. The correspondent concludes: “The day passed off pleasantly all around, and I think every one of us enjoyed ourselves duely [sic?]. We all hope to be at home one year hence to dine with those who love us. God grant it!”</p> <p>One may infer that the 2<sup>nd</sup> NJ remained at winter quarters in Alexandria VA at this time, providing protection to Washington. Facsimile submitted by John Zinn, 3/10/09. Source: <em>Newark</em><em> Daily Advertiser,</em> 12/4/1861.</p>  +
<p>Writing to the editor of the Manchester NH <em>Farmer’s Cabinet</em>, a soldier Mudsill noted that while awaiting further orders on the South Carolina island of Port Royal in November 1861, the 3<sup>rd</sup> NH observed a “regular, old-fashioned New England Thanksgiving Thursday, away down here in Dixie?” The pumpkin pies and plum pudding were missing, but “the day was passed in playing ball, turkey shooting, and in the afternoon a pole was erected and the regimental flag run up, amid a thousand cheers.” He does not further describe the ball game.</p> <p>Source: “Our Army Correspondence: Letter from the N. H. Third,” <em>Farmer’s Cabinet</em>, December 12, 1861.. Accessed via Genealogybank subscription, 5/21/09.</p>  +
<p>Edwin A. Haradon, a member of the 86<sup>th</sup> NY infantry [possibly from the Corning NY area], made 12 terse references to ballplaying from January 17, 1863 to April 15, 1864.</p> <p>Most are simple diary notes like the first entry: “Staid around camp and plaid at ball and had a good time nothing else going on.”</p> <p>Some other examples: “April 2 [1863] “went on picket plaid ball at the reserve 10:00 till 1:00 o’clock” April 6 [1863] “plaid at ball and saw the boys play drop ball.” April 15 [1864] “plaid ball some jumped some” April 30 [1863] “Laid around camp Saw the 40 and our boys play.” June 21 [1865] “Read some quite lonesome Saw the 73<sup>rd</sup> & 40<sup>th</sup> play ball some in the afternoon.” Haradon saw action at Chancellorsville, Gettysburg , and was wounded at Spotsylvania.</p> <p>Civil War Diary of Edwin Albert Haradon. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 2009.</p>  +
<p><em>December 1861</em> (Texas?): “There is nothing unusual transpiring in Camp. The boys are passing the time playing Town-Ball.”</p> <p><em>January 1862</em> (Texas?): “All rocking along finely, Boys playing Town-Ball”</p> <p><em>March 1863</em> (USA prison camp, IL?): The Rebels have at last found something to employ both mind and body; as the parade ground has dried up considerably in the past few days, Town Ball is in full blast, and it is a blessing for the men.”</p> <p><em>March 1863 </em>(USA prison camp, IL?): “Raining this morning, which will interfere with ball playing, but the manufacture of rings ‘goes bravely on,’ and I might say receives a fresh impetus by the failure of the ‘Town-ball’ business.”</p> <p>Source: W. W. Heartsill, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Fourteen Hundred and 91 Days in the Confederate Army: A Journal Kept by W. W. Heartsill: Day-by-Day, of the W. P. Lane (Texas) Rangers, from April 19<sup>th</sup> 1861 to May 20<sup>th</sup> 1865.</span> Submitted by Jeff Kittel, 5/12/09. Available online at The Ameridcan Civil War: Letters and Diaries Database, at <a href="http://solomon.cwld.alexanderstreet.com/">http://solomon.cwld.alexanderstreet.com/</a>. Heartsill joined Lane’s Texas Rangers early in the War at age 21. He was taken prisoner in Arkansas in early 1862, and exchanged for Union prisoners in April 1863. He then joined Bragg’s Army in Tennessee, and assigned to a unit put in charge of a Texas prison camp of Union soldiers. There are no references to ballplaying after 1863.<strong> Query: </strong>“manufacture of rings?”</p>  +
<p>“December 18<sup>th</sup>: Many of the boys had a revival of their school days in a game of ball. These amusements had much to do in preventing us from being homesick and were productive, also, of health and happiness.” The unit was stationed at Camp Webb, near Alexandria VA. No further description of the rules or play are given.<strong> Note: </strong>can we find the location of the 1<sup>st</sup> Regiment in late 1861? Are there other accounts of this unit that may add details to this account?</p> <p>Source: George Lewis, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The History of Battery E, First Regiment, Rhode Island Lioght </span>Artillery (Snow and Farmham, Providence, 1892), page 26. Adduced in Kirsch, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball in Blue and Gray</span>, page 33. Lewis makes no other mention of ballplaying in this history.</p>  +
<p>“Our light artillery rapidly gained position within range and the firing became general. The main body of our army [were] passive spectators of this game of ‘long ball,’ but not without partaking of its dangers.”</p> <p>Alexander Hays, “Letter from Alexander Hays, 1861,” in <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Life and Letters of Alexander Hays, Brevet Colonel United States Army</span> (publisher? date?), page 708. Provided by Jeff Kittel, 5/12/09. Not available online May 2009. Jeff notes that Hays was a Union general from PA who was killed in the Battle of the Wilderness in May 1864. Available online at The American Civil War: Letters and Diaries Database, at <a href="http://solomon.cwld.alexanderstreet.com/">http://solomon.cwld.alexanderstreet.com/</a>.</p> <p><strong>Query: </strong>Was Hays using a literal reference to the game of long ball, or was this a general analogy used at the time?</p>  +
<p>"The question will naturally be asked, how came the Unions to score so well against Creighton's pitching? and the reply is, that they waited until they got a ball to suit them, Creighton delivering, on an average, 20 or 30 balls to each striker in four of the six innings played."</p>  +
<p>“The 13<sup>th</sup> Massachusetts played amongst themselves daily during April and May of 1862.”</p> <p>Patricia Millen, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">From Pastime to Passion: Baseball and the Civil War</span> (Heritage Books, 2001), page 19. Millen cites S. Crockett, “Sports and Recreational Practices of Union and Confederate Soldiers, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Research Quarterly</span> October 1961, pp?. Crockett article is unprocured as of May 2009, and primary source is unknown.<strong> Note:</strong> It would be useful to know what game the regiment played, and how they named it. The regiment was reportedly at Ship Island, MS, in these months.</p>  +
<p>“’Every volunteer who has been in service, has realized the tedium of camp life . . . there is waste time, which might be used advantageously at such manly exercises as cricket, base ball, foot ball, quoit pitching, etc.’ That paper lamented the shortage of sporting goods available for the men and called for hardware dealers to supply quoits and also cricket and base ball bats. ‘For want of such things,’ it concluded, ‘the time of the soldier is mainly spent playing cars.’”</p> <p>Source: <em>Charleston</em><em> Mercury, </em>April 3, 1862, page. 2, column. 1. Mentioned without citation in Kirsch, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball in Blue and Gray</span> (Princeton U, 2003), page 40. It seems interesting that cricket and base ball receive comparable emphasis in this article.</p>  +
<p>A Wisconsin newspaper sent a writer to the nearby Camp Randall, where 881 prisoners of war were just arriving. “Some of the men and boys, of the 55<sup>th</sup> Tennessee regiment were amusing themselves with playing ball.” The reporter notes that many prisoners had only light clothing that would provide little protection against northern winds. Many of the prisoners had been among 7000 men captured in the CSA’s surrender of Island Ten, a strategic position in the Mississippi River near New Madrid, Missouri. The nature of the Tenneseeans’ ballplaying was not recorded.</p> <p>“Camp Randall,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Weekly Wisconsin Patriot </span>(Madison), April 26, 1862. Accessed at Genealogybank on 5/21/2009. Camp Randall was the former fairground for Madison WI.</p> <p>See also Madison Journal, April 22, 1862, Milwaukee Daily News, April 24, 1862, Manitowac Weekly Tribune, May 14, 1862.</p> <p>The Boston Recorder, June 12, 1862, reports that Union Col. Whipple [Charles Whipple, Col. 19th Wisconsin Infantry] plays baseball with the POWs at Camp Randall. [ba]</p>  +
<p>“Sometimes the war disrupted these pastimes . . . . In the spring of 1862 a game between the Fifty-Seventh and Sixty-Ninth Regiments of New York Jacob Cole was lying on the ground watching the match when he heard a ‘rumbling noise.’ When Cole and his friend stood up they heard nothing, but when they put their ears to the ground Cole told his friend that ‘our boys are fighting.’ He remembered: ‘Hardly had I spoken before orders came to report to our regiments at once. So the ball game came to a sudden stop never to resume.’”</p> <p>Source: Kirsch, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball in Blue and Gray</span> (Princeton U, 2003), pages 41-42. Kirsch does not supply a primary source. It appears that Cole was in the 57<sup>th</sup> NY, and that the story of the interrupted ball game was carried in Jacob H. Cole, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Under Five Commanders: or, A Boy’s Experience with the Army of the Potomac </span>(News Printing Company, 1909), p. [?]. Accessed as snippet-view text May 31, 2009. <strong>Note:</strong> Can we confirm the source, determine where this game took place, and assess the credibility of Cole’s account?</p> <p>Per p. 30 of the Cole book, this took place May 31, 1862, near the battle of Seven Pines, VA, a few miles east of Richmond. [ba]</p>  +
<p>“The evening parade was an uncommonly nice one . . . . The new colors were all brought out and the effect was very pretty, as they were escorted out and back and saluted by all the officers and me. After parade came a game of base-ball for the captains and other officers, and in the sweet evening air and early moonlight we heard cheerful sounds all about us at the men sang patriotic songs, laughed and chatted, or danced jig to the sound of a violin.”</p> <p>Eliza Howland, “Diary of Eliza Newton Woolsey Howland, April 1862, in <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Letters of a Family During the War for the Union 1861-1865</span> [Pubr? Date?] Volume 1, page 360. Eliza Howland’s husband Joseph was an officer with the 16<sup>th</sup> New York Volunteers. The couple lived in Mattawan NY before the War. Provided by Jeff Kittell, 5/12/09. Available online at The American Civil War: Letters and Diaries Database, at <a href="http://solomon.cwld.alexanderstreet.com/">http://solomon.cwld.alexanderstreet.com/</a>. <strong>Note:</strong> can we determine the location of the event?</p> <p>Per p. 284 of the Howland book, this took place April 3, 1862, in the camp of Slocum's division, near Fairfax, VA. [ba]</p>  +
<p>The regimental history has four references to ballplaying. In July 1862, the unit arrived at Camp Lincoln at Newport News VA, where “the amusements at this camp were fishing for crabs, bathing, foraging and base-ball playing” [page 187]. Back at Newport News in March 1863, “the officers and men enjoyed themselves much in the innocent games of cricket and base-ball.” [page 290]. In May 1863, at a temporary camp near Somerset KY, “both officers and men enjoyed themselves hugely by playing at base ball in daytime between drill hours and at night by the performance of genuine negro minstrels, who were the field hands belonging to the neighboring plantations” [page 301]. Waiting in Annapolis for expected deployment to North Carolina in April 1864, “[b]ase ball is enjoyed by a large number of officers and men every afternoon, when the weather permits, and, I assure you, some very creditable playing is done – some that would do honor to any base ball club extant. [page 539].</p> <p>Thomas H. Parker, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of the 51<sup>st</sup> Regiment of PV [Pennsylvania Volunteers]</span> (King and Baird, Philadelphia, 1869). Accessed 6/2/09 on Google books via “’51<sup>st</sup> regiment’ parker” search. The regiment formed in Harrisburg in late 1861.</p>  +
<p>May: “One of the boys in a letter home vividly describes a hailstorm . . . ‘one day we had a regular hailstorm . . . The boys were out playing ball when it commenced sprinkling, and they thought it wasn’t going to be much of a shower, they kept right on playing, when all of a sudden came the [hail] stones, and the boys put for their tents . . . Queer weather here!’”</p> <p>July 4: “Some of the officers played baseball and drill was neglected.”</p> <p>Alfred S. Roe, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Twenty-Fourth Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers, 1861-1866</span> (Twenty-Fourth Veteran Association, Worcester, 1907), pages 112 and 135. Accessed on Google books 6/2/09 via “twenty-fourth regiment” search. The regiment’s officers were mostly from Boston. The regiment, organized at Readville, 10 miles SW of Boston, and was at Seabrook Island SC on these dates.</p>  +
<p>Notes upon visiting a camp near Alexandria VA: “Here were in progress all the occupations, and all the idleness, of the soldier in the tented field. Some were cooking the company-rations in pots hung over fires in the open air; some played at ball, or developed their muscular power by gymnastic exercise; some read newspapers, some smoked cigars or pipes.”</p> <p>Nathaniel Hawthorne, “Fortress Monroe,” in I. Finseth, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The American Civil War</span> (CRC Press, 2006), page 398. Accessed in restricted view on Google Books 6/16/09.</p>  +
<p>“THE BIRTH OF BASE-BALL. Some of the men who went home on furlough in 1862 returned to their regiments with tales of a marvelous new game which was spreading though the Northern States. In camp at White Oak Church near Falmouth, Va., Kearny’s brigade played this ‘baseball,’ as it was known. Bartlett’s boys won this historic game.”</p> <p>F. Miller and R. Lanier, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Photographic History of the Civil War,</span> Volume Eight, Soldier Life, (Review of Reviews Co., New York, 1911), plate following page 243. This text sits next to a photograph of men playing football in 1864. <strong>Note: </strong> can we locate the cited photo?</p>  +
<p>On a lay day during a long October 1862 march from Harper’s Ferry WV toward Fredericksburg VA, the 21<sup>st</sup> CT “indulged the natural propensity of the soldier for foraging.” To thwart that, the Captain “ordered the roll to be called every hour, so that it was difficult to get far from camp. The boys enjoyed a game of baseball, notwithstanding the march of the day before, and the prospect of a longer march the next day.” This is the only reference to ballplaying in the history.</p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Story of the Twenty-First Regiment, Connecticut Volunteer Infantry, During the Civil War. 1861-1865</span> (Stewart Printing Co., Middletown, 1900). Accessed on Google books 6/2/09, via “story of the twenty-first” search. The regiment was recruited in Eastern CT in late summer 1862, with the most men enlisting from Groton and Hartford.</p>  +
<p>A soldier in the 18<sup>th</sup> CT, Charles Lynch spent Thanksgiving at a camp near Baltimore. “November. The most important event was our first Thanksgiving in camp. Passed very pleasantly. A good dinner, with games of foot and base-ball.”</p> <p>After Appomattox, Lynch wrote: June 5<sup>th</sup>: . . . Thank God the cruel war is over. Playing ball, pitching quoits, helping the farmers, is the way we pass the time while waiting for orders to be mustered out. We have many friends in this town and vicinity.” These are the only references in the diary to ballplaying. In June Lynch was stationed in Martinsburg WV, about 30 miles west of Frederick MD and 75 miles northwest of Washington.</p> <p>Charles H. Lynch, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Civil War Diary 1862-1865</span> (private printing, 1915), page 11, page 154. Accessed on Google books 6/2/09 via “charles h. lynch” search. Lynch, and presumably much of the regiment, was from the Norwich CT area. Lead provided by Jeff Kittel, 5/12/09.</p>  +
<p>Thanksgiving in Fairfax County in northernmost VA: “At 2 o’clock, the regiment turned out on the parade ground. The colonel had procured a foot ball. Sides were arranged by the lieutenant colonel and two or three royal games of foot ball – most manly of sports, and closest in its mimicry of actual warfare – were played. . . . Many joined in games of base ball; others formed rings and watched friendly contests of the champion wrestlers of the different companies . . . . It was a “tall time” all around.”</p> <p>George G. Benedict, “Letter from George Grenville Benedict, December 6, 1862,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Army Life in Virginia: Letters from the Twelfth Regiment</span> (Free Press, Burlington, 1895), pp 80-81. Accessed 6/3/09 on Google Books via “army life in Virginia” search. Benedict, from Burlington, had been an editor and postmaster before the Civil War, and later became a state senator. The regiment appears to have been raised in the Burlington area. Submitted by Jeff Kittel, 5/12/09.</p>  +
<p>“We had plenty of pork and hard tack to go with the beans. We amused ourselves when the weather would permit by having a game of baseball.”</p> <p>William A. Waugh, Reminiscences of the rebellion or what I saw as a private soldier on the 5<sup>th</sup> Mass. Light Battery from 1861-1863. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15 2009. Waugh is here describing life in winter quarters near Falmouth on the Virginia coast and east of Fredericksburg.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>“On Christmas Day 1862 the officers of Manigault’s brigade had a footrace, and afterward the colonels ‘chose sides from among the officers and men to play base[ball].’”</p> <p>Larry J. Daniel, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Soldiering in the Army of Tennessee: A Portrait of Life in a Confederate Army</span> (U of North Carolina Press, 1991), page 90. Daniel evidently attributes this quotation of a letter from James Hall to his father, December 25, 1862. His treatment of the name of the game, “base[ball], implies that the original letter read “base.” Manigault’s Brigade formed in Corinth, MS, in April 1862, comprising two South Carolina regiments and three from Alabama. We do not know the location of the brigade in December 1862, when Manigault was apparently elevated from colonel of the 10<sup>th</sup> SC to lead the brigade.</p> <p>The James Hall letter is cited more fully in Kevin Roberts, "We Were Marching on Christmas Day" p. 62:</p> <p>"We have tried to make a Christmas of it here. We have had foot races, wrestling and base[ball] playing ... {The colonels] chose sides from among their officers and met to play base[ball]."</p>  +
<p>“The report of musketry is heard but a very little distance from us . . . yet on the other side of the road is most of our company, playing Bat Ball and perhaps in less than half an hour, they may be called to play a Ball game of a more serious nature.”</p> <p>Attributed to “an Ohio private” who wrote home from Virginia in 1862, in Ward and Burns, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball: An Illustrated History</span> (Knopf, 1994), page 13. No source is given. <strong>Note:</strong> can we find the original source and fill in some detail? <strong>Note:</strong> the private’s use of the term “bat ball” is unusual. “Bat ball” is found in much earlier times [it was banned in both Pittsfield and Northampton MA in 1791]. In this case, since the private is an observer, not a player, it may be that he is using an incorrect label for the game he observes in 1862. Still, it may possibly imply that the term “bat ball” was current in Ohio in the pre-war years (in the private’s youth?), if not later.</p>  +
<p>[A] "[In April 1863] the Third Corps and the Sixth Corps baseball teams met near White Oak Church, Virginia, to play for the championship of the Army of the Potomac."</p> <p>[B] "Ballplaying in the Civil War Camps increased rapidly during the War, reaching a peak of 82 known games in April 1863 -- while the troops still remained in their winter camps.  Base ball was by a large margin the game of choice among soldiers, but wicket, cricket, and the Massachusetts game were occasionally played.  Play was much more common in the winter camps than near the battle fronts."</p> <p>[C] <strong>Note: </strong>In August 2013 Civil War scholar Bruce Allardice added this context to the recollected Army-wide "championship game":</p> <p>"The pitcher for the winning team was Lt. James Alexander Linen (1840-1918) of the 26th NJ, formerly of the Newark Eureka BBC. Linen later headed the bank, hence the mention in the book. In 1865 Linen organized the Wyoming BBC of Scranton, which changed its name to the Scranton BBC the next year. The 26th NJ was a Newark outfit, and a contemporary Newark newspaper says that many members of the prewar Eurekas and Adriatics of that town had joined the 26th. The 26th was in the Sixth Army Corps, Army of the Potomac, stationed at/near White Oak Church near Fredericksburg, VA. April 1863, the army was in camp.  The book says Linen played against Charlie Walker a former catcher of the Newark Adriatics who was now catcher for the "Third Corps" club.</p> <p>"With all that being said, in my opinion the clubs that played this game weren't 'corps' clubs, but rather regimental and/or brigade clubs that by their play against other regiments/brigades claimed the Third and Sixth Corps championships.</p> <p>"Steinke's "Scranton", page 44, has a line drawing and long article on Linen which mentions this game. See also the "New York Clipper" website, which has a photo of Linen."</p>  +
<p>Apparently not liking either the New York Rules or Massachusetts Game Rules, the two formal sets available to them, the boys of the South Berkshire Institute, a prep school in New Marlborough, MA, drew up a hybrid game. Their version is rare in that its documentation has survived.</p>  +
<p>“Not even regular guard and fatigue duty, drill and digging in the trenches could exhaust all of the energies of thee Massachusetts boys, so they must needs organize a baseball club, a thing they had never done in the month of January, and company rivalry ran high. The nine from Company I beat that of Company C to the tune of fifty to twenty-nine. It goes without saying that this was in the days of old-fashioned ball, when large scores were not unusual, and a phenomenally small one by no means argued a superior game.”</p> <p>Alfred S. Roe, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Fifth Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry</span> (Fifth Regiment Veteran Association, Boston, 1911) page 196 The book has no other reference to ballplaying. This passage appears in an account of late January 1863, and the camp was evidently near Newbern VA [a railroad terminus], about 45 miles SW of Roanoke in Southwest Virginia. Accessed at Google Books 6/609 via “fifth Massachusetts roe” search. The regiment comprised men from towns NW of Boston.</p> <p>The unit was at New Bern, NC in January 1863. [ba]</p>  +
<p>The regimental history, writing of winter camp on the Rappahannock River in late January,: “The duties of a soldier’s life in camp were resumed. Drill, dress parade, inspection, picket and guard duty, policing, building roads, were the usual occupations. Amusements were encouraged and chess, checkers, baseball and athletic exercises helped to while away tedious hours.”</p> <p>Camille Baquet, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of the First Brigade, New Jersey Volunteers </span>(State of New Jersey, 1910), page 71. This is the only reference to ballplaying in the book, which covers 1861 to 1865. Accessed 6/6/09 on Google Books via “baquet ‘first brigade’’’ search.</p>  +
<p>The 1863 diary of George Brockway includes 10 entries on ballplaying from February 27 to April 17 1863. Most are terse, along the lines of the March 11 entry: “played ball.” On March 2 Brockway elaborated a little: “In the afternoon the Company played base ball. O yes made a batter club also.” Two entries cite extramural play. April 11: “The boys play a game of ball with the 77<sup>th</sup> N. Y. V and beat them 12 members.” April 14: “The boys play a match game of ball with the Jersey boys and got bet by 40.” There are no references to ballplaying after April 17, and Brockway’s diaries for his other 3.5 years as a soldier are not referenced.</p> <p>George F. Brockway, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Diary of 1863. Unpublished. </span>Provided by Michael Aubrecht May 15 2009. The diary does specify Brockway’s location in spring 1863.</p> <p>George F. Brockway of Auburn, NY was a saddler in Cowan's NY battery of artillery, attached to the VI corps. In early 1863 it was stationed near Fredericksburg, VA. Brockway moved to MI postwar. [ba]</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>In February 1863 the 48<sup>th</sup> PA took a steamboat to Newport News VA, where it camped for a month. From the regimental history: “Many amusements were indulged in during the stay at Newport News – horse racing, cricket matches, base-ball and the like. Leaves of absence became frequent.” This is the only reference to ballplaying. In late March the unit headed off to Lexington KY.</p> <p>Oliver C. Bosbyshell, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The 48<sup>th</sup> in the War</span> (Avil Printing, Philadelphia, 1895), pp 102-103. Accessed 6/7/09 on Google Books via “bosbyshell 48<sup>th</sup>” search. The regiment formed in Schuylkill County of PA in late 1861, an area about 40 miles west of Allentown and 85 miles NW of Philadelphia.</p>  +
<p>“March 2 [1863]. Jas Mitchell falls. Died while playing wicket.”</p> <p>Diary entry, presumably by Captain Milo E. Palmer, 12<sup>th</sup> Regiment, in Deborah B. Martin, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of Brown County Wisconsin</span> (S. J. Clarke Publishing, Chicago, 1913), page 216. The 12<sup>th</sup> Wisconsin was near “Coliersville” [Collierville?] TN in early March, according to the diary entries. Collierville is about 15 miles SW of Memphis. The 12<sup>th</sup> WI seems to have been raised in the Madison WI area. The book was accessed 6/7/09 on Google Books via “of brown county” search. No other cited diary entries refer to ballplaying. <strong>Caution:</strong> It is unconfirmed that “playing wicket” in this case referred to ballplaying. It seems plausible that wicket was played in the 1850s-1860s in WI, but it hardly seems a mortally risky game, and it seems possible that “playing wicket” has a military meaning here. Input from readers on this issue is most welcome.</p>  +
<p>“The ‘first team’ of the Ninth New York Regiment beat the Fifty-first New Yorkers 31-34 [sic] at Yorktown Virginia, in 1863. But a few days later the ‘second nine’ of the two units played, with the Ninth Regiment triumphing by the fantastic score of 58-19!”</p> <p>Bell Irvin Wiley, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Common Soldier in the Civil War</span>, Book One, “The Life of Billy Yank,” page 170. Unavailable online in full text June 2009. Wiley’s footnotes are complicated, but it seems most likely the this account comes from “diary of Charles F. Johnson, March 4, 8, 1863, manuscript Minn. Historical Society.” It is unclear that the 9<sup>th</sup> was near Yorktown in early March. <strong>Note</strong>: can we confirm or disconfirm this Wiley reference?</p> <p>[ba]--the book "The Long Roll" is the wartime journal of Charles F. Johnson, 9th NY, and undoubtedly is Wiley's source (or the same as Wiley's source). Pages 215-217 note these games, which were played in camp near Newport News, VA. "Frank Hughson, President of the Hawkins Zouaves Baseball club" accepted a challenge from the 51st NY. Wagers were made, and the games played March 4 and 8, 1863. Graham, "The Ninth Regiment, New York Volunteers" p. 405 and the published Letters of Edward King Wightman, p. 121, also mention these games.</p>  +
<p>The US had captured the Sea Island area of SC in 1861, and a group of anti-slavery advocates from Massachusetts ventured south to help educate former slaves in the region. In a letter home from “H.W.,” described as the sister of a Harvard man just out of college, wrote about seeing, on March 3, 1863, what she called “real war camps.” She listed daily work duties, and added, “in almost every camp we saw some men playing ball.” It appears the trip’s objective was “the 24<sup>th</sup>,” which seems to have been the 24<sup>th</sup> MA, where a cousin James was to be found.</p>  +
<p>The history of the Fifth MA Battery has four brief references to base ball from March 1863 to February 1864. Two soldiers’ diaries note games on March 11, March 29, and April 11 1863 in Falmouth VA. A Captain Phillips wrote from Rappahannock Station on February 23, 1864: “I am sitting at my desk with my door wide open, and the men are playing ball out of doors.”</p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of the Fifth Massachusetts Battery</span> [1861-1865] (Luther E. Cowles, Boston, 1902), pages 559, 564, 572, 774. Accessed . . .</p>  +
<p>“Mar 13 [1863] Wrote a letter to George and one to father. In the afternoon played a game of ball. Mar 14 Played a game of ball in the afternoon. Bill rode my horse on the forage guard.”</p> <p>James H. Cowan, “Cowan’s Civil War Diary,” transcribed by Juanita Lewis, accessed 6/7/098 at <a href="http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/regiment/cavalry/01st/cowan.html">http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/regiment/cavalry/01st/cowan.html</a>. The diary, noted as volume 2, covers from September 1862 through April of 1863. The website notes that Cowan was from northernmost Iowa. His location in early March is inferred, perhaps incorrectly, from towns named Springfield, Rollo (Rolla?), Salem in the Feb/March entries.</p> <p>Cowan was in the 1st Iowa Cavalry. [ba]</p>  +
<p>“What think you, man of pen and scissors, of our hardships and sufferings, including the rigors of a winter campaign and other poetical ideas, when I tell you that the line officers of our Regiment played a match game of base ball last Saturday. The contest was between the right and left wings for the purpose of ascertaining which party should pay the expenses of an oyster supper.” The Left Wing won, 24-21, in a game evidently played by NY rules – nine players played nine innings and with 27 outs.</p> <p>“From the 17<sup>th</sup> Maine Regiment,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Lewiston</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> [Me] Daily Evening Journal</span>, March 23, 1863, page 1. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. The printed missive, signed “Right Wing,” is headed “Camp Pitcher near Falmouth, VA, March 15<sup>th</sup> 1863.” The full text of the Regiment’s history, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Red Diamond Regiment,</span> by William Jordan, is not accessible online as of June 2009. Lewiston ME is about 35 miles N of Portland.</p>  +
<p>Lewis C. Paxson left Pennsylvania in 1862 to teach school in Lake City MN, joining the 8<sup>th</sup> MN in August of that year.</p> <p>He very briefly refers to “playing ball four times: on March 16<sup>th</sup> 1863, September 16, 1863, September 22, 1863, and March 2, 1864. His most expansive entries were his first, “There was ball playing upon the west camp” [p. 113], and that for September 22, “Played leap frog. Played ball.” He called the game “baseball” in the 1864 entry.</p> <p>Paxson also referred to wicket: On April 30 he wrote “We were mustered. Cronin hurt in playing wicket by being run against.” His entry for the next day was “The mail did not come. Cronin dies.” <strong>Caution:</strong> It is unconfirmed that “playing wicket” in this case referred to ballplaying. It seems plausible that wicket was played in the 1850s-1860s in MN, but it hardly seems a mortally risky game, and it seems possible that “playing wicket” has a military meaning here. Input from readers on this issue is most welcome.</p> <p>Source: <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Collections of the State Historical Society of North Dakota</span>, Part II – Volume II (Tribune, Bismarck ND, 1908), pages 113, 115, 123, 132. It appears that Paxson’s service time from 1862 to 1865 was spent at Fort Abercrombie, ND, about 30 miles S of Fargo. The Fort, evidently meant to protect Minnesota territory, had been attacked by the Sioux in the Dakota War of 1862.</p>  +
<p>At Falmouth VA, excerpts from the diary of Sgt Earle of the 15<sup>th</sup> MA notes games of ball with the 34<sup>th</sup> NY on March 18 and again on April 16, 1863 in the regimental history.</p> <p>The historian, Andrew Ford, writes 35 years later that “during March and April ball playing is frequently mentioned in the diary. The game played in those days was the old-fashioned round ball. Practice games inside the regiment occurred almost daily, and there were several great games with the New York Thirty-Fourth. Our boys were so successful that the captain of the New York team gave up the contest with the admission that if they ‘had been playing for nuts his men wouldn’t even have the shucks.’ The interest taken in these games in the army as a whole almost rivaled that taken in the races, sparring matches, and cock-fights of Meagher’s troops.” Ford does not elaborate on how he concludes that round ball was played, or that the army as a whole was taking to base ball.</p> <p>Andrew E. Ford, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Story of the Fifteenth Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry</span> [1961-1864] (W. J. Coulter, Clinton [MA?], 1898), pages 242 and 244. Accessed 6/8/09 on Google Books via “’fifteenth Massachusetts’” search. The 15<sup>th</sup> MA drew significantly from Worcester County MA. The 34<sup>th</sup> NY regiment was known as the “Herkimer Regiment,” with roots in Herkimer County in Upstate New York; the town of Herkimer is about 15 miles east of Utica on the Mohawk River. The game in this area that preceded the NY game may have been round ball.</p>  +
<p>E. L. Tabler’s Civil War diary runs from January 1863 through May 1864. In March 1863 he was camped near Murfreesboro TN. On March 25 1863 he wrote: “the boys enjoy themselves very well playing at Ball & pitching Horseshoes.” Tabler notes that his regiment has been taken over by John C. McWilliams; a John C. McWilliams is listed at a Captain in the 51<sup>st</sup> Illinois, which was in the Murfreesboro area in March 1863.</p> <p>“1998 Transcription by William E. Henry of a Civil War Diary,”</p> <p><a href="http://www.51illinois.org/TablerDiaryRaw1863.pdf">http://www.51illinois.org/TablerDiaryRaw1863.pdf</a>, accessed 6/8/09.</p>  +
<p>“On the 25<sup>th</sup> [of March 1863] all cartridges were taken up, and fresh ammunition issued. From this time till after the fist of April, ‘base ball’ was the popular amusement in camp, and a select nine from our regiment played many games and return games with the 32<sup>nd</sup> New York Regiment, the 27<sup>th</sup> winning a good share of the games. The sharp exercise put the men in good condition after the winter of idleness in their tents and cabins.”</p> <p>C. Fairchild, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of the 27<sup>th</sup> Regiment N. Y. Vols</span> (Carl and Matthews, Binghamton NY, 1888), page 153. The regiment was camped near Falmouth VA.</p>  +
<p>The diary of Benjamin Franklin Hackett, of Rochester VT, describes ballplaying twice in the 7 months of his diary as a member of the 12<sup>th</sup> VT. On March 30, 1863, “near Wolf Run Shoals Va,” he wrote “very pleasant in afternoon. Boys played ball all the afternoon. In the same camp on April 14, he wrote “the boys are playing ball and are as cheerful as could be expected.”</p> <p>Diary of Benjamin Franklin Hackett, provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. An article based on the diary appears as Elna Rae Zeilinger and Larry Schweikart, ““’They Also Serve . . .’: The Diary of Benjamin Franklin Hackett, 12<sup>th</sup> Vermont Volunteers, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Vermont History</span>, Volume 51, Number 2 (Spring 1983), pp.89 ff. The article accessed on Google Books via “’benjamin franklin Hackett’” search.</p>  +
<p>John G. B. Adams of the Nineteenth Massachusetts Regiment: “While in camp at Falmouth [VA] the base ball fever broke out. It was the old-fashioned game, where a man running the bases must be hit by the ball to be declared out. It started with the men, then the officers began to play, and finally the 19<sup>th</sup> challenged the 7<sup>th</sup> Michigan to play for sixty dollars a side. . . . The game was played and witnessed by nearly all of our division, and the 19<sup>th</sup> won. The one hundred and twenty dollars was spent for a supper . . . . It was a grand time, and all agreed that it was nicer to play <em>base </em>than <em>minié</em> [bullet] ball.”</p> <p>Capt. John G. B. Adams, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Reminiscences of the Nineteenth Massachusetts Regiment</span> (Wright and Potter, Boston, 1899), pp 60-61. Accessed 6/8/09 on Google Books via “reminiscences nineteenth” search. The regiment arose in northern MA, near the NH border.</p>  +
<p>From April 1863 to May 1864, seven mentions of ballplaying – one of them a game of wicket – appear in the account of the 10<sup>th</sup> Massachusetts. In early April, “in the intervals between [snow] storms the boys found time and place for playing ball” [p. 173]. Later that month, “[i]n the midst of so much warlike preparation it was a relief to find the boys of the Tenth and those of the 36<sup>th</sup> New York playing a game of baseball and all must have quit good natured, since the game itself was a draw” [p. 177]. At camp at Brandy Station on April 18 1864 the 10<sup>th</sup> won a “hotly contested” game against the 2<sup>nd</sup> RI, and again on April 26 the two regiments competed, “but it was lose again for Rhody’s boys” [p.252]. On April 28<sup>th</sup> the officers of the 10<sup>th</sup> lost a “game of our favorite baseball” with the 37<sup>th</sup> [MA?] – p.252. The next day the 10<sup>th</sup> beat the Jersey Brigade, 15-13. [p253].</p> <p>“Considering the momentous interests at stake and the dread record that was to be written for May, 1864, it seems not a little strange that the beautiful month was ushered in just as April went out, with baseball. While a game of ball and shell of terrible import was pending, these men of war, after all only boys of a larger growth, happily ignorant of the future, were hilariously applauding the lucky hits and the swift running of bases clear up to the day before the movement across the Rapidan. It was on [May] 3<sup>rd</sup> that Company I played Company G and won the game by twelve tallies, and with that day came orders to march in the morning at 4.00 a.m.” [p. 253].</p> <p>The wicket games also occurred at Brandy Station in April 1864;“With the advance of the season came all the indications of quickening life, and athletics became exceedingly prevalent, and one item among many was a game of wicket on [April] 13<sup>th</sup>, between a picked team in the 37<sup>th</sup> [MA] and one drawn from the Tenth, resulting in a victory of two tallies for our boys” [p.251]. In a rematch 10 days later, the 10<sup>th</sup> won again [p.252].</p> <p>Alfred S. Roe, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Tenth Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry 1861-1864</span> (Tenth Regiment Veteran Association, Springfield MA, 1909). Accessed 6/9/09 on Google Books via “’tenth regiment’ roe” search. The regiment was drawn from Springfield and Western Massachusetts, where wicket was evidently a not uncommon prewar pastime. Cf [[CW-57]], which also reflects the 10<sup>th</sup> MA.</p>  
<p>“[W]hile I played barn ball, one old cat and two old cat in early boyhood days, Cricket was my favorite game, and up to the time I enlisted in the army I never played a regular game of base ball or the New York game as it was then called. In my regiment we had eleven cricketers that had all played together at home and I was the leading spirit in getting up matches. We played a number of good matches but we were too strong for any combination that we could get to play against us, and we finally had to abandon cricket and + take up this so called New York game. I remember well the first game that I played. It was against the 27<sup>th</sup> NY Inf. at White Oak Church near Fredericksburg Va. In the Spring of 1863. I played occasionally during the remainder of the war, but after my discharge in 1865 I came to Washington and joined the American Cricket Club of this city. But I soon turned my attention to base ball + played with the Olympic Club of this city from 1866 to 1870.”</p> <p>Nicholas Young was born in Amsterdam NY in 1840, and thus was playing the named games in the 1850s. He was a member of the 32<sup>nd</sup> NY Infantry, which was at Falmouth VA in spring 1863. He led the NL from 1881 to 1903.</p> <p> </p> <p> </p> <p> </p>  +
<p>In letters home written on April 6, and April 10, 1863 from Acquia Creek, VA, officer Mason Tyler wrote: “When I arrived this afternoon [from Washington] I found all the officers with Colonel Edwards at their head out playing ball. Games are all the rage now in the Army of the Potomac. [page 78]” A few later he wrote: “[T]he wind is fast drying up the mud. Our camp is alive with ball-players, almost every street having its game. My boy Jimmie is so busy playing that he hardly knows how to stop to do my errands. He can play ball with the best of them, and pitching quoits he can beat anybody in my company, captain and all. [page 78]”</p> <p>“On November 20<sup>th</sup> [1863] there was a baseball game between the Tenth and Thirty-Seventh, and the Thirty-Seventh won. [page 125]”</p> <p>He wrote from Brandy Station VA in January 1864 to report on his recent reading, he added, “Sometimes we get up a game of ball, and now we have some apparatus for gymnastics, that occupies some of my time.” [page 131]”</p> <p>Mason W. Tyler, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Memoir of Mason Whiting Tyler, in Recollections of the Civil War</span> (Putnams, New York, 1912) page 78. Provided by Jeff Kittel, May 12, 2009. Accessed 6/6/09 at Google Books via “mason whiting tyler” search. Tyler was a new Amherst College graduate when he enlisted, and was shortly elected a 1st Lieutenant.. PBall file: CW-XX.</p> <p>Tyler was in the 37th MA. [ba]</p>  +
<p>In a diary extending from 1862 to 1864, Sgt. Franklin Horner referred to ballplaying only on April 11, April 13, and April 18, 1863. The entries are brief: the most informative is: “April 11 Saturday – Warm and pleasant . . . . no news from our armies all quiet in front the boys are enjoying themselves by playing ball the health of the men is good I am well.”</p> <p>Diaries of Franklin Horner, Company H, 12<sup>th</sup> PA reserves regiment volunteers. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. The file states, “The diaries, in their original form, are part of the Curatorial Collection at the Gettysburg National Military Park. Their catalog numbers are as follows: 1862 Diary (GETT-6848), 1863 Diary (GETT-6850), 1864 Diary (GETT-6849).” It appears that in April 1863 the regiment camped in the Falls Church VA vicinity, a day’s march from Washington DC. The march to Gettysburg was ahead.</p>  +
<p>Chaplain Frank Hall of the 16<sup>th</sup> New York Infantry mentioned games of ball 10 times in his journal and letters home. [<strong>Note: </strong>we need to ascertain the range of actual dates; all seem to be for Feb. –April 1863.] All are passing references, like “Saturday, they had another splendid game of ball.” The men played on February 11, 1863, and Hall notes that “Gen. Bartlett came out . . . and played too & men from nearly the whole Brigade entered into the game. Col. Adams, shortly after Gen. Bartlett was called away & as he past on horseback someone threw the ball and it happened to pass right to his saddle bow. He caught it very gracefully & threw it back.”</p> <p>In an April 11 1863 letter to his wife he describes the scene at camp. “I thought I would just write out the sheet to try & give you a picture of things a bit. I am sitting in the tent by the table on one of the three legged stools which I fixed with straps the other day. The day is delightful. The wind is pleasantly flapping the tent. The Jersey band back of it has just finished a delightful air. On the hill in front, to the left of the camp, the boys are playing a game of ball & a few men are to be seen in camp who are excused from picket.”</p> <p>Frank Hall file, #BV-419-01, provided by Michael Aubrecht May 15, 2009. The 16<sup>th</sup> NY was drawn from northern counties, and included men from Plattsburg and Ogdensburg. The 16<sup>th</sup> was in northern VA in early 1863.</p>  +
<p>Sgt. Sewell G. Gray, 23, wrote in his diary entry for April 10, 1863: “. . . inspected at 1 o’clock p.m. by Captain Totten. This ended the duties of the day. I participated in a huge game of ball in the afternoon that proved disastrous to my powers of locomotion as it so lamed me that I can hardly stand on my pegs. Weather fine.” No other references to ballplaying are found.</p> <p>“Diary of Captain Sewell Gray 1862 to 1863,” page 12. The 6<sup>th</sup> Maine was at Falmouth VA at this time. Gray died at the second battle of Fredericksburg in May 1863. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009.</p>  +
<p>Private Berea M. Willsey kept a diary in 1862, 1863, and 1864, and noted ballplaying succinctly 8 times, all in the month of April. In April 1863 there are entries for April 9<sup>th</sup>, 14<sup>th</sup>, 18<sup>th</sup>, 20<sup>th</sup>, and 22<sup>nd</sup>. On the 14<sup>th</sup>, when hostilities seemed near, he wrote “Eight days rations were given out to the different Regts & all surplus baggage sent away. Prepared myself as well as I could for the coming struggle & then had a good game of ball.” Willsey mentions a match against the 35<sup>th</sup> NY on April 20<sup>th</sup> and one against the 36<sup>th</sup> NY on April 22<sup>nd</sup>. The 10<sup>th</sup> was in a Virginia winter camp in this period.</p> <p>In 1864 Willsey reports on a match game with the 2<sup>nd</sup> RI on April 26 and another against the 1<sup>st</sup> NJ on April 30. “We have never been beat, he says. On April 23, he records a “game of ball” that was wicket. “The dust has been flying in clouds all day, yet it did not prevent the game of Ball from being played. Our boys were opposed by the 37th Mass at a game of wicket making 337 tallies, while the 37<sup>th</sup> only made 200.” In 1864 the Regiment was in the vicinity of Brandy Station VA.</p> <p>Jessica H. DeMay, ed., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Civil War Diary of Berea M. Willsey</span> (Heritage Books, 1995), pp 84-86, 142-143. Full text unavailable online 6/10/09. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. The 10<sup>th</sup> MA was from Western Massachusetts, and Willsey may have been from the North Adams area. Cf. [[CW-51]], which also depicts the 10<sup>th</sup> MA.</p>  +
<p>“Dear Wife . . . . The boys have had fine Sport this Spring, playing Ball pitching quarters and other Sports, it has been fine weather for some time and the ground dry and hard. Last Evening after Dress Parade I could not resist the temptation of joining with the men in there sports. After playing ball for some time I changed the sport by running a foot race with Lt. Murphy, which created a considerable fun after which the whole Redg. joined with the 127<sup>th</sup> Redg. in the same Sport, officers as well as men.”</p> <p>Letter from Ambrose F Cole to his wife, Jane Utley Cole, April 14, 1863. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. <strong>Note:</strong> can we determine where the 59<sup>th</sup> was formed, and where it was in April 1863?</p> <p>59th mostly from NYC. Was in Army of the Potomac, in VA in April 1863. [ba]</p>  +
<p>“Falmouth April 27<sup>th</sup>, 63. Dear sister . . . we expect to move very soon perhaps to night other troops have been on the move all day the 19<sup>th</sup> Mass regt and the 7<sup>th</sup> Michigan have had a great game of ball to day the stakes were one hundred & ten dollars a side the Mass boys beat & won the money . . . write often.”</p> <p>Letter from James Decker to Francis Decker, April 1863. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. Other Decker letters suggest that Decker may have been from the Syracuse NY area. <strong>Note: </strong>identify Decker and his military unit?</p>  +
<p>“April 26<sup>th</sup> 1863. “Another day has passed and I have made a full day in the pay rolls. I heartily wish they were finished for I am tired of them. After parade played ball for half an hour . . . I think we will certainly march in a day or two:</p> <p>George French, Diaries for 1862 and 1863. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. French was a sergeant in the 105<sup>th</sup> NY. <strong>Note:</strong> we need to re-examine the context for this reference; where was the 105<sup>th</sup> in April, where was French from. The regiment had some soldiers from Rochester NY, including many Irish immigrants.</p> <p>The 105th was near Falmouth, VA that April. [ba]</p>  +
<p>Near Falmouth VA in April 1863, two companies of the 11<sup>th</sup> New Jersey Regiment played a ball game for which a box score was preserved. Each team was captained by, well, a Captain, and each Captain captain inserted himself as leadoff hitter. The box shows a nine-player, nine-inning game [or maybe eight] with a three-out side-out rule. [There seem to have been no outs recorded in one nine-run half-inning, but let’s not be picky.] Captain Martin’s D Company rushed out to an 18-2 lead and coasted to a 40-15 win over Captain Logan’s H Company.</p> <p>A handsome account of the game’s context, with the box score, is found in John W. Kuhl, “The Game,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Military Images</span>, Volume 25, Number 3 (November/December 2003), pp. 19-22. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. The article’s author reports that the box score appeared in the regimental history but does not give a further source. Sadly, both captains were to be killed at Gettysburg in a matter of weeks. The regiment’s history is Thomas D. Marbaker, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The History of the Eleventh New Jersey Volunteers from its Organization to Appomattox</span> (MacCrellish and Quigley, Trenton, 1898). It appears to be available online via the subscription site ancestry.com as of June 2009.</p>  +
While the 11th New Jersey base ball match took place prior to Gettysburg, the third reference involved a game played several months after the battle, not long before Abraham Lincoln gave his historic speech at the new Gettysburg National Cemetery.  Playing in the match were members of Battery B of the 1st New Jersey artillery, more popularly known as Clark's battery which served with distinction on both the second and third days at Gettysburg.  The base ball connection came to my attention when my friend, Joe Bilby sent me a picture of a print of Clark's battery in camp at Brandy Wine Station, Virginia in November of 1863.  The print shows members of the battery engaged in various camp activities including a group in the lower right hand corner playing base ball.  Joe cautioned me that the picture was not in the public domain so I set out try to locate the original.  My search took me to the Baseball Hall of Fame library which only has a copy and so couldn't give permission to use it.  The library also passed on a link to an recent sale of a copy on eBay for about $425. (John Zinn)<br>  +
<p>The <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Herald</span> headline for an April 1863 article about Hooker’s Army of the Potomac promised “Fun and Sports in the Army: Base Ball Match – New Jersey vs. New York.” Unfortunately, no corresponding text is in the article as retrieved online. The dispatch from Virginia is dated April 28.</p> <p>“Interesting from Hooker’s Army,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">New York</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> Herald</span>, April 29, 1863. Accessed May 21, 2009 via subscription to Genealogybank. <strong>Note:</strong> can we locate the full text?</p>  +
<p>“A match game at Base Ball occurred between selected nines of the Fifth and Eighth New Jersey Regiments on Tuesday last, resulted in favor of the Eighth by a score of 50 to 15. . . . On the second innings the Eighth Regiment made 14 runs.”</p> <p>“Base Ball in the Army,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Trenton</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> State</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> Gazette</span>, April 30, 1863. Accessed May 20, 2009 via Genealogybank subscription. According to a fellow named Abner Doubleday, the 5<sup>th</sup> NJ was part of a “brilliant Counter-charge at the Battle of Chancellorsville on May 3: thus, the regiment and the match must have been in Virginia. [See A. Doubleday, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Chancellorsville and Gettysburg</span> (Scribners, New York, 1882), page 47.] An identical article appeared in the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Newark Daily Advertiser</span> on April 28, 1863 [provided by John Zinn on 3/10/09], and in the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Daily State Gazette and Republican</span> [City?] on 4/30/1864 [provided by John Maurath on 1/18/2009].</p>  +
<p>“A match game of base ball was played near the banks of the Rappahannock on the 2<sup>nd</sup> inst., between selected nines of the 2d and 26<sup>th</sup> Regiments, and of the 2d New Jersey Brigade, resulting in favor of the former, 29 to 15. Among the players of the former were Lieuts. Linen [see file CW-65] and Neidisch [sic?] of the Eureka and Newark Clubs.”</p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Newark</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> Daily Advertiser</span>, June 6, 1863. Provided by John Zinn, March 10, 2009.</p>  +
<p>“On Saturday the 11<sup>th</sup> inst., a match game of ‘base ball’ came off upon the drill ground of the 1<sup>st</sup> N. J. Brigade, in Virginia, between the players of the 2<sup>nd</sup> Regt., and the 26<sup>th</sup>, the former being the challengers. It was witnessed with much interest by most of the Brigade . . . . “A challenge from the 26<sup>th</sup> is expected soon, when the 2<sup>nd</sup> hope to carry off the palm.”</p> <p>“Local Matters. Base Ball in the Army,” Newark Daily Advertiser, April 15, 1863. Provided by John Zinn 3/10/09.<strong> Note:</strong> this game is also mentioned in passing in B. Gottfried, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Kearney’s Own: the History of the First Jersey Brigade in the Civil War</span> (Rutgers U Press, 2005), page 107.</p>  +
<p>“The health of the entire Army remains good, and the men enjoy themselves by athletic exercises and other amusements between parades and drills, pitching quoits, playing base ball and cricket, and horse racing are their every day pastimes.”</p><p>“Penn,” [sic?] in “Our Army Correspondence,” [Pittsburgh?] <u>Chronicle, </u>Thursday, April 16, 1863. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. This long piece focuses some on the “three Pittsburgh and Alleghany regiments, viz. Sixty-Second, One Hundred and Twenty-Third, and One Hundred and Fifty-Fifth,” but the remark about recreation does not appear to apply to them only. The correspondent writes from a camp near Falmouth, VA. </p>  +
<p>“All We two Compnys do is to drill 1 and ½ hower in th mornig gon gard once in two Weaks We play ball pitch quoits the rest of the time. We play the New York Gam most of the time. Mass Game some We Changle other Regement and thay us the 25 Mass is the Best plays 46 next 44 next 51 Nex Battarys Next 5 R.I. Last some exciting games to. Have a Greesy pole Grees Pig all sorts of games you can think of Card Domonuse, &c. . . . But How are the girls in M [Marlboro NH] . . . the Boys have bases up & are in a stem to have me play ball I supose I must go. . . [resuming later:] My side got 10 tales. The other side got 7 talies the sam wons are going to try it to morrow.”</p> <p>Letter from Ora W. Harvey, April 15, 1863, from New Bern NC. Harvey, from Marlboro NH, was with the 46<sup>th</sup> MA. New Bern had been captured by the North in March 1862 and held for the entire war. Text and facsimile online via the Notre Dame rare book collection, accessed 6/14/09 via ”’msn/cw 5026-01’” search. Marlboro NH is just west of Keene NH, and about 20 miles north of the MA border. New Bern is near the Atlantic coast and is about 100 miles SE of Raleigh.</p>  +
<p>“Friday, April 17, 1863 Quite a fine day. Boys all playing ball. Co. drills in the afternoon.</p> <p>“Wednesday, April 22, 1863 Cool with some appearances of a storm. Played ball today and got somewhat tired.”</p> <p>G. S. Stuart and A. M. Jakeman, Jr., eds., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">John H. Stevens: Civil War </span>Diary (Miller Books, Acton ME, 1997), page 127. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 1863. <strong>Note: </strong>we need to ascertain Stevens’ home and unit; the 9<sup>th</sup> PA lists a soldier by this name as a 1st Lt., as does the 5<sup>th</sup> MI, as does the 5<sup>th</sup> ME, which seems the most likely unit.. Text is not found via Google Books in June 2009.</p>  +
<p>“The parade ground has been a busy place for a week or so past, ball-playing having become a mania in camp. Officers and men forget, for a time, the differences in rank and indulge in the invigorating sport with a school-boy’s ardor. [The account lists two recent inter-company games.] The game is the fashionable “New York Game,” played by nine on a side, and nine innings making a game. An undecided game is now pending between the Tenth Massachusetts and Thirty-Sixth New York regiments.”</p><p>Private Alpheris B. Parker, of the Tenth Massachusetts, on April 21, 1863, as cited [in part] in Ward and Burns, <u>Baseball</u> (Knopf, 1994), page 11. The original source is not there cited, but must be from a letter or diary written by Parker. The full quotation appears in J. K. Newell, <u>Ours. Annals of 10<sup>th</sup> Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers, in the Rebellion</u> (C. A. Nichols, Springfield, 1875), page 199. The author of the history indicates that he “pirated” material from men’s accounts, sometimes without attribution, as seems to be the case with this passage. The 10<sup>th</sup> lists an “Alpheus Parker,” from Colrain in NW MA, on its Company G rolls. The Tenth’s winter camp in 1862-63 was near Falmouth VA, and In April it stood on the eve of the Chancellorsville battle.</p><p>In April 1864 the 10<sup>th</sup> was camped near Brandy Station VA. <u>Ours</u> [page 256] suddenly lists ballplaying on seven days between April 13 and May 3. Wicket was played on April 13 [10<sup>th</sup> vs, 37<sup>th</sup>] and April 23<sup>rd </sup>[10<sup>th</sup> vs 37<sup>th</sup>]. Base ball was played on April 18 [10<sup>th</sup> vs. 2<sup>nd</sup> RI], April 26 [10thj vs, 2<sup>nd</sup> RI], April 28 [officers of 120<sup>th</sup> vs. officers of 37<sup>th</sup>], April 30 [10<sup>th</sup> vs. 1<sup>st</sup> NJ, and May 3 [Company I vs. Company I]. The next day they all left for the Battle of the Wilderness.</p><p><u>Ours</u> was accessed 6/14/09 at Google Books via “ours annals” search. </p> <p>The New York Sunday Mercury, April 26, 1863 reports on the 10th/36th game, played on the 20th in the rain to a 20-20 tie [ba].</p>  
<p>“April 22d pleasant. On wood detail this morning. This afternoon the 9 best base ball players of the 2 New York Troy regiment play with the best 9 Jerseymen in our brigade for <em>300.00. </em>The Jersey boys beat 20 inings & a ining not played.”</p> <p>Heyward Emmell, Journal, April 22 1863. Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. It would seem that Emmell was not familiar with base ball, or the game was played by unusual rules. A NPS research note places Emmell in the 7<sup>th</sup> NJ regiment, which may have been in the same brigade as the 2<sup>nd</sup> NY and 9<sup>th</sup> NJ. <strong>Note:</strong> the men were about to fight at Chancellorsville in VA, but we do not know the location of this game.</p> <p>The New York Herald, April 29, 1863, appears to report this game, in a letter datelined April 24 from "near the Rappahannock." The 2nd brigade, 2nd division, Army of the Potomac included 4 NJ regiments and the 2nd NY. A team from the 5th/7th/8th NJ played the 2nd NY for $100 a side and "betting ran high." NJ won. Gives a box score.</p>  +
<p>“[O]ur camp was made merry by the common prevalence of a variety of sports. Horse racing was quite extensively practiced, the presence of the paymasters enabling the officers to make up purses with much freedom. . . . In the Second Brigade of the Second division base ball became the popular amusement, and matches between regiments were of every day occurrence. The brigade counts for New Jersey regiments and one (the Second) from New York. The Jerseymen had played a number of matches between themselves, when the New Yorkers challenged the first nine from all the Jersey regiments to a match for $150 a side. The game was played on Tuesday, and attracted a large crowd. Betting ran high, with odds at the outset in favor of the New Yorkers. The playing was spirited on both sides; but the Jersey boys displayed the greater skill, and quickly turned the popular enthusiasm. They won the match on their eighth innings by twenty-three runs.” An elaborate box score is included.</p> <p>“Near the Rappahannock, April 24, 1863: Sports in Camp,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">New York</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> Herald</span>, April 24, 1863. Provided by John Maurath, January 18, 2008. <strong>Note:</strong> our image is truncated in the middle of the box score, and more text may appear in the full article. The NJ nine comprised 5 players from the 8<sup>th</sup> NJ, 3 from the 7<sup>th</sup> NJ, and 1 player from the 5<sup>th</sup> NJ.</p> <p>The <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Trenton State Gazette</span> carried a brief account of this game on May 2, 1863. It reported the final score as 34-14, the stakes were $100 a side, and noted that the 2<sup>nd</sup> NY was from Troy NY.</p>  +
<p>“I thought we should have been half way to Richmond before this time, but here we are all very much taken up with base ball playing recently. Yesterday the fifth N. Jersey played the rest of the Brigade for $100 a side and we beat them, to day we played the second New York on the same terms and beat them, and tomorrow the Eight New Jersey playes the second N.Y. for $300 a side, and then we play the Sickles Brigade.”</p> <p>Stanley Gaines, 7<sup>th</sup> NJ, to his sister from “Camp near Falmouth Va April 22d/63. In an earlier letter to a friend on April 14, 1863, Gaines had written, “Morality is certainly at a low ebb in the army, more preferring to play ball than to go to church, but a more generous open hearted and jolly crew than our soldiers it is hard to find.” Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009.</p>  +
<p>[A]  “The <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Rochester Evening Express</span> published a letter from a soldier dated March 31, 1863, saying the Union Troops near what is now Leeland Station in Stafford were amusing themselves by running races and ‘playing ball, the latter being the favorite amusement or our correspondent. ‘We played nearly all day yesterday, our gallant Colonel looking on with as much pleasure as though he had a hand in . . . . (Quite a number of spectators assembled on our parade ground to witness the expertness of our officers, as they were practicing a match-game with the commissioned officers of the veteran 13th.) I learn that the 108<sup>th</sup> Regiment and the 14<sup>th</sup> Brooklyn Regiment were to play a match game of ball to-day for a purse of $25. . . . It may appear that we should be engaged in something else beside playing base ball, but I tell you it is one of the best things in the world to keep up the spirits of the men, , and not only that, but it is of vast importance to their health, and necessary to the development of their muscle . . . . The old veteran Joe (Gen. Joseph Hooker) himself can be seen out on the field encouraging the boys on as earnest as if he were on the battlefield.”</p> <p>[B] In a 2001 article, Allison Barash cites parts of this communiqué, and adds that the writer was “Captain Patrick H. “True Blue” Sullivan of the 140<sup>th</sup> New York Volunteers, who had played for Rochester’s Lone Stars Club before the war and was obviously hopelessly addicted to the game, left many written statements of Civil War ballgames.” She does note give a source for this passage or the other writings.</p>  +
<p>“William D. Rogers closed a letter to his parents by confessing he was stopping to ‘join the Boys in a game of Ball which has become a great amusement here.’”</p> <p>J. S. Sheppard, “’By the Noble Daring of Her Sons; The Florida Brigade of the Army of Tennessee,” (PhD Dissertation, Florida State U, 2008), page 200. Sheppard’s citation: “William D. Rogers to Dear Papa and Mother, April 17, 1863. William D. Rogers Letters, 1862-1865.” Thesis accessed 6/15/09 via Google Scholar search “’noble daring’ Sheppard.’’ Rogers’ unit was evidently at winter quarters near Tullahoma TN then, about 80miles SE of Nashville and 245 miles N of the Alabama border. Rogers was from Alabama.</p>  +
<p>“Occasionally they indulged in the amusing and time-honored game of base-ball, but not infrequently they were called from this pleasure, to some arduous and important duty.”</p> <p>William Whitman and Charles True, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Maine in the War for Union</span> (Dingley, Lewiston, 1865), page 247. It seems clear from context that ballplaying was not infrequent. It is unclear from the phrasing whether they played the NY game or an old-fashioned form. The passage seems to imply that the game was played in 1862-1863 winter camp; the Tenth ME was at Stafford Court House VA from January to April 1863.</p>  +
<p>“During the winter the ground was occasionally covered with snow and battles with snow balls took place, different regiments challenging each other. When the weather was pleasant baseball became popular, and there were many excellent players on the Third Brigade. These games were watched by great crowds with intense interest. On April 18<sup>th</sup>, the 49<sup>th</sup> and 77<sup>th</sup> Regiments played a grand game on the parade ground.”</p> <p>F. D. Bidwell, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of the Forty-Ninth New York Volunters</span> (J. B. Lyon, Albany, 1916), pages 28-29. Accessed on Google Books 6/27/09 via “forty-ninth new” search. The regiment formed in the Buffalo area, and was at Falmouth VA on April 18.</p>  +
<p>May 16<sup>th</sup>, 1863. “We have had a fine game of Town Ball which gave me good Exercise, and I was on the Side that beat.” May 28<sup>th</sup>, 1863. “We have [jus]t had a fine game of Town Ball and I was on the Beating Side. Nothing can beat me and Sergeant. Jones. He is a first rate man.”</p> <p>Letters from Corporal William Harden, Company G, 63<sup>rd</sup> Infantry Regiment, Georgia Volunteers, to his wife, written from just east of Savannah at “Thunderbolt.”. Accessed 6/26/09 at the Giamatti Center of the Baseball Hall of Fame, Civil War file. The 63<sup>rd</sup> formed in Savannah, and Harden had previously lived in Pike County, which is directly south of Atlanta.</p>  +
<p>“The civil war, however, arrested the development of the new game [base ball] for a time. It was played during the war in camps all over the south. Regiments and companies having their teams. Sergeant Dryden, of an Iowa regiment, relates that during the long waits in the trenches before Vicksburg, the Union and Confederate soldiers jokingly challenged each other to play baseball, and that during the brief truces the men of his company and the enemy played catch from line to line.</p> <p>“’We were throwing and catching the ball belonging to our company ne day,’ he relates, ‘when firing commenced afresh and the men dived into their holes. There was a big fellow named Holleran who, after we got to cover, wanted to go over and whip the ‘Johnny Reb’ who hd stolen our ball. The next morning during a lull in the firing, that ‘Reb’ yelled to us and in a minute the baseball came flying over the works, so we played a game on our next relief.’”</p> <p>The siege of Vicksburg MS occurred from late May to July 4 1863.  Many Iowa regiments participated.</p>  +
<p>“Another favorite amusement in the corps was the game of base ball. There were many excellent players in the different regiments, and it was common for the ball-players of one regiment or brigade to challenge another regiment or brigade.’ He added: ‘These matches were watched by great crowds of soldiers with intense interest.’”</p> <p>George T. Stevens, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Three Years in the Sixth Corps</span> (Gray, Albany, 1866), page 183. Accessed on Google Books 6/15/09 via “’three years with the sixth’” search. (Part of this passage is cited in George B. Kirsch, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball in Blue and Gray</span>, (Princeton U Press, 2003), page 37). Stevens’ 77<sup>th</sup> NY was in winter camp at White Oak Church, near Falmouth VA, in 1862-63. Stevens was a regimental surgeon.</p> <p>Stevens [page 191] also reports that, awaiting the assault on Chancellorsville, even as the sounds of nearby clashes rolled in, “the thundering of the guns and the trembling of the earth seemed like a series of earthquakes. The spirit of our boys rose, and the battle on the right progressed, and there seemed to be indications of work for them. Groups might be seen at any time, when we were not standing in the line of battle, telling yarns, singing songs, playing ball, and pitching quoits, while they momentarily looked for the order to advance upon the heights, into the very jaws of death.”</p>  +
<p>Finding, on the Chancellorsville battlefield, a partly used diary in the abandoned knapsack of a Union soldier from the 87<sup>th</sup> NY, Robert T. Douglass started making entries in May 1864.</p> <p>“May 26 . . . Quite pleasant this afternoon. Played a game of ball with my friends in the 40<sup>th</sup> Va. Reg.” “May 27. . . . Relieved from guard this morning. Out in the field playing ball with a portion of the 40<sup>th</sup> Reg.” “May 28. . . . Played ball.” “May 30. . . . Played ball this evening for sport as I had nothing else to do. Bad news from home.” “June 2. . . . Played ball this afternoon. No news in camp of any importance.” “June 11 . . . . Played a game of ball called cat.” Douglass returned the diary to its original owner in 1867.</p> <p>Provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. The diary is also found online: Google web search: “douglass diary morrisville.” <strong>Note:</strong> Douglass’ unit appears to have stayed near the Stafford/Chancellorsville area in May and June. His diary entries continue through 1863 but have no additional ballplaying references. Accessed online 6/15/09.</p>  +
<p>“Roddie Shaw wrote that baseball fever also swept through his regiment, mentioned ‘while I write the Regt. Is engaged in a game of town-ball one of our greatest sources of amusement.’”</p><p>J. S. Sheppard, “’By the Noble Daring of Her Sons; The Florida Brigade of the Army of Tennessee,” (PhD Dissertation, Florida State U, 2008), page 200. ’’ Sheppard’s citation: “Roddie Shaw to My Dear Sister, May 17, 1863. FSA, Tallahassee, FL.” Thesis accessed 6/15/09 via Google Scholar search “’noble daring’ Sheppard.” Shaw’s 4<sup>th</sup> FL unit was evidently at winter quarters near Tullahoma TN then, about 80miles SE of Nashville and 245 miles N of the Alabama border. Shaw was from Quincy, FL, which is about 20 miles NW of Tallahassee and about ten miles S of the Georgia border. </p>  +
<p>“A sergeant from the 62<sup>nd</sup> N.Y. Volunteers wrote to the <u>New York Clipper</u> sporting weekly on May 30 of 1863 to clarify the rules as he knew them: ‘That in making a home run in a game of baseball the runner is allowed to run 2’ either side of the bases without touching them. I claim that he is obligated to touch each base as he passes it; . . . To play now in N.Y. is to touch the base in all cases; so that the matter is settled, and the rules can now be interpreted correctly.’”</p><p>Patricia Millen, <u>From Pastime to Passion: Baseball and the Civil War</u> (Heritage Books,2001), page 20. The 62<sup>nd</sup> NY, recruited from New York City, had fought at Chancellorsville in early May, sustaining its heaviest casualties, and Gettysburg was a month ahead. <b>Note: </b>can we obtain the article? </p>  +
<p>“That June a correspondent to the [New York] <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Clipper</span> reported a match following the Massachusetts game rules played for $50 a side between Massachusetts’ Eleventh Regiment and the Twenty Sixth of Pennsylvania. He noted: ‘we have four clubs in our brigade, and there are several more in the division.’”</p> <p>George B. Kirsch, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Base Ball in Blue Gray</span> (Princeton U Press, 2003), page 39. The 26<sup>th</sup> had fought in the May 1863 Chancellorsville battle, seems likely to be in Virginia in June, perhaps back at Falmouth. Kirsch does not specify the date of the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Clipper</span> article. It seems unusual that a MA – PA game would have been featured in a New York paper. <strong>Note:</strong> can we locate this article?</p>  +
<p>“During the [Thanksgiving] holiday of 1863, twenty picked men from the brigade [2nd Brigade, 2nd Corps, Army of the Potomac] and some of the members of the old ‘Honey Run Club’ from the Germantown, Pennsylvania area reportedly played ball.”</p> <p>Patricia Millen, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Passion to Pastime: Baseball and the Civil War </span>(Heritage Books, 2001), page 24. Millen cites the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">New York Clipper</span> for November 14<sup>th</sup> and November 28, 1863. The location of the game is not indicated in the book.</p> <p>See also 1862.84. The Clipper of Nov. 14th indicates that the game would be town ball, played on the 25th at the parade ground of the 2nd brigade, 2nd division, 2nd Corps, Army of the Potomac, then stationed in VA.</p>  +
<p>“As Confederate soldier Corporal William Harding wrote while stationed in Georgia in 1863, ‘had a fine game of Town ball which gave me good exercise. . .’”</p> <p>Patricia Millen, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Passion to Pastime: Baseball and the Civil War </span>(Heritage Books, 2001), page 19. Millen cites “Harding, John. Letter. Cooperstown, NY: National Baseball Hall of Fame Library. 1863.” <strong>Note:</strong> can we obtain a facsimile of the letter, and determine Harding’s unit and the GA location of the game?</p>  +
<p>Isaac Clason, of Company B in the 2<sup>nd</sup> Minnesota Volunteers, made 10 minimal references to ballplaying from January 29 to April 16, 1864. No more appear to the June end of the record. A typical entry was “Had a fine game of ball this afternoon” [March 17]. On January 29: “Spent today playing ball, pitching anvils and everything to amuse myself.” On April 5: “Had a fine game of ball and in the evening went to the Boulten Minstrels performance. Not very good entertainment.” The diary refers to “Ringgold” [and to peach trees in bloom in March] and it would seem that Clason spent his winter in the area of Ringgold Gap, GA, where a September 1863 defeat had stalled the North’s incipient drive toward Atlanta until May 7 1864. Ringgold GA is about 15 miles SE of Chattanooga and about 6 miles south of the Tennessee border.</p> <p>Diary of Isaac W. Clason, accessed online at ancestry.com by Google web search “clason diary.”</p>  +
<p>In a diary extending from January 1864 through January 1865, James Lormor of the 103<sup>rd</sup> New York Infantry made passing reference to having a “game of ball” on three dates from January 27 to February 6. The least laconic: “Saturday February 6 – Got up at five as usual went to work and fixed our tent The 89 and our boys had a game of ball Weather warm and pleasant” He mentions shelling Charleston and serving as picket at Pawnee Landing – was he on the Carolina coast east of Charleston SC?</p><p>Civil War Diary of James Cordin Lormor, 103<sup>rd</sup> New York Infantry, at civilwararchive.com, accessed 6/16/09 via Google web “stormo inlet” search. </p>  +
<p>In his diary for the year 1864, Lieutenant Lemuel Abbott [10<sup>th</sup> VT] includes six entries on ballplaying. One involved a challenge from the non-commissioned officers to the officers to play for an oyster dinner [January 29], and another in which his Company challenged the regiment to “play a game of ball for $50 [March 19]. One day he reports that “a game of ball came off this afternoon in which the commissioned offers won. Two more games are to be played Monday if a good day. [January 30]” All ballplaying entries appear between January 29 and April 29.</p> <p>Lemuel A. Abbott, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Personal Recollections and Civil War Diary 1864</span> (Free Press, Burlington, 1908), pages 13, 20, 28, 30, 41. The January entry is mentioned in Kirsch, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball in Blue and </span>Gray, page 41. Accessed 6/19/09 on Google Books via “recollections 1864” search. Abbott’s Company B was from Burlington VT. Their camp during early 1864 was near Brandy Station, VA, about 60 miles SW of Washington and about 75 miles NW of Richmond.</p> <p>See also Montpelier Daily Journal, Feb. 15, 1864, and Vermont Watchman, Feb. 19, 1864, for notice of the commissioned/non-commissioned officers game.</p>  +
<p>“[Horse] [r]aces were a favorite amusement of the men in this camp . . . . Foot-races among the men wre frequently indulged in, not for the purpose of developing any <em>retreating</em> qualities. These were always exciting, and usually afforded themes for discussion and conversation for one day at least. Base-ball and foot-ball were favorite amusements among the soldiers, and afforded recreation which was highly appreciated.”</p> <p>Rev. Geo. W. Bicknell, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of the Fifth Regiment Maine Volunteers</span> (Hall L. Davis, Portland, 1871), page 298. Bicknell writes this of the 63/64 winter camp. The camp was at White Oak Church, near Falmouth VA – which is about 3 miles NE of Fredericksburg.</p>  +
<p>A CSA Chaplain wrote: “At leisure hours I frequently engaged with the young men on my regiment in a game of base-ball, for exercise in part, but principally to effect what it was ever my purpose to do, viz., to draw men out from their tents into the light of day, where evil practices are discouraged or corrected.</p><p>Rev. A. C. Hopkins [Chaplain, 2<sup>nd</sup> Virginia Infantry], in “Appendix: Letters from Our Army Workers,” J. W. Jones, <u>Christ in the Camp, or Religion in Lee’s Army</u> (B. F. Johnson, Richmond, 1887), page 472. Accessed on Google Books 6/17/09 via “jones ‘in the camp’” search. Hopkins in this passage refers to the regiment’s winter camp “near Pisgah’s Church in Orange County [VA].The area is about 25 miles E of Fredericksburg and 60 miles NE of Richmond. </p>  +
<p>“February 12, 1864. Officers played a game of base ball this afternoon.”</p> <p><strong> </strong></p>  +
<p>“A game between the Eighth and the 114<sup>th</sup> Vermont Regiments near Franklin, Louisiana, in February 1864 was won by the former, 21 to 9.”</p><p>Bell Irvin Wiley, <u>The Common Soldier in the Civil War</u> (Grosset and Dunlap, New York, 1952) Book One, page 170. Wiley’s footnotes are clustered, and it difficult to determine source which is which. . The “diary of James F. Williams, Feb. 6, 1864” seems a possibility. The 114<sup>th</sup> New York was in camp near Franklin in early 1864, and seems the likely opponent of the Eighth VT. [There is no record of a 114<sup>th</sup> VT regiment.] The Eighth’s Regimental history does not mention any ballplaying, or a 114<sup>th</sup> regiment. The Eighth was recruited from northern VT. </p>  +
<p>“[T]he Thirty-Seventh provided liberal physical recreation. Nearly every pleasant day in the intervals between drills a game of base-ball or ‘wicket’ formed a center of attention for the unemployed members of the brigade; these games were becoming largely inter-regimental, a variety of ‘teams’ were organized throughout the brigade, some of which became very proficient. If a fall of snow prevented the regular pastime, it only furnished the opportunity for another, and many a battle of snow-balls was conducted. . . . ”</p> <p>James L. Bowen, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of the Thirty-Seventh Regiment, Mass. Volunteers</span> (Bryan and Co., Holyoke), 1884), page 260. In winter 1863/1864 the regiment, and evidently its brigade, was at “Camp Sedgwick” on the Rapidan River in VA.</p> <p>The regiment was in a camp at Warren Station VA [near Petersburg], the 37<sup>th</sup> history [page 406] paints this early spring 1865 tableau: “As the warming weather of early succeeded the interminable storms of the severe winter, and the hoarse voice of the frog began to resound from the surrounding marshes, games of quoits and ball became possible on the color line and mingled with the good news of the collapsing of the rebellion in <span style="text-decoration: underline;">other</span> directions.”</p>  +
<p>“March 1 . . . I played wicket ball, pitched quarters and stayed with Smith.” “March 2 . . . Helped get dinner, drilled, played ball, got some water to drink . . .”</p><p>Alonzo Miller, “Diary of Alonzo Miller, March 1864,” in Alonzo Miller, <u>Diaries and Letters, 1864-1865</u> (Alexander Street Press, 1958), page 122. Provided by Jeff Kittel, May 12 2009. Miller was with the 12<sup>th</sup> WI, which participated in Sherman’s Atlanta campaign in 1864. It might be inferred that Miller was from Prescott WI, which is on the Minnesota border and about 20 miles S or St. Paul. Available online via subscription June 2009. <b>Note:</b> can we confirm that Miller’s letters and diaries have no other ballplaying references? </p>  +
<p>[March 3] “Went on shore at 10 ½ o’clock this morning and played base ball for about 3 hours. At 3 p.m. practiced with revolver.”</p> <p>[March 10] “Went out in the afternoon and exercised my men in company drill. Played a game of ball.”</p> <p>J. Jones and E. Keuchel, eds., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Civil War Marine: a Diary of the Red River Expedition, 1864</span> (US Marine Corps, 1975) page 34-35. Provided by Jeff Kittel, May 12, 2009. Church was a member of the small [3800 troops] Marine Corps sent from Cairo IL to support the Red River campaign, intended to liberate TX, AR, and LA [it didn’t]. The base ball entries preceded the March 13 start of fighting. Church’s diary covers three spring months of 1864.</p>  +
<p>“Monday, March 7, 1864. Warm again as usual to day. Great and exciting game of Ball in which Chaplain Rowlings figures conspiculously.”</p><p>“Civil War Diary of Charles Lepley, 103<sup>rd</sup> Pennsylvania Infantry,” online at <a href="http://www.civilwararchive.com/">www.civilwararchive.com</a> as accessed 6/19/09 via “charles lepley” Google Web search. Lepley’s diary covers the first nine months of 1864. His camp was at Plymouth NC, near the Carolina coast and about 110 miles east of Raleigh. Lepley was captured in April and died of dysentery at Andersonville Prison in September. </p>  +
<p>March 28, 1864: “Supply train went to the station but did not get any soft bread. The 2<sup>nd</sup> Regt boys and a Massachusetts Battery had a game of base ball today. The 2<sup>nd</sup> Regt boys were the winners.” April 8, 1864: “Went to corps headquarters to see a base ball match between the 2<sup>nd</sup> Regt and the 77<sup>th</sup> New York. The New Yorkers did not appear.”</p><p>Diary of Stephen Gordon, provided by Michael Albrecht May 15, 2009. The 2<sup>nd</sup> NJ, 77<sup>th</sup> NY, and 1<sup>st</sup> MA artillery were in the 6<sup>th</sup> corps of the Army of the Potomac, which was at Brandy Station VA in spring of 1864.</p><p>The cancelled April 8<sup>th</sup> 1864 game was also noted in the <u>New York Clipper</u> of April 30, 1864. As noted in Patricia Millen, <u>From Pastime to Passion</u> (Heritage, 2001), page 22, <u>Clipper c</u>orrespondent W. B. Wilson complained that there was “great disappointment” among the gathered crowd when the match didn’t come off. <u></u></p>  +
<p>“7<sup>th</sup> [April, 1864]. Fine weather. Drilled. Great base ball game between ours and the 143<sup>rd</sup> Regiment.”</p> <p>Diary of John Bodler, 149<sup>th</sup> Pennsylvania, provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009.</p> <p>The 149<sup>th</sup> regiment’s history also records this game. “The first days of spring [1864] weather greeted the legions of the vast army gathered around Culpeper that March and the men found a new activity to enjoy: baseball. Letters and diaries recorded the great fun the game brought in camp. Men gathered after the evening meal to lay the game for pleasure but soon there were games of competition between companies. Samuel Foust admitted losing a $20 bet when the team of the 149<sup>th</sup> lost to the 143<sup>rd</sup> regiment [page 125].” The history also refers to baseball games when the regiment was in Washington [September 1862?; page 27] and in June 1863 [page 68].</p> <p>Richard E. Matthews, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The 149<sup>th</sup> Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry in the Civil War</span> (McFarland,1994). Accessed in limited preview format 6/19/90 via Google Books “149<sup>th</sup> pennsylvania” search.</p>  +
<p>“[Illeg. Date ] April 1864. Base ball match between the 9<sup>th</sup> NYSM and 14<sup>th</sup> Regt. Score 9<sup>th</sup> Regt [illeg.] and 14<sup>th</sup> Regt 59 runs. . . .” [Illeg. Date] April 1864. Return match between 9<sup>th</sup> NTSM and 14<sup>th</sup> Regiment score 9<sup>th</sup> Regt [illeg.] and 14<sup>th</sup> Regt 33 runs”</p> <p>Diary of Henry C. Sabine of the 14<sup>th</sup> NY Infantry, provided by Michael Aubrecht May 15, 1864. Sabine was near Culpeper VA on these dates.</p> <p>The <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Clipper</span> ran box scores of these games, fixing the dates as April 20 and 25, 1864, and noting them as the regiments’ first matches of the season. The scores were Ninth 36, Fourteenth 29 in the first match, and Fourteenth 38, Ninth 33 in the second match. Facsimile supplied by Gregory Christiano, June 15 2009. “Ball Play in the Army,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">New York</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> Clipper</span>, May 7, 1864.</p>  +
<p>“Soldier baseball must have been vigorous. One Yank noted after a contest in Tennessee, “We get lamed badly.”</p> <p>Bell Irvin Wiley, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Common Soldier in the Civil War</span> (Grosset and Dunlap, New York, 1952), page 170. Wiley’s footnotes are clustered, and hard to match to textual claims. His most likely source is “Edward L. Edes for his father, April 3, 1864.” <strong>Note:</strong> can we verify and enrich this account? Richard Welch’s <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Boy </span>General (Fairleigh Dickinson U, 2003), page 76) identifies an Edward L. Edes as a soldier in the 33<sup>rd</sup> Massachusetts.. In April 1864 the 33<sup>rd</sup>, apparently raised in Springfield, MA was on the outskirts of Chattanooga awaiting the start of the Atlanta campaign.</p>  +
<p>“Rappahannock Station, Va., April 18<sup>th</sup> 1864. Dear Wife, . . . . there is a move on the foot or I am no judge of Soldiering. Our Dr. seems to think we shall stay here this summer. It is nothing but play ball when we are in camp lately and I must stop for my arm is lame throwing. I thought I would write today for the Picket goes out tomorrow and it is my turn to go.”</p> <p>Letter from Eugene B. Kelleran, 20<sup>th</sup> Maine; provided by Michael Aubrecht, May 15, 2009. The 20<sup>th</sup> was spared in the upcoming battle of Chancellorsville in May 1864 when it was quarantined for suspected smallpox.</p>  +
<p>“The boys are killing time in camp by playing ball, which is such good exercise that it will fit them for the fatiguing marches to be taken this summer. The Soldiers here are undoubtedly, at this time more lighthearted and like schoolboys than I ever saw them. Maj. Lash and Col. Badger often play ball with the men.”</p> <p>Letters from Washington Ives, 4<sup>th</sup> FL regiment, April 14, April 17, May 3, and May 7 1864, as noted in J. Sheppard, “’By the Noble Daring of Her Sons’: The Florida Brigade of the Army of Tennessee,” (FSU Dissertation, 2008), pages 291-292. Some of these letters, and evidently another written by Archie Livingston on April 24, further describe a series of games involving the 1<sup>st</sup> FL, the 3<sup>rd</sup> FL, the 4<sup>th</sup> FL, the 6<sup>th</sup> FL, and the 7<sup>th</sup> FL regiments in this period. The Sheppard thesis was accessed 6/20/09 on Google Scholar via “’noble daring’ Sheppard” search. The regiments were camped at Dalton GA, about 30 miles SW of Chattanooga defending the route to Atlanta.</p>  +
<p>“We are enjoying our share of April showers . . . the soldiers prayer is that it may continue to rain until the 5<sup>th</sup> of June. When it is pleasant the boys are at their games of ball. Yesterday we had a game in our Regt 9 innings to a side. One side got 34 tallies the other 28. There was some fine playing. [4/15/1864].”</p> <p>Letter from Corporal Henry Blanchard, 2<sup>nd</sup> Rhode Island, as cited in an auction lot accessed online June 20, 2009, by a Google Web search for “’lot 281 civil war’ RI”. Blanchard was at Camp Sedgwick near Petersburg VA in April. He was killed three weeks later in the Battle of the Wilderness. One can infer that Blanchard was new to a nine-inning game, presumably the New York game, and he uses the term “tallies” usually seen in the New England game.</p>  +
<p>“Captain James Hall of the 24<sup>th</sup> Alabama Regiment observed his men playing [. . . ] ‘just like school boys’ while waiting for the advance of Union General Sherman.”</p> <p>Patricia Millen, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">From Pastime to Passion </span>(Heritage, 2001), page 19. She cites B. I. Wiley, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Common Soldier in the Civil War</span> (Grosset and Dunlap, 1960), page 170. L. J. Daniel, in <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Soldiering in the Army of the Tennessee</span> (UNC Press, 1991), page 90, seems to identify this quote as taken from a letter from James Hall to his brother, April 19, 1864.</p>  +
<p>“A game between the ‘first 9’ of the 1<sup>st</sup> New Jersey and the 10<sup>th</sup> Massachusetts was also recorded in the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">New York Clipper</span> as being played near Brandy Station [VA] on May 14, 1863 – the 1<sup>st</sup> New Jersey losing 15 to 13.”</p> <p>Patricia Millen, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">From Pastime to Passion: Baseball and the Civil War</span> (Heritage Books,2001), page 26. <strong>Note: </strong>can we obtain the article?</p>  +
<p>“Orders to be in readiness to move were received every day . . . . From their very frequency the regiment soon came to regard these orders with serenity, and in the first days of June abandoned itself in unclaimed hours, to the pleasant pastime of cricket – a game very dear to Philadelphians– for which a complete outfit had been ordered some time before.”</p> <p>Lt.Col. Thomas Chamberlin, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of the One Hundred and Fiftieth Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers</span> (F. McManus, Philadelphia, 1905), page 106. Accessed 6/20/09 on Google Books via “bucktail brigade” search. The regiment was camped at White Oak Church, near Falmouth VA. The regiment has several companies from Philadelphia.</p>  +
<p>“When the Fourteenth Regiment returned to Brooklyn in June 1864 a comrade in arms from the Thirteenth Regiment wrote to the<u> Brooklyn Daily Eagle</u>: ‘Among the returned heroes of our gallant Fourteenth are some well known ball players who, while devoted to the use of more deadly weapons, have not forgotten the use of bat and ball, as the many games played by them during their three years service will prove.’ He proposed an ‘amalgamated match’ between the two regiments to inaugurate a new ball ground in Coney Island.”</p><p>Patricia Millen, <u>From Pastime to Passion</u> (Heritage, 2001), pages 37-38. Millen does not indicate the date of the <u>Eagle</u> article, which is likely her main source for this passage. <b>Note: </b>can we locate the article, and discover whether the game was played? </p>  +
<p>“Vegetable and market wagons were allowed to visit them every morning; a pint of rice, a slice of bacon, and usually a small loaf of bread, with some salt, were allowed them as a daily ration; and a plot of ground where they could play ball and exercise themselves was set apart for their use.”</p> <p>H. E. Tremain, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Two Days of War</span> (Bonnell, Silver and Bowers, New York, 1905), page 218. Accessed 6/20/09 on Google Books via “two days of war” search. Tremain is apparently here describing the improved conditions that ensued after the Union troops threatened to treat rebel prisoners cruelly if inhumane treatment of Union prisoners continued. The location was Charleston SC, which was under bombardment in August 1864.</p>  +
<p>Perhaps the best documented instance of ballplaying in the Civil War occurred near Sandusky Ohio, site of the Johnson’s Island prison for southern officers. Beginning in about July 1864, apparently, matches were common. Accounts from 6 diaries give accounts of regular play. According to one diarist, the officers also had a cricket club and a chess club.</p> <p>In-depth coverage of base ball at Johnson’s Island is found in John R. Husman, “Ohio’s First Baseball Game: Played by Confederates and Taught to Yankees,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Base Ball</span>, Volume 2, Issue 1 (Spring 2008), pp 58-65. Husman reports that while prior interclub play in OH is known, the prison saw the first match game. He also points out that at least some players knew the New York game from pre-war play in New Orleans.</p> <p>See also W. A. Nash, "Camp, Field and Prison Life" p. 234, 168.</p> <p>See also Benjamin Cooling, "Forts Henry and Donelson" p. 257, stating the POWs played town ball, which cites the prison journal of Captain John Henry Guy at the VA Historical Society; Curran, "John Dooley's Civil War..." p. 295, which has a diary entry on an Aug. 29, 1864 game.</p> <p>See also John Snead Lambdin's "Recollections of my prison Life," in the Magnolia (MS) Gazette Oct. 22, 1880.</p> <p>See also Diary of Lt. William Peel, 11th Mississippi, MS Dept of Archives and History, entries for July 29 and Aug. 28, 1864; D. R. Hundley diary, publsihed in 1874.</p>  +
<p>“Tuesday [September] 27 [1864] pleasant weather, I was detailed for Camp guard the A.M. we had a game of ball this afternoon, I stood two tricks of guard only.”</p> <p>Civil War Diary of Samuel Whitehead, Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center MS collection, Ac #4248. Accessed 6/21 on Google Web search with “’samuel whitehead’ diary” search. The diary covers about May through November 1864. In September the 100<sup>th</sup> OH was at Decatur, GA, about 5 miles east of Atlanta. He was mortally wounded in November.</p>  +
<p>“The prison guard, Captain Hogendoble, struck by a foul ball from a prisoners’ baseball game, approached the batter, drew his pistol, and threatened to ‘blow their d-----d brains out.’”</p> <p>Benton McAdams, “Greybeards in Blue,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Civil War Times</span>, February 1998. Accessed 6/21/09 via Google Web search: “’greybeards in blue’ hogendoble.” The article tells the story of the 37<sup>th</sup> Iowa, comprising many older men, who were assigned in May 1864 to the military prison in Alton, Illinois. The source for this recollection is not provided.</p>  +
<p>“[A] new person being put in command of the inside [of the Texas prison] about the 1<sup>st</sup> of October [1864], made suggestions which the commandant allowed him to carry out, and relieved us ever afterward. He gave us a fine ball ground which was well occupied and proved a blessing.”</p> <p>Major J. M. McCulloch, 77<sup>th</sup> Illinois, as quoted in Washington Davis, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Camp-Fire Chats of the Civil War</span> (Lewis Publishing, Chicago, 1888), page 70. Accessed on Google Books 6/21/09 via “’camp-fire chats’ davis” search. McCulloch does not elaborate on the nature of games played. He had been captured with troops from Ohio and Kentucky as well as Illinois. The prison was at Camp Ford near Tyler TX, about 100 miles E of Dallas.</p> <p>An escapee from Camp Ford arrived in Milwaukee in November and told the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Sentinel </span>about his adventure. “We used to pass time playing checkers, cards, and dominoes. We were let out by twenties on parole to play ball, but so many ran away that the privilege was taken from us.” “Prison Life in Texas – Narrative of an Escaped Prisoner, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Milwaukee</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> Sentinel</span>, November 11, 1864.” Accessed 5/21/09 via Genealogybank subscription.</p>  +
<p>“During some portions of the winter of 1864-’65, in fine weather, the officers and men of the Eleventh often indulged in a friendly game of ball together. As they were playing one day, some general officers passed them on horseback, and one of them was overheard to remark, ‘That’s a good regiment, for the men and officers play ball together.’ Whoever that officer was, he never uttered truer words.”</p> <p>Leander W. Cogswell, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">A History of the Eleventh New Hampshire Regiment</span> (Republican Press Assn, Concord NH, 18911), pages 396-397. From June 1864 to early April 1865, the 11<sup>th</sup> NH was part of the siege of Petersburg VA. The regiment formed in Concord NH.</p>  +
<p>“Washington March 29 65. . . . Put up fence round our Q’rs played wicket ball Evening bought cigars and smoked.” “Monday Apr. 3<sup>rd</sup> Lost and found my Pocket Book Played Wicket Traded watches.” “Tuesday Apr. 4<sup>th</sup> Played ball.”</p> <p>Milo Deering Dailey, Civil War Diary of 1865. Accessed 6/22/09 by Google Web search: “’milo deering dailey.’” The diary covers February through-June 1865. Dailey was with the 112<sup>th</sup> Illinois, which was organized in Peoria IL. The regiment was in North Carolina in early April, closing on Raleigh from the east. Washington NC is about 95 miles E of Raleigh.</p>  +
<p>“My dear wife, We were drawn up in line this afternoon and informed we would be discharged and sent to our Regiments in ten days. We had a gay old time playing ball. . . . You must send me five dollars without fail. I am almost distracted by the want of tobacco.”</p> <p>Letter home from Wheeling, West Virginia, by John R. Irving, May 4, 1865. Irving, in a Massachusetts Cavalry unit, was assigned to General Custer’s Division. <strong>Note: </strong>it is possible that the ellipsis in this rendering omits a bit more detail about the ballplaying. Accessed 6/22/09 by Google Web search “’john r irving’ ‘auction contents.’” The letter is descried under auction #2.1.</p>  +
<p>[Thursday May 4, 1865] “Not much to do in camp. Most of us playing ball.”</p> <p>Civil War Diary of Dr. William McKibbin, covering February to August 1865. Accessed via Genealogybank subscription 5/19/09. McKibbin wrote this entry in Carlisle PA. He mustered out of the service on the next day, and three days later “Ella and I married at 7:00 in the evening.”</p>  +
<p>“Wednesday [May] 17 [1865]: Laid in camp. Boys playing ball. Weather fine and warm with breeze. David reported captured.”</p> <p>Civil War Diary of William Johnston Dean, August 1862 – September 1865. This entry was written near Selma. Alabama. Diary accessed via Google Web search “’william johnston dean’ diary.” Dean was with the 9<sup>th</sup> Minnesota.</p>  +
<p>“Mr Reporter: The game of ball spoke of in the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Gazette</span> on June 5<sup>th</sup>, as between the Model School B. B. Club and the Veteran Corps, is a mistake. The players belonged to the Old Detachment N. J. Vols., and are men detached from different New Jersey Regiments in the field, and have been doing duty at Camp Perrine. The name taken for the organization is the Old Detachment Base Ball Club. W. H. Dodd, Sec’y.”</p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Trenton</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> State</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> Gazette</span>, June 7, 1865. Accessed via Genealogybank, 5/20/09. Camp Perrine was in Trenton.</p>  +
<p>“This afternoon I played ‘base ball’ for four hours a 1<sup>st</sup> baseman in a match game between the Officers of the 12<sup>th</sup> V.R.C. and the Officers of the 24<sup>th</sup> the game – after seven innings – standing in favor of the former club, the score being 53 to 23”</p> <p>Letter, October 2, 1865, from York Amos Woodward, 24<sup>th</sup> Veteran Reserves. A series of Woodward’s letters, written in October and November 1865, contain 9 references to base ball, including a report of a game between the National club of Washington and the Excelsior of Brooklyn [October 9]. Woodward appears to have been in Washington at the time. From an auction offering accessed via Google Web search on 5/19/09.</p>  +
<p>The regimental history of the First Rhode Island Artillery, covering 1861-1865, contains 13 references to ball-playing between August 1863 and January 1864. It also shows several other more general references to playing games, some of them pitting different regiments, starting in August 1861. A General Hayes is mentioned as watching several games, sometimes along with his wife.</p> <p>The most detailed of the ballplaying entries occurred on January 25, 1864, in winter camp near Brandy Station VA: :On the 25<sup>th</sup> we had a fine game of ball in honor of General Hays, who had sent to Washington for balls and bats to enable us to play to good advantage. When the general and his wife came galloping into camp, with a number of officers and ladies, our captain went out to greet them and said: ‘Ah! general, I suppose you would like to see the battery on drill.’ The general quickly replied: ‘No; I want to see them play ball, which they can do better than any men I ever saw.’” Few other entries are more than minimal references. A typical example is for August 21, 1863: “The 21<sup>st</sup> was another fine day. The men continued to engage in different sports, and there were ball games, jumping, putting the shot, and other amusements.”</p> <p>Thomas M. Aldrich, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The History of Battery A: First Regiment Rhode Island Light Artillery</span> (Snow and Farnham, Providence, 1904), pages 272-273. Accessed 6/28/09 on Google Books via “’history of battery a’ aldrich” search. In August 1863 the regiment was back in Virginia from the Battle of Gettysburg, and in January it was in winter camp near Brandy Station. The Hays passage appears without citation in Kirsch, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball in Blue and Gray</span>, page 41. Millen reports that Aldrich and a member of the 13<sup>th</sup> MA “believed or were thought to have believed, based on their track record of wins in the army, that their teams could have beaten any of the professional teams of the 1890. She does not give an original source for this, but cites L. Fielding, “Sport: The Meter Stick of the Civil War Soldier,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Canadian Journal of History of Sport</span>, May 1978, pp 17-18.</p>  
<p>“One after another, the men rapidly died off. On the 26<sup>th</sup> of September, some of the prisoners obtained permission to play ball. One of them, in chasing the ball, ventured within a few feet of the camp lines, when he was short by the guards, and nearly killed.”</p> <p>“The Death of Lieut. Matthew Hayes, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">New York Times</span>, January 1864. Accessed 5/21/09 via genealogy subscription. The story depicts health conditions in Camp Groce, near Houston TX.</p>  +
<p>“Saturday, November 21, 1863. Fine and cool. The Base Ball match comes off and the 91<sup>st</sup> gets beat by two runs and the[y] come home jolly.”</p> <p>From a telephone auction offering that has this description: “Fascinating personal journal was carried on the person of 91<sup>st</sup> New York Volunteer Infantry Private Edwin Keay during the Union Army campaign of 1863 through the bayous and battlefields of Louisiana. . . Diary is perhaps most valuable, however, for its several mentions of the game of baseball, which are all but impossible to find in journals from the war . . . . ‘Thursday, December 3 . . . The new bats and balls have come up and the match takes place this afternoon . . . the 91<sup>st</sup> gets beat.’” Accessed at the Giamatti Center of the Baseball Hall of Fame [Civil War file] on June 26, 2009. The auction clip is not dated. The 91<sup>st</sup> was organized in Albany. It was garrisoned at New Orleans for much of 1863 and early 1864. <strong>Note:</strong> does the December entry imply that the Union Army supplied bats and balls to the troops? <strong>Note:</strong> It appears that other baseball-related entries are in the diary. Can we find it? A copy of a Keay diray, possibly a later one, is reportedly held as item MDMS-5433 in the Maryland Manuscript Collection [Keay spent some of 1865 stationed in Baltimore].</p>  +
<p>“657a  Scarce Civil War era inscribed Massachusetts style trophy baseball . . . .  Black leather 9” diameter four piece lemon peel style baseball with a period inscription on two side panels, ‘22<sup>nd</sup> MASS REGIMENT UNION Feb 2, 1864 U.S.A.’  The 22<sup>nd</sup>Mass. Regiment fought in many of the War’s most important battles, including Chancellorsville, Gainsville [sic] and Gettysburg. . . .”  The baseball may also be considered as a ‘true’ example of a ball created specifically under the rules of the ‘Massachusettsgame.’  In February 1864 it was camped at Beverly Ford VA, evidently near Brandy Station.</p> <p>From an undated and unidentified auction catalog page accessed 6/26/09 at the Giamatti Center of the Baseball Hall of Fame [Civil War file].  The 22<sup>nd</sup> MA formed north of Boston.  <strong>Note:</strong>  are we sure that the lemon peel style was closely associated with the MA game?</p>  +
<p>“I remember helping to organize for our own regiment as baseball nine which won the championship of the read-guard, defeating some active nines from Connecticut and Massachusetts. For our regimental team I served as pitcher and I believe as captain.</p> <p>“The baseball contests were, however, brought suddenly to a close through an unfortunate misunderstanding with the Rebels, upon whose considerateness in this matter of sports we had, it appeared, placed too much confidence. We found no really satisfactory ground for baseball within the lines of our fortifications and, after experimenting with a field just outside our earthworks, we concluded that risk of using a better field which was just outside the line of the pickets. It was, of course, entirely contrary not only to ordinary regulations but to special orders prohibiting any men from going through the picket lines. It was particularly absurd for men without arms to run any such risk. I do not now understand how the officers of the 176<sup>th</sup>, including the major commanding, could have permitted themselves to incur such a breach of discipline, but the thing was done and trouble resulted therefrom.</p> <p>“We were winning a really beautiful game from the 13<sup>th</sup> Connecticut, a game in which our own pickets, who were the only spectators, found themselves much interested. Suddenly there came a scattering fire of which the three outfielders caught the brunt: the centre field was hit and was captured, the left and right field managed to get into our lines. Our pickets fell forward with all possible promptness as the players fell back. The Rebel attack, which was made with merely a skirmish line, was repelled without serious difficulty, but we had lost not only our centre field but our baseball and it was the only baseball in Alexandria.</p> <p>G. H. Putnam, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Memories of My Youth 1844-1865</span> (G. P. Putnam’s Sons, New York, 1914), pp 48-49. Accessed 6/28/09 on Google Books via “’my youth’ putnam” search. The 176<sup>th</sup> was part of the Red River Campaign, and Alexandria LA is in mid-Louisiana, about equidistant from Baton Rouge and Shreveport. The 176<sup>th</sup>, raised in New York City, was at Alexandria LA from mid-April to mid-May of 1864. The 13<sup>th</sup> CT, organized in Hartford, was there April 30 to May 10. Kirsch and Millen both carry the meat of this colorful passage. Millen identifies Putnam with the 114<sup>th</sup> NY.</p>  
<p>“[The 10<sup>th</sup> and?] the 2<sup>nd</sup> RI are to have a grand match of Base Ball to day. a few days ago they played a game of Wicket with the 37<sup>th</sup> and our boys beat them handsomely . . . .[Source letter not available on Google Books.]</p> <p>“Our Regiment played another match game of Base Ball with the 2<sup>nd</sup> RI to day and beat them as usual. They played a second game of Wicket with the 37<sup>th</sup> last Saturday and beat them again worse than the first time.</p> <p>“I was out with the Officers of our Regt and the 7<sup>th</sup> this morning playing Wicket when I got hit in the eye with the ball which has blacked it most beautifully. My eye is ornamented with a black spot as big as a silver dollar, if you can remember the size of one of those, I had almost forgotten it.” The last two passages are from an April 26, 1864 letter home.</p> <p>Charles Harvey Brewster, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">When This Cruel War is Over: the Civil War Letters of Charles Harvey Brewster</span> (UMass Press, 1992), pages 284 and 288. Accessed 7/709 on Google Books [in limited preview], via “brewster ‘when this cruel’” search. From the apparent context, this passage appears in a chapter covering March to June 1864, when the 10<sup>th</sup> MA was near Brandy Station VA. The regiment was from Springfield in western Massachusetts, and the 37<sup>th</sup> MA formed in Pittsfield MA.</p>  +
<p>“And the game might become so rough as to necessitate precautionary steps. ‘Frank Ezell was ruled out,’ wrote a Texas Ranger in his diary, because ‘he could throw harder and straighter than any man in the company. He came very neat knocking the stuffing out of three or four of the boys, and the boys swore they would not play with him.’”</p> <p>Bell Irvin Wiley, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Common Soldier in the Civil War</span> (Grosset and Dunlap, New York, 1952), Book Two, The Life of Johnny Reb, page 159. Wiley’s end-note is, evidently, “diary of D[esmond]. P[ulaski]. Hopkins, entry of March 15, 1862, typescript, University of Texas.” Neither Hopkins’ unit nor its March 1862 location is noted. </p>  +
<p>Over five years after the fact, the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Ball Players’ Chronicle</span> evidently dug up an old CW letter and published it:</p> <p>“Camp Crooke, July 20<sup>th</sup> 1862. We had a good afternoon’s sport here yesterday. The selected nine of the 4<sup>th</sup> N. Y. V. came to our camp, confident of victory, to play us a game of base ball. . . . They played a very strong game and had a tip-top pitcher and catcher, but they were outbatted , our boys doing some tall things in that line. Lieut. Fuller treated them handsomely, and they departed in good spirits, though feeling a little sore at their defeat, having hitherto beaten every other nine they have played against.” A box score of the regulation 16-11 game was included. The article also reports on an earlier match between the 13<sup>th</sup>’s right wing and left wing, and a shorter impromptu contest between the staff officers and line officers of the 13<sup>th</sup>, “the latter [game] was a rich match, full of all the attractive features of muffinism.”</p> <p>“Base Ball Reminiscences,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Ball Players’ Chronicle</span>, November 28, 1867. From the Giamatti Research Center at the Baseball Hall of Fame, Civil War folder, accessed June 2009. The 13<sup>th</sup> was evidently a three-month regiment that mustered out in September 1862. The 4<sup>th</sup> was from New York City.</p>  +
<p>“There was, also, no lack of athletic sports, such as jumping, pitching quoits, wrestling, etc., with now and then, in the regiments favorably stationed in forts or on garrison duty, a game of base ball, although this game was not then, as now [1897], the craze of the day.”</p> <p>Asa. W. Bartlett, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of the Twelfth Regiment, New Hampshire Volunteers</span> (Ira C. Evans, Concord NH, 1897), page 356. Accessed 7/8/09 on Google Books via “bartlett ‘twelfth regiment’” search. This passage is a generic account of camp life, and seems to have no time period associated with it; in fact, it is not entirely clear from this account that the 12<sup>th</sup> NH itself played the game. The 12<sup>th</sup> saw major battles including Chancellorsville and Gettysburg, and ended the war in the trenches around Richmond.</p>  +
<p>“The New Orleans boys also carried base balls in their knapsacks. A few of them found themselves in a Federal prison stockade on the Mississippi. The formed a club. Confederate prisoners from Georgia and South Carolina watched them, got the hang of it and organized for rivalry. In the East and West Series that followed the West won triumphantly by unrecorded scores.”</p> <p>Will Irwin, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Collier’s Weekly</span>, May 8, 1909, as attributed in A. G. Spalding, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">America’s National Game</span> (American Sports Publishing, 1911), pp. 96-97. Kirsch also cites the Irwin source. <strong>Note:</strong> can we deduce what prison is described, and obtain an original source? Were the New Orleans soldiers prisoners [and the “West” team?] or prison guards? Are there clues [or other stories] to be found in the original Collier’s piece?</p>  +
<p>“[A] wheelbarrow race and a contest to catch two greased pigs rounded out the Christmas Day festivities for a soldier from Maryland, after he witnessed the officers of his company play three innings of baseball.”</p> <p>Patricia Millen, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">From Pastime to Passion: Baseball and the Civil War</span> (Heritage, 2001), page 23. Millen’s citation: John Cumming, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Runners and Walkers: A Nineteenth Century Sports Chronicle</span> (Regnary Gateway, Chicago, 1981), page 65. Full text of this book is unavailable online July 2009: a snippet view on Google Books via “’runners and walkers’ 1981” search does not include a reference to the officers’ game, nor indicate a time or year for a Christmas celebration.</p>  +
<p>A large drawing reposing in the Civil War file at the Giamatti Research Center at the Baseball Hall of Fame shows nine men in uniform playing a game conspicuously located on a diamond-shaped infield. The Caption: Camp of Battery B, 1<sup>st</sup> NJ Artil. Near Brandy Station Va.” The drawing, noted as “never-before published,” is reproduced opposite page 25 in Patricia Millan, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">From Pastime to Passion</span> (Heritage, 2001). The ballplaying depiction is on the primitive side, and reveals little about the game played. There appear to be two balls in play, and one may be served to the batsman in a gentle toss from a soldier standing next to the batsman. The 1<sup>st</sup> NJ Artillery formed at Hoboken NJ in 1861. It fought mostly in Virginia, and its winter camp for ’63-’64 was near Brandy Station.</p>  +
<p>“On Roanoke Island Hawkins' Zouaves formed two scrub teams. A young volunteer pitcher won for his side by a weak, puzzling delivery which baffled the batsmen. It was Alphonse Martin, first in line of great American pitchers.”</p> <p>A. G. Spalding, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">America’s National Game </span>(American Sports Publishing, 1911), page 97. Available online via Google Books. Roanoke Island is on the North Carolina Coast near Kitty Hawk NC, and about 80 miles SE of Norfolk VA.. Hawkin’s Zouaves were the 9<sup>th</sup> NY Regiment, which was organized in New York City and was at Roanoke Island in the early part of 1862. Alphonse “Phonney” Martin was then not yet 17. Known for throwing tricky pitches, “Old Slow Ball” Martin pitched for Troy, Brooklyn, and the New York Mutuals in 1872 and 1873. Spalding gives no source for this note, which may well have been received via personal communication.</p> <p>The New York Sunday Mercury, April 20, 1862 mentions a match on Roanoke by Company F of this regiment.  Another match is reported in same, June 8, 1862.[ba]</p>  +
<p>Spring 1863: “The boredom became unbearable as the winter wore on. Mud was everywhere, limiting outside activities . . . . By the end of February, they walker a mile for wood, and the distance increased each day. During the long days the men also played chess, checkers, cards, and, when weather permitted, baseball and other athletic pursuits.”</p> <p>Spring 1864: “The men played baseball and football as the weather moderated. ‘The exercise will do more toward restoring health in the regiment than all the blue pills in the medical department,’ noted Lucien Voorhees. Some men secured boxing gloves, and daily fights were all the rage.</p> <p>Bradley M. Gottfried, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Kearney’s Own: The History of the First New Jersey Brigade During the Civil War</span> (Rutgers U Press, 2005), pages 100 and 157. Gottfried does not document these observations, other than briefly noting [p. 107] the 1863 game between the 2<sup>nd</sup> and the 26<sup>th</sup> Regiments noted in file [[CW-66]]. In 1863 the Brigade wintered at White Oak Church near Falmouth VA. Accessed 6/14/09 on Google Books via “’kearny’s own’” search; available in limited preview format.</p>  +
<p>“We went back to our camp and stayed there all winter and until late April 1864. Only doing picket duty on the banks of the [Rapidan] River and playing base ball. During the winter, we fought a snow-ball battle with the Brigade of North Carolina and Virginia.”</p><p>Memoirs of W. P. Snakenberg, Wilson, North Carolina, Private, “Louisiana Tigers.” Provided by Michael Aubrecht May 15, 2006. Snakenberg was from Louisiana, and had been a member of the Hope Base Ball and LaQuarte Club, which played weekly in Gretna [across the river from New Orleans]. </p>  +
<p>From an auction listing:  “Includes Civil Diary of H. E. Randell of Co. L, 3<sup>rd</sup> Regiment of the New York Cavalry . . . .   The multi-page hand-written diary gives a highly literate soldier’s accounts of life in the field during the Civil War.  Randell’s entry for February 2, 1864 reads, in part, ‘Played Base Ball nearly all day and experienced a ‘chapter’ of accidents.  Got a severe blow with ball to the face, and a finger almost broken . . . for it is a healthful sport and quite exciting.’  Randell’s reference to being struck by the ball also corroborates the contention that the game, played between New York and Massachusetts regiments, was played under Massachusetts rules.”</p> <p>From an undated and unidentified auction catalog page accessed 6/26/09 at the Giamatti Center of the Baseball Hall of Fame [Civil War file].  The 3<sup>rd</sup> NY Cavalry formed in the Rochester/Syracuse region of upstate NY, where the old-fashioned game of ball[believed to be like the Massachusetts game] had been played before the War.  The 3<sup>rd</sup> Regiment appears to have been in North Carolina in February 1864.  <strong>Note: </strong>the diary is listed in the same lot as the trophy ball noted in file CW-140, and the cited diary entry [2/2/64] is the same as is written on that ball.  The two items may be related, but the distance between the two regiments needs to be addressed.</p>  +
B
<p>"He will surely wind you around and around, and throw you like a ball into a large country. There you will die . . . " <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Isaiah 22:18.</span></p><p>The word "ball" appears only twice in the Bible, and the other one refers to the ball of the foot of a beast (Leviticus 11:27). The Isaiah usage was the inspiration for a January 1905 news article headed, "Isaiah's prophesies were written [in Hebrew] late in the eighth century BC.</p>  +
1
<p>"In al this world nis a murier lyf/Thanne is a yong man wythouten a wyf,/For he may lyven wythouten strif/In every place wher-so he go.</p> <p>"In every place he is loved over alle/Among maydens grete and smale-/In daunsyng, in pipyngs, and rennyng at the balle,/In every place wher-so he go.</p> <p>"They leten lighte by housebonde-men/Whan they at the balle renne;/They casten ther love to yonge men/In every place wher-so they go.</p> <p>"Then seyn maydens, "Farewel, Jakke,/Thy love is pressed al in thy pak;/Thou berest thy love bihynde thy back,/In every place wher-so thou go."</p> <p>Robert Stevick, ed., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">One Hundred Middle English Lyrics</span> (U of Illinois Press, 1994), page 141. Posted to 19CBB on 11/14/2008 by Richard Hershberger. Richard reports that Stevick dates this poem—#81 of the 100 collected in this volume—to c. 1470. He interprets the lyric's 'running at the ball' as 'stool ball, probably,' but stow ball [resembling field hockey] seems apter. Richard also points out that "for the sake of precision, it should be noted that this volume is intended for student use and normalizes the spellings."</p>  +
<p>There is "an unconfirmed report which was published in the beginning of the Century quoting one Joseph Iscanus, of Exeter, as having referred to stoolball in 1189, but no satisfactory evidence that this quotation was genuine." National Stoolball Association, "A Brief History of Stoolball," page 2. This mimeo, available in NSA files, has no date or author, but has one internal reference to an 1989 source, so it must be fairly recent. It contains no hint on the source of the 1189 claim or how it has been assessed. <b>Note: </b> Is it now possible to further pursue this claim using online resources? The 1189 claim appears nowhere else in available writings about stoolball.</p> <p>However, some cite a Joseph Iscanus couplet: "The youth at cricks did play/Throughout the livelong [or "merry"] day/" as an indicator of early cricket. However, the online source of this rhyme does not give a source. Very murky, no? [The rhyme is quoted as early as the 1860 edition of <u>The Cricketer’s Manual</u>, and ten years earlier in Bell’s Life in a letter from “Alexis” on the subject “When Was Cricket Invented?” ] <b>Query:</b> what do leading cricket historians say of this alleged reference?</p>  +
<p> </p> <p>A thirteenth century Spanish drawing appears to depict a female figure swinging at a ball with a bat.</p> <p>The book <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Spain</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;">: A History in Art</span> by Bradley Smith (Doubleday, 1971) includes a plate that appears to show "several representations of baseball figures and some narrative." The work is dated to 1255, the period of King Alfonso.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>According to a manuscript written in the 1600s, Robert Dudley, the Earl of Leicester and his "Trayne" "came to Wotton, and thence to Michaelwood Lodge . . . and thence went to Wotton Hill, where hee paid a match at stobball."</p> <p>Internal evidence places ths event in the fifteenth year of Queen Elizabeth’s reign, which would be 1547-48. Elizabeth I named her close associate [once rumored to be her choice as husband] Dudley to became Earl of Leicester in the 1564, and he died in 1588.</p>  +
<p>Trevithick, Alan, "Trapball," in David Levinson and Karen Christopher, <u>Encyclopedia of World Sport: From Ancient Times to the Present</u> [Oxford University Press, 1996], page 421.</p>  +
<p>While others see cricket as taking its name from the term for a staff, or stick, "[T]he famous <i>New English Dictionary</i> favors a word used as a [game's] target: <u>criquet</u>. Du Cange quotes this word in a manuscript of 1478: 'The suppliant came to a place where a game of ball (<i>jeu de boule</i>) was played, near to a stick (<i>attaché</i>) or <i>criquet,'</i> and defines <i>criquet</i> as 'a stick which serves as a target in a ball game.'"</p> <p>Du Cange, <u>Glossarium Mediae ET Infimae Latinatis</u> [Paris, 1846], Vol. 4: Mellat, Vol. 5 Pelotas. Per Henderson ref 48.</p>  +
<p>A Westminster statute, made to curb gambling by rowdy soldiers upon their return from battle, reportedly imposed sanctions for "playing at cloish, ragle, half-bowls, handyn and handoute, quekeborde, and if any person permits even others to play at such games in his house or yard, he is to be imprisoned for three years; as also he who plays at such game, to forfeit ten pounds to the king, and be imprisoned for two years."</p> <p><u>Observations Upon the Statutes, Chiefly the More Ancient, from Magna Charta to the Twenty-first [Year] of James the First</u>, etc. (Daines Barrington, London, 1766), page 335.</p> <p>The author adds: "This is, perhaps, the most severe law which has ever been made in any country against gaming, and some of the forbidden sports seem to have been manly exercises, particularly the <i>handing</i> and <i>handoute</i>, which I should suppose to be a kind of cricket, as the term <i>hands</i> is still retained in that game [for what would later be known as innings].</p> <p>An1864 writer expands further: "Half-bowls was played with pins and one-half of a sphere of wood, upon the floor of a room. It is said to be still played in Hertfordshire under the name of rolly-polly. Hand-in and hand-out was a ring-game, played by boys and girls, like kissing-ring [footnote 31]." John Harland<u>, A Volume of Court Leet Records of the Manor of Manchester in the Sixteenth Century</u> (Chetham Society, 1864), p 34. Accessed 1/27/10 via Google Books search ("court leet" half-bowls). "Roly-poly" and hand-in/hand-out are sometimes later described as having running/plugging features preserved in cat games and early forms of base ball. Thus, these prohibitions may or may not include games resembling baseball. <b>Query:</b> Can residents of Britain help us understand this ancient text?</p>  +
<p>An Act of Parliament forbade unlawful games as conducive to disorder and as discouraging the practice of archery. The games that were forbidden, under penalty of two years' imprisonment or a fine of ten pounds, were these: quoits, football, closh, kails, half-bowls, hand-in and hand-out, chequer-board.</p> <p>This Act is cited as Rot. Parl. VI, 188. Information provided by John Thorn, email of 2/27/2008.</p> <p><b>Caveat:</b> The list of proscribed games is similar to the Edward III's prohibition [see #1363.1 above] adding "hand-in and hand-out" in place of a game translated as "club-ball" or "stick-ball." We are uncertain as to whether hand-in and hand-out is the ancestor of a safe-haven game.</p>  +
B
<p>[A]“The earliest known references to <em>seker-hemat</em> (translation: “batting the ball”) as a fertility rite and ritual of renewal are inscribed in pyramids dating to 2400 BC.”  Egyptologist Peter Piccione reads Pyramid Texts Spell 254 as commanding a pharaoh to cross the heavens and “strike the ball” in the meadow of the sacred Apis bull.</p> <p>[B]Piccione’s reading seems consistent with Robert Henderson’s identification of ancient Egypt as the source of ballplaying: “It is the purpose of this book to show that all modern games played with bat and ball descend from one common source: an ancient fertility rite observed by Priest–Kings in the Egypt of the Pyramids.”</p> <p> </p>  +
1
<p>According to an otherwise unidentified clip in the Origins file at the Giamatti Center, an AP article datelined Bucharest Romania [and which appeared in the <em>Oneonta Times</em> on March 29, 1990], the still popular Romanian game of oina can be traced back to a [unspecified] document dating to the year 1310. The game itself "was invented by shepherds in the first century."</p> <p>The article is evidently based on an interview with Cristian Costescu, who sees baseball as "the American pastime derived from the ancient game of oina." Oina reportedly has eleven players per side, an all-out-side-out rule, tossed pitches, nine bases describing a total basepath of 120 yards, plugging of baserunners, the opportunity for the fielding side to score points, and a bat described as similar to a cricket bat. Costescu is reported to have served as head of the Romanian Oina Federation in the years when baseball was banned in Romania as "a capitalist sport."</p> <p>The <em>Oneonta Times</em> headline is "Play Oina! Romanians Say Their Game Inspired Creation of Baseball." <strong>Note:</strong> Can we find additional documentation of oina's rules and history? Is the 1310 documentation available in English translation? Have others followed the recent fate of oina and the work of Costescu?</p>  +
B
<p>Wall inscriptions in Egyptian royal tombs depict games using bats and balls.</p> <p>According to Egyptologist Peter Piccione, "A wall relief at the temple of Deir et-Bahari showing Thutmose III playing under the watchful eye of the goddess Hathor dates to 1460 BC. Priests are depicted catching the balls . . . this was really a game."</p> <p> </p>  +
1
<p>David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u> [page 165], cites the Myrc work, "early poetic instruction of priests," as "How thow schalt thy paresche preche," London. It warns "Bal and bares and suche play/ Out of chyrcheyorde put a-way." A note reportedly inserted by another author included among the banned games "tenessyng handball, fott ball stoil ball and all manner other games out churchyard." <b>Note:</b> can we determine when the "other author" wrote in "stoil ball? This may count as the first time "stool ball" [virtually] appeared.</p>  +
6
<p>Mulling on whether the ball came to England in Anglo-Saxon days, Joseph Strutt reports "the author of a manuscript in Trinity College, Oxford, written in the fourteenth century and containing the life of Saint Cuthbert, says of him, that when young, 'he pleyde atte balle with the children that his felawes [fellows] were.' On what authority this information is established I cannot tell."</p> <p> </p>  +
1
<p>"The [1301 - see below] illustration is a very early depiction of the game we know as baseball, but it's probably not the first. In 1964, a writer named Harry Simmons cited an English bat and ball picture from a genealogical roll of the Kings of England up to Henry III, who died in 1269."</p> <p><u>Baltimore Sun</u> article on the Ghistelle Calendar [see entry for 1301], April 6, 1999, page 1E.</p>  +
B
<p>Ancient cultures—Lydians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, and Egyptians—play primitive ball games for recreation, as fertility rites and in religious rituals.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>The Greeks, famous for their athletics, played several ball games. In fact the Greek gymnasium ["palaistra"] was often known to include a special room ["sphairiteria"] for ballplaying . . . a "sphaira" being a ball. Pollux [ca 180 AD] lists a number of children's ball games, including games that loosely resemble very physical forms of keepaway and rugby, and the playing of a complicated form of catch, one that involved feints to deceive other players.</p> <p>The great physician Galen wrote [ca. 180 AD] especially fondly of ballplaying and its merits, and seems to have seen it as an adult activity. He advised that "the most strenuous form of ball playing is in no way inferior to other exercises." Turning to milder forms of ball play, he said "I believe that in this form ball playing is also superior to all the other exercises." His partiality to ballplaying stemmed in part from its benefit for the whole body, not just the legs or arms, as was the case for running and wrestling.</p> <p>As far as we are aware, Greek ball games did not include any that involved running among bases or safe havens, or any that involved propelling a ball with a club or stick (or hands).</p> <p> </p>  +
1
<p>According to a 2007 article in a Canadian magazine, there is poetry in which a milkmaid calls to another, "Oi, Rosie, coming out to Potter's field for a whack at the old stool?" The article continues: "The year was 1393. The place was Sussex . . . the game was called stoolball, which was probably a direct descendant of stump-ball".</p> <p>The article, by Ruth Tendulkar, is titled "The Great-Grandmother of Baseball and Cricket," and appeared in the May/June 2007 issue of <em>The Canadian Newcomers Magazine.</em> As of 2007, we have been unable to find additional source details from the author or the magazine.</p> <p> </p> <p> </p>  +
3
<p>In his <em>Confessions</em>, Augustine of Hippo - later St. Augustine - recalls his youth in Northern Africa, where his father served as a Roman official. "I was disobedient, not because I chose something better than [my parents and elders] chose for me, but simply from the love of games. For I liked to score a fine win at sport or to have my ears tickled by the make-believe of the stage." [Book One, chapter 10] In Book One, chapter 9, Augustine had explained that "we enjoyed playing games and were punished for them by men who played games themselves. However, grown up games are known as 'business. . . . Was the master who beat me himself very different from me? If he were worsted by a colleague in some petty argument, he would be convulsed in anger and envy, much more so than I was when a playmate beat me at a game of ball."</p> <p> </p>  +
1
<p>Henderson: "The testimony of Beleth and Durandus, both eminently qualified witnesses, clearly indicates that in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries the ball had found a place for itself in the Easter celebrations of the Church." In fact, Beleth and Durandus had both opposed the practice, seeing it as the intrusion of pagan rites into church rites. "There are some Churches in which it is customary for the Bishops and Archbishops to play in the monasteries with those under them, even to stoop to the game of ball" [Beleth, 1165]. "In certain places in our country, prelates play games with their own clerics on Easter in the cloisters, or in the Episcopal Palaces, even so far as to descend to the game of ball" [Durandus, 1286].</p> <p><strong>Note:</strong> This source appears to be Henderson, Robert W., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Ball, Bat and Bishop: The Origins of Ball Games</span> [Rockport Press, 1947], pp. 37-38. Page 37 refers to an 1165 prohibition and page 38 mentions 12<sup>th</sup> and 13<sup>th</sup> Century Easter rites. Henderson identifies two sources for the page 38 statement: Beleth, J., "Rationale Divinorum Officiorum," in Migne, J. P., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Patrologiae Curius Completus</span>, Ser 2, Vol. 106, pp. 575-591 [Paris, 1855], and Durandus, G., "Rationale Divinorum Officiorum," Book VI, Ch 86, Sect. 9 [Rome, 1473]...Henderson does not say that these rites involved the use of sticks.</p>  +
<p>"A manuscript of 1344 in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (No. 264) shows a game of club and ball. One player throws that ball to another who holds a vicious-looking club. He defends a round object which resembles a stool but with a base instead of legs. . . ". "In the course of time a second stool was added, which obviously made a primitive form of cricket. Now a stool was also called a "cricket" and it is possible that the name cricket came from the three-legged stool . . . " "We may summarize: The game and name of cricket stem back to ancient games played with a curved stick and ball, starting with <i>la soule</i>, and evolving in England through stoolball . . .".</p> <p>Henderson, Robert W., <u>Ball, Bat and Bishop: The Origins of Ball Games</u> [Rockport Press, 1947], pp. 130-131. Henderson's ref 17 is Bodleian Library, <u>Douce MSS</u> 264, ff 22, 44, 63.<b> </b> Cox's 1903 edition of Strutt includes this drawing and its reference. <b>Note:</b> do other observers agree with Henderson on whether and how stoolball evolved into cricket?</p>  +
<p>"Stoolball is a ball game that dates back to the 14<sup>th</sup> century, originating in Sussex [in southern England]. It may be an ancestor of cricket (a game it resembles), baseball, and rounders. Traditionally it was played be milkmaids who used their milking stools as 'wickets.' . . ." Later forms of the game involved running between two wickets, but "[o]riginally the batsman simply had to defend his stool from each ball with his hand and would score a point for each delivery until the stool was hit. The game later evolved to include runs and bats."</p> <p>Source: Wikipedia entry on "Stoolball," accessed 1/25/2007. <b>Note:</b> this source does not credit bittle-battle [see entry 1086.1] as an earlier form of stoolball. It gives no citations for the evidence of the founding date. The Wikipedia entry is compatible with entry #1330.1, below, but evidently does not credit 1330 as the likely time of stoolball's appearance.</p>  +
<p>"The recreations prohibited by proclamation in the reign of Edward III, exclusive of the games of chance, are thus specified; the throwing of stones, wood, or iron; playing at hand-ball, foot-ball, club-ball, and camucam, which I take to have been a species of goff . . . ." Edward III reigned from 1327 to 1377. The actual term for "club-ball" in the proclamation was, evidently, "bacculoream."</p> <p>This appears to be one of only two direct references to "club-ball" in the literature. See #1794.2, below.</p> <p><strong>Caveat</strong>: David Block argues that, contrary to Strutt's contention [see #1801.1, below], club ball may not be the common ancestor of cricket and other ballgames. See David Block, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball Before We Knew It,</span> pages 105-107 and 183-184. Block says that "pilam bacculoream" translates as "ball play with a stick or staff." <strong>Note:</strong> We seem not to really know what "camucam" was. Nor, of course, how club ball was played, since the term could have denoted a form of tennis or field hockey or and early form of stoolball or cricket. Edward II had issued a ban of his own in 1314, regarding football.</p>  +
<p>Scholars report that the <u>Chronicle of Britain</u> [1205] contained the words "Summe heo driuen balles wide . . ." which they see as "the first known use of the word <i>ball</i> in the sense of a globular body that is played with." The source? Old Norse, by way of Middle English. [Old High German had used <i>ballo</i> and <i>pallo</i>, but the English didn't use "ball" in those days.] The source does not say whether people in England used some other term for their rolling playthings prior to 1205.</p> <p>Source: Wikipedia entry on "ball," accessed 5/31/2006.</p>  +
B
<p>"Recent excavations near Cairo, Egypt, have brought to light small balls of leather and others of wood obviously used in some outdoor sport, and probably dating back to at least 2000 years before Christ. These may be the oldest balls in existence. Hence Egypt maybe the birthplace of the original ball game whatever it was. We know, however that the Greeks and Romans played ball at a remote period. We do not know the exact nature of any of these ancient games, Egyptian, Greek, or Roman."</p> <p> </p>  +
1
<p>"Stoolball was played in England as early as 1330, when William Pagula, Vicar of Winkfield, near Windsor, wrote in Latin a poem of instructions to parish priests, advising them to forbid the playing of all games of ball in churchyards: "Bats and bares and suche play/Out of chyrche-yorde put away."</p> <p>Henderson, Robert W., <u>Ball, Bat and Bishop: The Origins of Ball Games</u> [Rockport Press, 1947], p. 74. <b>Note:</b> The Vicar's caution was translated in 1450 by a Canon, John Myrc. Henderson's ref 120 is Mirk [sic], J., "Instructions to Parish Priests," <u>Early English Text Society</u>, Old Series 31, p. 11 [London, 1868]. A contemporary of Myrc in 1450 evidently identified the Vicar's targets as including stoolball. Block [p. 165] identifies the original author as William de Pagula. Writing in 1886, T. L. Kington Oliphant identifies "bares" as prisoner's base: "There is the term "bace pleye," whence must come the "prisoner's base;" this in Myrc had appeared as the game of "bares." Kington Oliphant does not elaborate on this claim, and does not comment on the accompanying term "bats" in the original. The 1886 reference was provided by John Thorn, 2/24/2008</p>  +
<p>Stool ball, a stick and ball game and a forerunner of rounders and cricket, is apparently mentioned in the Domesday Book as "bittle-battle."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>A letter written by Robert Braybroke laid out the palpable risks of ball-playing: "Certain [boys], also, good for nothing in their insolence and idleness, instigated by evil minds and busying themselves rather in doing harm than good, throw and shoot stones, arrows, and different kinds of missiles at the rooks, pigeons, and other birds nesting in the walls and porches of the church and perching [there]. Also they play ball inside and outside the church and engage in other destructive games there, breaking and greatly damaging the glass windows and the stone images of the church . . . .This they do not without great offense to God and our church and to the prejudice and injury of us as well as to the grave peril of their souls." And the sanction for such play? "We . . . proclaim solemnly that any malefactors whatever of this kind [including churchyard merchants as well as young ballplayers] whom it is possible to catch in the aforesaid actions after this our warning have been and are excommunicated . . . ."</p> <p>Crow, Martin M., and Clair C. Olson, eds., "Chaucer's World" [Columbia University Press, New York, 1948], pp. 48-49. Submitted by John Thorn, 10/12/2004.</p>  +
8
<p>Ching Tsung was the new Chinese emperor at the age of 15. "As soon as he could escape from the morning levee, the young Emperor rushed off to play ball. His habits were well known in the city, and in the summer of 824 someone suggested to a master-dyer named Chang Shao that, as a prank, he should slip into the Palace, lie on the Emperor's couch and eat his dinner, 'for nowadays he is always away, playing ball or hunting.'" The prank was carried out, but those prankish dyers . . . well, they died as a result.</p> <p> </p>  +
1
<p>A 1915 book on ancient British schools includes a drawing dated circa 1310. It shows two players, one clad in a garment with broad horizontal stripes. Both players hold clubs, and the player in stripes appears ready to swing at a melon-sized ball. The other player appears to be preparing to fungo the ball . . . or, conceivably, toss it with his left hand, to the striped player. The illustration's caption is "A Game of Ball, Stripes vs. Plain, c. 1310." The British Museum's documentation: MS Royal 10 E. iv, f. 94 b. </p> <p>Posted by Mark Aubrey to the 19CBB listserve on 1/10/2008. The 1915 source, available in full text on Google Books, is A. F. Leach, <i>The Schools of Medieval England</i> (Macmillan, New York, 1915), on the unnumbered page following p. 140.</p>  +
<p>Cashman, Richard, "Cricket," in David Levinson and Karen Christopher, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Encyclopedia of World Sport: From Ancient Times to the Present</span> [Oxford University Press, 1996], page 87.</p>  +
<p>A manuscript obtained in 1999 by the Walters Art Gallery in Baltimore appears to show a batted-ball game played by two young persons. The manuscript, called the Calendar of the Ghistelles Hours, dates from 1301. It is a small monthly calendar of saints' days from a monastery in the town of Ghistelles, in southwestern Flanders. The illustration is for the month of September.</p> <p>Schoettler, Carl, "The Old, Old, Old Ball Game," <u>Baltimore</u> <u>Sun</u>, April 6 1999, page 1E.</p>  +
9
<p>Mayan Indians play stick and ball games in ceremonial courts in Chichen Itza, Mexico</p> <p><b>Note:</b> This source may be Henderson, Robert W., <u>Ball, Bat and Bishop: The Origins of Ball Games</u> [Rockport Press, 1947], p. 201. And Henderson's source may be his ref 53, Effler, L. R., <u>The Ruins of Chichen Itza</u> [Toledo, Ohio], pp 19 - 21. However, Henderson's account of the game played at Chichen Itza is not dated to 900 AD, or connected with a stick, so another source may be preferable.</p>  +
1
<p>"Parisian legislators were more sympathetic with regard to games than their English contemporaries. Even the Founder of the Cisterian College of St Bernard contemplated that permission might be obtained for games, though not before dinner or after the bell rang for vespers. A sixteenth century code of statutes for the College of Tours, while recording the complaints of the neighbors about the noise made by the scholars playing ball ('de insolentiis, exclamationibus et ludis palmariis dictorum scholarium, qui ludent . . . pilis durissimis') permitted the game under less noisy conditions ('pilis seu scopes mollibus et manu, ac cum silentio et absque clamoribus tumultuosis.')</p> <p>Rait, Robert S., <u>Life in the Medieval University</u> [Cambridge University Press, 1912], p. 83. Submitted by John Thorn, 10/12/2004.</p>  +
B
<p>Writing in 1891, Stewart Culin reported “the discovery by Mr. Flinders-Petrie of wooden ‘tip cats’ among the remains of Rahun, in the Fayoom, Egypt (circa 2500 B.C).”  Culin infers that these short wooden objects, pointed on each end, were used in an ancient form of the game later know as Cat.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>According to SABR member César González, "There are remains of rubber balls found since the time of the Olmeca culture between 1500 and 700 BC." He reports that it is believed that one of the earliest Mesoamerican games was played with a stick. A dozen rubber balls dating to 1600 BCE or earlier have been found in <span style="text-decoration: underline;">El Manatí</span>, an Olmec sacrificial <span style="text-decoration: underline;">bog</span> 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) east of San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan.</p>  +
1
<p>Edward III wrote to the Sheriff of Kent, and evidently sheriffs throughout England. Noting a relative neglect of the useful art of archery, the King said he was thereby, on festival days, "forbidding, all and single, on our orders, to toy in any way with these games of throwing stones, wood, or iron, playing handball, football, "stickball," or hockey, . . . which are worthless, under pain of imprisonment." The translator uses "stickball" as a translation of the Latin "pila cacularis," and suggests that it might have been an early form of cricket. We might also ask whether it was referring to early stoolball.</p> <p>A. R. Myers, <i>English Historical Documents</i> (Routledge, 1996), page 1203. [Viewed online 10/16/08]. Provided in email from John Thorn, 2/27/2008. Myers' citation is "Rymer, Foedera, III, ii, from Close Roll, 37 Edward III [Latin]."</p> <p><b>Caveat:</b> The content of this entry resembles that of #1365.1 below, and both refer to a restriction imposed by Edward III. However that entry, stemming from Strutt, refers to "club-ball" instead of "stick-ball," and identifies the Latin as "pilam bacculoream," not "pila cacularis." It is possible that both refer to the same source. Strutt’s text reads: “The recreations prohibited by proclamation in the reign of Edward III., exclusive of the games of chance, are thus specified; throwing of stones, wood, or iron….” The accompanying footnote reads: “<em>Pilam manualtm, ptdinam, el bacculoream, et ad cambucam</em>, etc.” Also: the letter to Kent is elsewhere dated 1365, which could be consistent with Edward III's 37<sup>th</sup> year under the crown, but Myers uses 1363.</p> <p><b>Note:</b> this entry replaced the former entry #1365.1: "In 1365 the sheriffs had to forbid able-bodied men playing ball games as, instead, they were to practice archery on Sundays and holidays." Source: Hassall, W. O., [compiler], "How They Lived: An Anthology of Original Accounts Written Before 1485" [Blackwell, Oxford University Press, 1962], page 285. Submitted by John Thorn, 10/12/2004.</p>  
<p>"When Christopher Columbus revisited Haiti on his second voyage, he observed some natives playing with a ball. The men who came with Columbus to conquer the Indies had brought their Castilian wind-balls [wound from yarn] to play with in idle hours. But at once they found that the balls of Haiti were incomparably superior; they bounced better. These high-bouncing balls were made, they learned, from a milky fluid of the consistency of honey which the natives procured by tapping certain trees and then cured over the smoke of palm nuts. A discovery which improved the delights of ball games was noteworthy." 350 years later, after Goodyear discovered vulcanization [1839], "India rubber" balls were to be identified with the New York game of baseball.</p> <p>Holland Thompson, "Charles Goodyear and the History of Rubber," at <a href="http://inventors.about.come/cs/inventorsalphabet/a/rubber_2.htm">http://inventors.about.come/cs/inventorsalphabet/a/rubber_2.htm</a>, accessed 1/24/2007.</p>  +
B
<p>The main chamber of Tomb 15 at Beni Hasan has a depiction of catching a ball, as well as throwing.  Two women, each riding on the back of another woman, appear to be doing some form of ball-handling. The image of one woman pretty clearly depicts her in the act of catching ("fielding”) a ball, and the other is quite plausibly about to throw a ball toward her.</p> <p> </p>  +
1
<p>"[Stoolball] is mentioned in the classic book <em>Don Quixote."</em></p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"Item, quod petrus frankeleyne vid posuit iiiixx ovesin le stoball field contra ordinacionem."</p> <p>Source: National Stoolball Association, "A Brief History of Stoolball," [mimeo, author and date unspecified], page 2. This wording is reportedly found in "an extract from the rolls of the Court Baron of the Royal Manor of Kirklington, belonging to the Duchy of Lancaster (16<sup>th</sup> Century), under the heading of trespass." <strong>Note:</strong> We need a citation here, and a reason for assigning the 1523 date. The relation of stoball to stoolball remains under dispute, with many observers seeing stoball as an early golf-like game. Can we obtain a good translation and interpretation of this quotation?</p>  +
<p>"O lodre of Ipocrites/ Nowe shut vpp your wickets,/ And clappe to your clickettes/ A! Farewell, kings for crekettes!"</p> <p>"The Image of Ipocrisie" (1533) attributed to John Skelton. This verse is interpreted as showing no sympathy to Flemish weavers who settled in southern and eastern England, bringing at least the rudiments of cricket with them. Heiner Gillmeister and John Campbell noted publicly in June 2009 that this is relevant evidence of cricket's non-English origin. <b>Note:</b> the first written reference to cricket was nearly 70 years in the future in 1533. Contributed by Beth Hise, January 12, 2010. <strong>Query:</strong> are cricket historians accepting this poem as valid evidence of cricket's roots?</p>  +
<p>"Certain types of ball games had a prominent place in heathen rituals and were believed to promote fertility. Even after Christianity had gained the ascendancy over the older religion, ball continued to be played in the churchyard and even within the church at certain times. In France, ball was played in churches at Easter, until the custom was abolished in 1538. In England, the practice persisted up to a much later date."</p> <p>The abolition in France is attributed to an act of the French Parlement. </p> <p> </p>  +
<p>Cary Smith [<a href="mailto:ZinnBeck@aol.com">ZinnBeck@aol.com</a>] has noted an alluring illustration in a 1540 publication, and we seek additional input on it. In a posting to the 19CBB listserve in March 2008, Cary wrote:</p> <p>"On the British Library web site in the turning pages section there is a book called the Golf Book, but it is labeled as 'Flemish Masters in Miniature.' On page seven of the book there is a small grisalle border at the bottom. It looks like what today would be considered a pitcher, catcher, and batter. The book is from 1540. To access the web site you will need to have Flash running. If on a Macintosh that is intel based you will need to click the Rosetta button in the info window of your web browser." <strong>Note:</strong> can you help us interpret this artwork?</p> <p>The URL is <a href="http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/ttp/ttpbooks.html">http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/ttp/ttpbooks.html</a>.</p>  +
<p> A 1598 trial in the Surrey town of Guildford includes a statement by John Derrick, then aged 59. According to a 1950 history of Guildford's Royal Grammar School, "[H]e stated that he had known the [disputed] ground for fifty years or more and that 'when he was a scholar in the free school of Guildford, he and several of his fellows did run and play there at cricket and other plays.' This is believed to be the first recorded mention of cricket."</p> <p>Cf [[1598.3 below.]] </p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"The medieval origin of the national game of the English is beyond doubt, but not so its Island roots. There would have been ample opportunity for it to figure on the lists of banned games set out by their kings, but there is no written mention of it before 1550. It is, of course, not impossible that its forerunner was one of the many ball games played with unidentifiable rules, as for instance club ball."</p> <p><strong> </strong></p>  +
<p>"To shote, to bowle, or caste the barre,</p> <p>To play tenise, or tosse the ball,</p> <p>Or to rene base, like men of war,</p> <p>Shall hurt thy study naught at all."</p> <p>Crowley, Robert, "The Scholar's Lesson," circa 1555, in J. M. Cowper, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Select Works of Robert Crowley</span> [N. Truber, London, 1872], page 73. Submitted by John Bowman, 7/16/2004. Citation from Thomas L. Altherr, "A Place Leavel Enough to Play Ball," reprinted in David Block, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball Before We Knew It</span>, see pages 230 and 312.  Cited in Thomas L. Altherr, “There is Nothing Now Heard of, in Our Leisure Hours, But Ball, Ball, Ball,” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Cooperstown Symposium on Baseball and American Culture</span> 1999 (McFarland, 2000), pp. 188.</p>  +
<p>"<u>The Malden Corporation Court Book</u> of 1562 contains a charge against John Porter alias Brown, and a servant, for 'playing an unlawful game called "clycett."'"</p> <p>Brookes, Christopher, <u>English Cricket: the Game and its Players Through the Ages</u> (Newton Abbot, 1978), page 16, as cited in Bateman, Anthony,"'More Mighty than the Bat, the Pen . . . ;' Culture, Hegemony, and the Literaturisaton of Cricket," <u>Sport in History</u>, v. 23, 1 (Summer 2003), page 29.</p>  +
<p>"1564 - complaints were made to the justices sitting at the midsummer session, at Malden, Surrey, that the constable (himself possibly an enthusiast with the stool and ball) suffered stoolball to be played on Sunday."</p> <p>M. S. Russell-Goggs, "Stoolball in Sussex," <u>The Sussex County Magazine</u>, volume 2, no. 7 (July 1928), page 318. Surrey is the adjoining county to Sussex. <b>Note:</b> we need to locate the full citations for this and all other Russell-Goggs references. </p>  +
<p>"We had paused right in front of [the Flemish artist] Bruegel the Elder's "Corn Harvest" (1565), one of the world's great paintings of everyday life . . . .[M]y eye fell upon a tiny tableau at the left-center of the painting in which young men appeared to be playing a game of bat and ball in a meadow distant from the scything and stacking and dining and drinking that made up the foreground. . . . There appeared to be a man with a bat, a fielder at a base, a runner, and spectators as well as participants in waiting. The strange device opposite the batsman's position might have been a catapult. As I was later to learn with hurried research, this detain is unnoted in the art-history studies."</p> <p>From John Thorn, "Play's the Thing," <em>Woodstock</em> <em>Times</em>, December 28, 2006. See <a>thornpricks.blogspot.com/2006/12/bruegel-and-me_27.html,</a> accessed 1/30/07.</p>  +
<p>"The stoole ball, top, or camping ball/If suche one should assaye/As hath no mannour skill therein,/Amongste a mightye croude,/Theye all would screeke unto the frye/And laugh at hym aloude."</p> <p>Drant, Thomas, <u>Horace His Arte of Poetrie, Pistles, and Satyrs Englished, and to the Earle of Ormounte</u>, [London], per David Block, page 166. There is no implication that Horace himself refers to a stool ball.</p>  +
<p>"A few years later [than 1564], at the Easter Sessions in the same town [Malden, Surrey], one Edward Anderkyn and four others were indicted for playing stoolball on Sunday."</p> <p>M. S. Russell-Goggs, "Stoolball in Sussex," <u>The Sussex County Magazine</u>, volume 2, no. 7 (July 1928), page 318. Surrey is the adjoining county to Sussex. <b>Note:</b> we need to locate the full citations for this and all other Russell-Goggs references. </p>  +
<p>Gascoigne, George, <u>The Posies of George Gascoigne Esquire, Corrected, perfected, and augmented by the Authour</u> [London, Richard Smith], per Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 166. The key lines: "Yet have I shot at master <i>Bellums</i> butte/And throwen his ball although I toucht no tutte."</p>  +
<p>"Whereas this a great abuse in a game or games used in the town called "<em>Gede Gadye</em> or the <em>Cat's Pallet,</em> and <em>Typing</em> or hurling the Ball," - that no mannor person shall play at the same games, being above the age of seven years, wither in the churchyard or in any of the streets of this town, upon pain of every person so playing being imprisoned in the <em>Doungeon</em> for the space of two hours; or else every person so offending to pay 6 [pence] for every time. And if they have not [wherewithal] to pay, then the parents or masters of such persons so offending to pay the said 6 [pence] or to suffer the like imprisonment." (Similar language is found in 1579 entry [page 148], but it lacked the name "Typing" and did not mention a ball.)</p> <p>John Harland, editor, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Court Leet Records of the Manor of Manchester in the Sixteenth Century</span> (Chetham Society, 1864), page 156. Accessed 1/27/10 via Google Books search: "court leet" half-bowls. <strong>Note:</strong> The game gidigadie is not known to us, but the 1864 editor notes elsewhere (page 149, footnote 61) that was "not unlikely" to be tip-cat, and he interprets "typing" as tipping. As later described [see "Tip-Cat" and "Pallet" at <a href="http://retrosheet.org/Protoball/Glossary.htm">http://retrosheet.org/Protoball/Glossary.htm</a>], tip-cat could be played with a cat or a ball, and could involve running among holes as bases. <strong>Caveat:</strong> we do not yet know what the nature of the proscribed game was in Elizabethan times.</p>  +
<p>In a 1600 publication attributed to Samuel Rowlands [died 1588], the fourth of six "Satires," presents a catalog of about 30 pastimes, including "play at stoole-ball," and "play at nine-holes." Other diversions include pitching the barre, foote-ball, play at base, and leap-frog.</p> <p>Rowlands, Samuel, <u>The Letting of Humour's blood in the head-vein</u> (W. White, London, 1600), as discussed in Brydges, Samuel E., <u>Censura Literaria</u> (Longman, London, 1808), p.279. Virtually the same long verse - but one that carelessly lists stoole-ball twice - is attributed to "Randal Holme of Chester" in an 1817 book: Drake, Nathan, <u>Shakspeare and His</u> Times (Cadell and Davies, London, 1817), pages 246-247. Drake does not suggest a date for this verse. <b>Caveat:</b> Our choice of 1585 as the year of Rowlands' composition is merely speculative. <b>Note:</b> This entry needs to be reconciled with #1630c.1 below.</p>  +
<p>"A time there is for all, my mother often sayes</p> <p>When she with skirts tuckt very hie, with gyrles at stoolball playes"</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>In his entry for Rounders, W. C. Hazlitt speculates: "It is possible that this is the game which, under the name of rownes (rounds) is mentioned in <u>The English Courtier and the Countrey Gentleman: A Pleasant and Learned Disputation</u>, 1586 [printed by Richard Jones, London]. One source attributes this work of Nicholas Breton. Protoball has not located this book.</p> <p>Hazlitt, W. C., <u>Faiths and Folklore: A Dictionary of National Beliefs, Superstitions, and Popular Customs</u> (Reeves and Turner, London, 1905), vol. 2, page 527. <b>Note:</b> Can we find this early text and evaluate whether rounders is in fact its subject? <b>Caveat:</b> It would startle most of us to encounter any species of rounders this early; the earliest appearance of the term may be as late as 1828 - see #1828.1 below.</p>  +
<p>Pericule [Percival], Richard, <u>Bibliotheca hispanica: containing a graamar, with a dictionarie in Spanish, English, and Latine, gathered out of diuers good authors: very profitable for the studious of the Spanish toong</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It,</u> page 166. The dictionary's entries include "<i>paleta</i> - a trapsticke" and <i>paletilla</i> - a little trapsticke."</p>  +
<p>"Time of recreation is necessary, I graunt, and think as necessary for schollers . . . as it is for any. Yet in my opinion it were not fit for them to play at Stoole-ball among wenches, nor at Mumchance or Maw with idle loose companions; not at trunks in Guile-halls, nor to dance about Maypoles, nor to rufle in alehouses, nor to carowse in tauernes, nor to steale deere, nor to rob orchards. Though who can deny that they may doe these things, yea worse."</p> <p>Attributed to Dr. Rainoldes in J. P. Collier, ed., <u>The Political Decameron, or Ten Conversations on English Poets and Poetry</u> [Constable and Co., Edinburgh, 1820], page 257. This passage is from the "ninth conversation" and covers low practices during the reigns of Elizabeth and of James I. <b>Note:</b> we need to ascertain the source, date, and context of the original Rainoldes material. It appears that Rainoldes' cited "conversation" with Gager took place in 1592.</p>  +
<p>"We present one Bottolph Wappoll, a continual gamester and one of the very lewd behaviour, who being on Mayday last at stoolball in time of Divine service one of our sidesmen came and admonished him to leave off playing and go to church, for which he fell on him and beat him that the blood ran about his ears."</p> <p>Source: National Stoolball Association, "A Brief History of Stoolball," [author and date unspecified], page 2. The original source is not supplied but is reported to have been a presentation from the parish of St Paul in Canterbury to the Archdeacon of Canterbury. <b>Note:</b> can we find this source?</p>  +
<p>"After dinner all the youthes go into the fields to play at the bal…. The schollers of euery schoole haue their ball, or baston, in their hands: the auncient and wealthy men of the Citie come foorth on horsebacke to see the sport of young men."</p> <p>Stow, John, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Survey of London</span> [first published in 1598]. David Block [page 166] gives the full title as <span style="text-decoration: underline;">A Survey of London: Contayning the Originall, Antiquity, Increase, Modern Estate, and Description of that Citie: written in the yeare 1598</span> [London]. Block adds that the term "baston" is described by the OED as a "cudgel, club, bat or truncheon."</p>  +
<p>"People have often regarded Florio's expression in his Italian Dictionary (1598) <em>cricket-a-wicket</em> as the first mention (cf #[[1598.2]] and #[[1598.3]], above) of the noble game. It were strange indeed if this great word first dropped from the pen of an Italian! I have no doubt myself that this is a mere coincidence of sound. . . . [C]ricket-a-wicket must pair off with 'helter-skelter,' higgledy-piggledy, and <em>Tarabara</em> to which Florio gives gives cricket-a-wicket as an equivalent."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>Florio, John, <u>A world of wordes or Most copious, and exact dictionarie in Italian and English</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 167. This dictionary defines <i>lippa</i> as "a cat or trap as children use to play with."</p> <p>1598.3 - First Known Appearance of the Term "Cricket"</p> <p>[Cf #1550c.2 above.] A 1598 trial in the Surrey town of Guildford includes a statement by John Derrick, then aged 59. According to a 1950 history of Guildford's Royal Grammar School, "[H]e stated that he had known the [disputed] ground for fifty years or more and that 'when he was a scholar in the free school of Guildford, he and several of his fellows did run and play there at cricket and other plays.' This is believed to be the first recorded mention of cricket."</p> <p>Brown, J. F., <u>The Story of the Royal Grammar School, Guildford</u>, 1950, page 6. <b>Note:</b> it would be interesting to see the original reference, and to know how 1550 was chosen as the reported year of play.</p>  +
<p>[A]  H. Guarinoni describes a game he saw in Prague in 1600 involving a large field of play, the hitting of a small thrown ball ["the size of a quince"] with a four-foot tapered club, the changing of sides if a hit ball was caught.   While not mentioning the presence of bases or of base-running, he advises that the game "is good for tender youth which never has enough of running back and forth."</p> <p>[B] "German Schlagball ["hit the ball"] is also similar to rounders. The native claim that these games 'have remained the games of the Germanic peoples, and have won no popularity beyond their countries' quite obviously does not accord with facts. It is enough to quote the conclusion of a description of "hit the ball" by H. Guarnoni, who had a medical practice in Innsbruck about 1600: 'We enjoyed this game in Prague very much and played it a lot. The cleverest at it were the Poles and the Silesians, so the game obviously comes from there.' Incidentally, he was one of the first who described the way in which the game was played. It was played with a leather ball and a club four-foot long. The ball was tossed by a bowler who threw it to the striker, who struck it with a club rounded at the end as far into the field as possible, and attempted to make a circuit of the bases without being hit by the ball. If 'one of the opposing players catches the ball in the air, a change of positions follows.'"</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"Shakespeare mentions games of "base" and "rounders. Lovett, <u>Old Boston Boys</u>, page 126."</p> <p>Seymour, Harold - Notes in the Seymour Collection at Cornell University, Kroch Library Department of Rare and Manuscript Collections, collection 4809. <b>Caveat:</b> We have not yet confirmed that Lovett or Shakespeare used the term "rounders." Gomme [page 80], among others, identifies the Bard's use of "base" in Cymbeline as a reference to prisoner's base, which is not a ball game. John Bowman, email of 5/21/2008, reports that his concordance of all of Shakespeare's words shows has no listing for "rounders" . . . nor for "stoolball," for that matter [see #1612c.1, below], 'tho that may because Shakespeare's authorship of <u>Two Noble Kinsmen</u> is not universally accepted by scholars..</p>  +
<p>"Soon after the new year [1609], [we] initiated a ball game played with a bat . . . . Most often we played this game on Sundays. We rolled up rags to make balls . . . Our game attracted the savages who sat around the field, delighted with this Polish sport."</p> <p>A 1975 letter from Matthew Baranski letter to the HOF said:</p> <p>"For your information and records, I am pleased to inform you that after much research I have discovered that baseball was introduced to America by the Poles who arrived in Jamestown in 1609. . . . Records of the University of Krakow, the oldest school of higher learning in Poland show that baseball or batball was played by the students in the 14<sup>th</sup> century and was part of the official physical culture program."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>A match is thought to have been played between the men of North Downs and men of the Weald.</p> <p>Contributed by Beth Hise January 12, 2010. Beth is in pursuit of the original source of this claim. North Downs is in Surrey, about 4 miles NE of Guildford, where early uses of both "cricket" and "base-ball" are found. It is about 30 miles SW of London. The Weald is apparently an old term for the county of Kent, which is SW of London.</p>  +
<p>Dictionary-maker R. Cotgrave translates <i>"crosse"</i> as "the crooked staff wherewith boies play at cricket."</p> <p>"<i>Martinet</i>" [a device for propelling large stones at castles] is defined as "the game called cat and trap."</p> <p>Cotgrave, Randle, <u>A Dictionarie of the French and English Tongues</u> [London, 1611], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 168. "</p> <p>Cricket historians Steel and Lyttelton: "Thanks to Cotgrave, then, we know that in 1611 cricket was a boy's game, played with a crooked bat. The club, bat, or staff continued to be crooked or curved at the blade till the middle of the eighteenth century or later: and till nearly 1720 cricket was mainly a game for boys." A.G. Steel and R. H. Lyttelton, <u>Cricket,</u> (Longmans Green, London, 1890) 4<sup>th</sup> edition, page 6.<b> </b></p>  +
<p>A young maid asks her wooer to go with her. "What shall we do there, wench?" She replies, "Why, play at stool-ball; what else is there to do?"</p> <p>Fletcher and Shakespeare, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Two Noble Kinsmen</span> [London], Act V, Scene 2, per W. W. Grantham, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Stoolball Illustrated and How to Play</span> It [W. Speaight, London, 1904], page 29. David Block, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball Before We Knew It</span>, page 170, gives 1634 as the publication date of this play, which was reportedly performed in 1612, and mentions that doubts have been expressed as to authorship, so Shakespeare [1564-1616] may not have contributed. Others surmise that The Bard wrote Acts One and Five, which would make him the author of the stoolball reference. See also item #1600c.2 above. <strong>Note:</strong> can we find further specifics? Russell-Goggs, in "Stoolball in Sussex," <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Sussex County Magazine</span>, volume 2, no. 7 (July 1928), page 320, notes that the speaker is the "daughter of the Jailer."</p>  +
<p>"Ward: Can you play at shuttlecock forsooth?</p> <p>Isabella: Ay, and stool-ball too, sir; I have great luck at it.</p> <p>Ward: Why, can you catch a ball well?</p> <p>Isabella: I have catched two in my lap at one game</p> <p>Ward: What, have you, woman? I must have you learn to play at trap too, then y'are full and whole."</p> <p>Dutton, Richard Thomas, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Women Beware Women and Other Plays</span> [Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1999], page 135. The play itself is generally dated 1613 or 1614. Submitted by John Thorn, 7/9/2004</p>  +
<p>Breton, Nicholas, <u>I Would, and Would Not</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 168. Stanza 79 reads "I would I were an honest Countrey Wench/ . . . / And for a <i>Tanzey</i>, goe to <i>Stoole-Ball-</i>Play." Tansy cakes were reportedly given as prizes for ball play.</p>  +
<p>"And some dayes heare we stayed we shott at butts and bowe and arrows, at other tymes at stoole ball, and some tymes of foote ball</p> <p>William Baffin, from "The Fourth Recorded Voyage of Baffin," in C. M. Markham, ed., <u>The Voyages of William Baffin, 1612-1622</u>, [Hakluyt Society, 1881], page 122. This voyage started in March 1615, and the entry is dated June?? 19<sup>th,</sup> 1615. The voyage was taken in hope of finding a northwest passage to the East, but was thwarted by ice, and Baffin returned to England in the fall of 1615. <b>Note:</b> Ascertain the month, which is obscured in the online copy. Was location of play near what is now known as Baffin Island?</p>  +
<p>Translator Chapman described a scene in which several virgins play stool-ball near a river while Ulysses sleeps nearby: "The Queene now (for the upstroke) strooke the ball/Quite wide off th' other maids; and made it fall/Amidst the whirlpools. </p> <p>Chapman, George, <u>The whole works of Homer: prince of poets, in his Iliads, and Odysses</u> [London, 1616], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 168.</p> <p>Steel and Lyttelton indicate that Chapman's translation may date "as early as 1614," and say report that Chapman calls the fragment "a stoolball chance." See A.G. Steel and R. H. Lyttelton, <u>Cricket,</u> (Longmans Green, London, 1890) 4<sup>th</sup> edition, page 2. <b>Note:</b> The year of the translation needs to be confirmed;. It would be interesting to see how other translators have treated this scene.</p>  +
<p>Reacting to Puritans' denunciations of Sabbath recreations, James I in 1617 listed a large number of permitted Sunday activities -including no ball games - and cited as unlawful only "beare and Bull beatinge enterludes & bowlinge. . . ." Axon, Ernest, <u>Notes of Proceedings.</u> V<u>olume 1 - 1616-1622-3</u> (Printed for the Record Society for the Publication of Original Documents, 1901), page xxvi. There was adverse reaction to this proclamation, which is said to have surprised the King.</p> <p>Another source lists the Sunday bans as "Bull-baiting, bear-baiting, interludes, and bowls:" Keightley, Thomas, <u>The History of England</u>, volume II (Whittaker and Co., London, 1839), page 321. One chruchman listed "bear-baiting, bull-baiting, common plays, and bowling:" Marsden, J. B., <u>History of Christian Churches and Sects</u> (Richard Bentley, London, 1856), page 269. Thus, unless "enterludes" then connoted a range of games or "common plays" that included ballplay, contemporary ballgames like stoolball and cricket - and cat games - remained unconstrained.</p>  +
<p>"It was the day of all dayes in the yeare/That unto Bacchus hath its dedication,/ . . . / When country wenches play with stoole and ball,/And run at <i>Barley-breake</i> until they fall:/And country lads fall on them, in such sort/That after forty weekes the[sic] rew the sport."</p> <p>Anonymous, <u>Pasquils Palinodia, and His Progress to the Taverne; Where, After the Survey of the Sellar, You Are Presented with a Pleasant Pynte of Poeticall Sherry</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 169, who credits Henderson, page 74. Block notes that "Barley-Break" [not a ball game] was, like stoole ball, traditionally a spring courtship ritual in the English countryside.</p>  +
<p>Governor Bradford describes Christmas Day 1621 at Plymouth Plantation, MA; "most of this new-company excused them selves and said it wente against their consciences to work on ye day. So ye Govr tould them that if they made it mater of conscience, he would spare them till they were better informed. So he led away ye rest and left them; but when they came home at noone from their worke, he found them in ye street at play, openly; some at pitching ye barr, and some at stoole-ball and shuch like sport. . . . Since which time nothing hath been attempted that way, at least openly."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>A Chichester churchwarden indicted a group of men for ballplaying, reasoning thus: "first, for it is contrarie to the 7<sup>th</sup> Article; second, for they are used to break the Church window with the balls; and thirdly, for that little children had like to have their braynes beaten out with the cricket batt."</p> <p>Brookes, Christopher, <u>English Cricket: the game and its players through the ages</u> (Newton Abbot, 1978), page 16, as cited in Bateman, Anthony,"'More Mighty than the Bat, the Pen . . . ;' Culture, Hegemony, and the Literaturisaton of Cricket," <u>Sport in History</u>, v. 23, 1 (Summer 2003), page 29.</p>  +
<p>Shirley, James, <u>The Wedding. As it was lately acted by her Mauesties seruants at the Phenix at Drury Lane</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 170. A servant in the play describes his master as so mild in manner that "the last time he was in the field a boy of seven year old beat him with a trap-stick."</p>  +
<p>"In 1629, having been censured for playing 'at Cricketts,' the curate of Ruckinge in Kent unsuccessfully defended himself on the grounds that it was a game played by men of quality."</p> <p>Bateman, Anthony,"'More Mighty than the Bat, the Pen . . . ;' Culture, Hegemony, and the Literaturisaton of Cricket," <u>Sport in History</u>, v. 23, 1 (Summer 2003), page 29. Bateman does not provide his source for this anecdote. <b>Note:</b> Can we find and extend this story?</p>  +
<p>"About 1630 a Puritan records that 'Maidstone was formerly a very profane town, where stoolball and other games were practiced on the Lord's Day."</p> <p>M. S. Russell-Goggs, "Stoolball in Sussex," <u>The Sussex County Magazine</u>, volume 2, no. 7 (July 1928), page 318. <b>Note:</b> we need to locate the full citations for this and all other Russell-Goggs references.. We need to sort out how this claim relates to the very similar wording in the quote by Reverend Wilson in entry #1672.1 below.</p>  +
<p>"In the early seventeenth century, an Oxford fellow, Thomas Crosfield, noted the customs of Shrovetide as '1. frittering. 2. throwing at cocks. 3. playing at stooleball in ye Citty by women & footeball by men.'" Shrovetide was the Monday and Tuesday [that Tuesday being Mardi Gras in some quarter] preceding Ash Wednesday and the onset of Lent.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"Any they dare challenge for to throw the sleudge,/To Jumpe or leape over dich or hedge,/ To wrastle, play at stooleball, or to Runne,/ To pitch the bar, or to shoote off a Gunne/ To play at Loggets, nine holes, or ten pins. . . .[list continues, mentioning stool ball once more at end.]"</p> <p>This verse, titled "Ancient Cheshire Games: Auntient customes in games used by boys and girles merily sett out in verse," is attributed to "Randle Holmes's MSS Brit Mus." Is in <u>Medium of Inter-communications for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, Etc</u>, July - December 1856, page 487. <b>Note: </b> Can we learn why is this account associated with 1630? This entry needs to be reconciled with #1585.1 above. Add online search detail?</p>  +
<p>"Page: You, sirrah sheep's-head/ With a face cut on a cat-stick, do you hear?/ You, yeoman fewterer, conduct me to/ the lady of the mansion, or my poniard/ Shall disembogue thy soul."</p> <p>"The Maid of Honour," Scene 2, in <u>The Plays of Philip Massinger</u>, Volume 1 (John Murray, London, 1830), page 327. </p> <p>Notes written in 1830 by W. Gifford: "<i>Cat-stick</i>. This, I believe, is what is now called a <i>buck-stick</i>, used by children in the game of tip-cat, or kit-cat." <b>Query:</b> Is it clear why an abusive address like this would employ a phrase like "cut on a cat-stick?" Does it imply, for instance a disfigured or pock-marked visage? </p>  +
<p>"The [preceding] reference to Fuchsius should be to Institutiones 2.3.4: . . . 'Whereby the habit of our German schoolboys is most worthy of reprehension, who never take exercise except immediately after food, either jumping or running or playing ball or quoits or taking part in other exercises of a like nature; so that it is no surprise, seeing they thus accumulate a great mass of crude humours, that they suffer from perpetual scabies, and other diseases caused by vicious humours':p. 337)"</p> <p>Burton, Robert E., <u>The Anatomy of Melancholy</u>, vol. 4 [Clarenden Press, Oxford, 1989], page 285. [<b>Note:</b> We need to confirm date of the Fuschius quote; we're not sure why it is assigned to 1632.]. Submitted by John Thorn, 10/12/2004.</p>  +
<p>"At stoole ball I have a North-west stripling shall deale with ever a boy in the Strand."</p> <p>Cited in W. C. Hazlitt, <u>Faiths and Folklore: A Dictionary of National Beliefs, Superstitions and Popular Customs</u> [Reeves and Turner, London, 1905], page 569. Hazlitt attributes this mysterious fragment to someone named Stickwell in <i>Totenham Court</i>, by T. Nabbes, appearing in 1638. <b>Note</b>: Can we guess what Stickwell was trying to say, and why? I find that Nabbes wrote this drama in 1633 or before, and surmise that "Stickwell" is the name of the fictional character who speaks the quoted line. Can we straighten out, or interpret, the syntax of this line? [The Strand, presumably, refers to the London street of that name?]</p>  +
<p>"In his visitation and reference to churchyards, he [Archbishop Laud, in 1634] is troubled because 'several spend their time in stoolball.'"</p> <p>M. S. Russell-Goggs, "Stoolball in Sussex," <u>The Sussex County Magazine</u>, volume 2, no. 7 (July 1928), page 318. <b>Note1:</b> we need to locate the full citations for this and all other Russell-Goggs references.</p> <p>Another source quotes Laud as saying "This whole churchyard is made a receptacle for all ydle persons to spend their time in stopball and such lyke recreacions." OED, Abp Laud's Visit, in 4<sup>th</sup> Rep Hist. MSS Comm. App 144/1, provided by John Thorn, email of 6/11/2007. <b>Note2:</b> is this from the same source?</p>  +
<p>Shirley, James, <u>Hide Park: A Comedie</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 171. A beautiful young woman, to a servant who is fishing for a compliment: "Indeed, I have heard you are a precious gentleman/ And in your younger days could play at trap well."</p>  +
<p>Burton, Henry, and William Prynne, <u>A Divine Tragedie Lately Acted</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 171. In a denunciation of King Charles' approval of after-church play on Sundays, the authors cite as one of the "memorable examples of Gods judgements" a case in which youths "playing at Catt on the Lords day, two of them fell out, and the one hitting the other under the eare with his catt, he therwith fell downe for dead." Cited by David Block in <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 171: Block notes that the weapon here was a cat-stick.</p>  +
<p>Bishop Mantague admonishes Norwich Churchmen to consider the churchyard as consecrated ground, "not to be profaned by feeding and dunging cattle . . . . Much less is it to be unhallowed with dancings, morrises, meetings at Easter, drinkings, Whitson ales, midsummer merriments or the like, stool ball, football, wrestlings, wasters or boy's sports."</p> <p>Barrett, Jay Botsford, <u>English Society in the Eighteenth Century as Influence from Oversea</u> [Macmillan, New York, 1924], page 221. Barrett cites this passage as Articles of Enquiry and Direction for the Diocese of Norwich, sigs. A3-A3v.</p> <p>1638.2 - Archdeacon: Churchyards Are Not For Stoole-ball or "Other Profane Uses"</p> <p>"Have any playes, feasts, banquets, suppers, churchales, drinkings, temporal courts or leets, lay juries, musters, exercise of dauncing, stoole-ball, foot-ball, or the like, or any other profane usage been suffered to be kept in your church, chappell, or churchyard?</p> <p>Attributed to Mr. Dr. Pearson, Archdeacon of Suffolke, in Heino Pfannenschmid, <u>Das Weihwasser</u> [Hahn'sche Hofbuchhandlung, Hannover, 1869], page 74n.</p>  +
<p>"J. Smythe, in his <u>Hundred of Berkeley</u> (1640) gave the following admonition: 'Doe witness the inbred delight, that both gentry, yeomanry, rascallity, boyes, and children, doe take in a game called stoball. . . And not a sonne of mine, but at 7 was furnished with his double stoball staves, and a gamester thereafter.'"</p> <p>M. S. Russell-Goggs, "Stoolball in Sussex," <u>The Sussex County Magazine</u>, volume 2, no. 7 (July 1928), page 320. John Smyth's three-volume <i>Berkeley Manuscripts</i> were published in 1883 by J. Bellows; Volume Three is titled "A description of the hundred of Berkeley in the County of Gloucester . . . ." Citation supplied by John Thorn, email of 1/30/2008.</p>  +
<p>"At Stool-ball, <em>Lucia</em>, let us play," offers the poet, then proposing that if he wins, he would "have for all a kisse."</p> <p>[Full text is in Supplemental Text, below.]</p>  +
<p>Taylor, John, <u>A Short Relation of a Long Journey Made Round or Ovall</u> [London], book 4, per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 172. A versifier recounts his journey to Wales, where he notes a lack of religious fervor, "so that people do exercise and edify in the churchyard at the lawful and laudable games of trap, cat, stool-ball, racket, &c., on Sundays."</p>  +
<p>"So far as is known, the first mention [of the word "cricket"] occurs in Sir Thomas Urquhart's translation of the works of Rabelais, published in London in 1653, where it is found enumerated as one of the games of the Gargantua."</p> <p>Editorial, "The Pedigree of Cricket," <i>The Irish Times</i>, 5/9/1931. Reprinted in <i>The</i> Times, 5/9/2001. From the MCC Library collection.</p> <p><b>Caveat:</b> We now have at least four pre-1653 claims to the use of "cricket" and similar terms: see #1598.3, #1598.4, #1611.1, #1622.1, and #1629.2 above. <b>Note:</b> Rabelais' "games of Gargantua" is a list of over 200 games supposedly played at one sitting by the fictional character Gargantua. Urquhart's translation includes several familiar pastimes, including cricket, nine-pins, billiards, "tip and hurl" [?], prison bars, barley-break, and the morris dance . . . along with many games that appear to be whimsy and word-play ["ramcod ball," "nivinivinack," and "the bush leap"]. Not included are: club ball, stick ball, stoolball, horne billets, nine holes, hat ball, rounders, feeder, or base ball. <i>Francis Rabelais - Completely Translated into English by Urquhard and Motteux</i> (the Aldus Society, London, 1903), pp 68-71. Text chased down by John Thorn, email of 1/30/2008. </p>  +
<p>A character is asked how he might raise some needed money: "If my woodes being cut down cannot fill this pocket, cut 'em into trapsticks."</p> <p>Middleton, Thomas, and William Rowley, <u>The Spanish Gipsie</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 172. Block observes that this snippet suggests that "trapstick" was by then commonly understood as a trap-ball bat.</p>  +
<p>Simon Rae writes that the "killjoy mentality reached its zenith under the Puritans, during the Interregnum, achieving an absurd peak when cricket was banned in Ireland in 1656 even though the Irish didn't play it." Evidently, hurling was mistaken for cricket.</p> <p>Simon Rae, <u>It's Not Cricket: A History of Skulduggery, Sharp Practice and Downright Cheating in the Noble Game</u> (Faber and Faber, 2001), page 46. <b>Note:</b> Rae does not document this event.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>In October 1656 Director-General Peter Stuyvesant announced a stricter Sabbath Law in New Netherlands, including fine of a one pound Flemish for "playing ball," . . . cricket, tennis, ninepins, dancing, drinking, etc.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"The game [Stoolball] cropped up in 1656 in a pronouncement by the Counties of Cumberland and Westmoreland which said that "too much attention was being paid to 'shooting, playing at football, stoolball, wrestling.'"</p> <p>SRA website, accessed 4/11/07. <b>Note:</b> we need a fuller citation and perhaps further text and motivation for these pronouncements.</p>  +
<p>"Cricket was . . . emerging in a written sense, not through the form of a celebratory discourse, but as the target of Puritan and sabbatarian ire. Even in the first reliable literary reference to cricket - in <u>The Mysteries of Love and Eloquence</u> (1658) [a poem] by John Milton's nephew, Edward Philips - the game is represented as synonymous with brutality: 'Ay, but Richard, will you not think so hereafter? Will you not when you have me throw a stool at my head, and cry, "Would my eyes had been beaten out with a cricket ball ["batt?" asks Bateman], the day before I saw thee"'."</p> <p>Bateman, Anthony,"More Mighty than the Bat, the Pen . . . ;' Culture,, Hegemony, and the Literaturisaton of Cricket," <u>Sport in History</u>, v. 23, 1 (Summer 2003), page 30. Bateman does not give the original source for the Philips quotation. <b> Note:</b> Can we find the original Philips source? A few citations give the year of publication as 1685.</p>  +
<p>Nichols, John, <u>Illustrations of the Manners and Expences of Ancient Times in England</u> [London, 1797], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 182. Included is an account from the parish of St. Margaret's, Westminster, from 1658: "Item to <i>Richard May</i>, 13 shillings for informing of one that played at trap-ball on the Lord's day."</p>  +
<p>"We shall interdict and forbid, during divine service on the [fasting] day aforesaid, all exercise and games of tennis, ball-playing, hunting, plowing and sowing, and moreover all unlawful practice such as dice, drunkenness . . ." proclaimed Peter Stuyvesant. Stuyvesant was Director-General of New Netherlands.</p> <p>Manchester, Herbert, <u>Four Centuries of Sport in America</u> (Publisher?, 1931). Email from John Thorn, 1/24/097. <b>Query:</b> Can we determine what area was affected by this proclamation? How does this proclamation relate to #1656.1 above?</p>  +
<p>"That is the street which I could ne'er abide,/And these the grounds I play'd side and hide;/ This the pond whereon I caught a fall,/ And that the barn whereon I play'd at ball."</p> <p>The uncle of U.S. patriot Benjamin Franklin, also named Benjamin Franklin, wrote these lines in a 1704 recollection of his native English town of Ecton. The uncle lived from 1650/1 to 1727. Ecton is a village in Northamptonshire.</p> <p>Loring, J. S., <u>The Franklin Manuscripts</u>. <i>The Historical Magazine, and Notes and Queries Concerning the Antiquities, History, and Biography of America</i> (1857-1875), Volume 3, issue 1, January 1859, 4 pages. Submitted by John Thorn, 4/24/06. </p>  +
<p>The biography of a 17<sup>th</sup> century lord includes "a nostalgic description of the little town of Kirtling" by the lord's son Roger, born in 1651, as follows:</p> <p>"The town was then my grandfather's . . . it was always the custom for the youth of the town . . . to play [from noon when chores ended] to milking time and supper at night. The men [went to play] football, and the maids, with whom we children were commonly mixed, being not proof for the turbulence of the other party, to stoolball and such running games as they knew." Dale B. J. Randall, <u>Gentle Flame: The Life and Verse of Dudley, Lord North (1602 - 1677 (Duke Univ. Press, 1983), page 56. The town of Kirtling is in Cambridgeshire, northeast of London.</u></p>  +
<p>The great scientist wrote, in a treatise discussing how the ball behaves in different ball games, including tennis: "Stool-ball, when they play in a stony way, . . . they do not trundle the ball upon the ground, but throw it, as if to pitch a quait. . . . . To make the ball stay, they hold it artificially with their hand uppermost, and it undermost, which in its delivery hath a contrary twirl or rolling conferred upon it by the fingers, by means whereof in its coming to the ground neer the mark it stays there, or runs very little forwards."</p> <p>(see Supplemental Text, below, for a longer excerpt, which also includes the effect of  "cutting" balls in tennis as a helpful tactic.) </p> <p> </p> <p> </p>  +
<p>This translation of a French parody of Virgil's <u>Aeneid</u> includes these lines on the god Mercury: "Then in his hand he take a thick Bat,/ With which he us'd to play at kit-cat;/ To beat mens Apples from their trees, . . . " Ouch.</p> <p>Scarron, Paul, <u>Scarronnides, or, Virgile travestie a mock poem</u> [London], trans. Charles Cotton, Book Four, per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 172. </p>  +
<p>"I was in the midst of a game of cat, and having struck it one blow from the hole, just as I was about to strike the second time a voice did suddenly dart from Heaven into my soul which said, 'Wilt thou leave thy sins and go to Heaven or have thy sins and go to hell?'"</p> <p> </p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"The writer who took most interest in popular pastimes was Shadwell, whose rococo play <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Royal Shepherdess</span> was produced before the king in 1669. It included country folk who danced and sand of a list of genuine English rural games, such as trap, keels, barley-break, golf [and] stool-ball . . . ."</p> <p>Hutton, Ronald, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Rise and Fall of Merry England: the Ritual Year, 1400-1700</span> (Oxford U Press, Oxford, 1994), page 235. Provided by John Thorn, email, 7/9/2004. <strong>Note:</strong> can we retrieve the full original list?</p>  +
<p>"Thus all our life long we are frolick and gay,/And instead of Court revels, we merrily play/At Trap, at Rules, and at Barly-break run:/At Goff, and at Foot-ball, and when we have done/These innocent sports, we'l laugh and lie down,/And to each pretty Lass/We will give a green Gown.</p> <p>Ebsworth, Joseph W., <u>Westminster</u> <u>Drolleries, Both Parts, of 1671, 1672</u> [R. Roberts, Lincolnshire, 1875], page 28. <b>Note:</b> Yes, the player's method for turning the gown to green is what you suspect it is. We'll see this gown again at #1719.1, below.</p>  +
<p>Warwickshire scientist Francis Willughby (1635-1672) compiled, in manuscript form, descriptions of over 130 games, including, stoolball, hornebillets, kit-cat, stowball, and tutball [but not cricket, trapball or rounders]. He died at 36 and the incomplete manuscript, long held privately, became known to researchers in the 1990s and was published in 2003.</p> <p>Willughby described stoolball as a game in which a team of players defended an overturned stool with their hands.</p> <p>Hornebillets, unlike stoolball and early cat games, involved using a bat, and also base-running [between holes placed 7 or 8 yards apart], but it used no ball - a cat was used as the batted object. A runner [running was compulsory, even for short hits] had to place his staff in a hole before the other team could put the cat in that hole. The number of holes depended on the number of players available.</p> <p>Stowball appears as a golf-like game.</p> <p>Kit Cat is described as a sort of fungo game in which the cats can be propelled 60 yards or more.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>In his memoirs, the Rev. Thomas Wilson, a Puritan divine of Maidstone, England, states: "Maidstone was formerly a very profane town, in as much as I have seen morrice-dancing, cudgel-playing, stool-ball, cricketts, and many other sports openly and publicly indulged in on the Lord's Day." </p> <p><b>Note:</b> Henderson covers Wilson, but doesn't reference him. In the text, he says that Wilson wrote a memoir in 1700, but doesn't use a year for the events that were then recalled. I assume that the 1672 date is taken from date clues in the whole text. Henderson's source may be his ref #167: see Woodruff, C.H., "Origin of Cricket," <u>Baily's Magazine</u> [London, 1901], Vol. 6, p. 51. David Block [page 173ff] describes how "base ball" was substituted for "stool-ball" in later accounts of Wilson' s biography, which he cites as Swinnick, George, <u>The Life and Death of Mr. Tho. Wilson, Minister of Maidstone</u> [London].</p>  +
<p>The chaplain assigned to three British ships at Aleppo [now in northern Syria] wrote this in his diary for May 6, 1676:</p> <p>As was the custom all summer long, this day [in May 1676] "at least 40 of the English, with his worship the Consull, rod [sic] out of the citty about 4 miles to the Greene Platt, a fine vally by a river side, to recreate them selves. Where a princely tent was pitched; and wee had severall pastimes and sports, as duck-hunting, fishing, shooting, handball, krickett, scrofilo . . . . and at 6 wee returne all home in good order, but soundly tyred and weary."</p> <p>A.G. Steel and R. H. Lyttelton, <u>Cricket,</u> (Longmans Green, London, 1890) 4<sup>th</sup> edition, page 8.<b> </b> The passage is at Teonge, Henry, <u>The Diary of Henry Teonge</u> (Charles Knight, London, 1825), page 159. Accessed on Google Books, 12/28/2007.</p>  +
<p>The Mayor and Aldermen of New York that none should "att any Time hereafter willfully or obstinately prophane the Sabbath daye by . . . Playinge att Cards Dice Tables or any other Vnlawful Games whatsoeuer," banning "alsoe the disorderly Assemblyes of Children In ye Streets and other Places To the disturbance of Others with Noyse." Consequences? "Ye Person or Persons soe found drinkinge Gameing or Playing Either in Priuate or Publicke Shall forfeict Tenn Guildrs for Euery such offence." Note that ballplaying was not specifically prohibited.  </p>  +
<p>"Young men and maids,/ Now very brisk,/ At barley-break and/ Stool-ball frisk."</p> <p>W. Winstanley, <u>Poor Robin 1677. An almanack after a new fashion, by Poor Robin</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 174.</p>  +
<p>Anon., <u>Honest Hodge and Ralph Holding a Sober Discourse in Answer to a late Scandalous and Pernicious Pamphlet</u>, by "a person of quality" [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 174. The anonymous author of this tract sees the pamphlet as a tool used to trigger civil unrest in England, calling it "a mere <i>trap-stick</i> to bang the <i>Phanaticks</i> about."</p>  +
<p>While the length of the cricket pitch [distance between wickets] was formally set at 22 yards in the 1744 rules, that distance is already "thought to have been 22 yards in the 1680's." [John Thorn points out that 22 yards is one-tenth of a furlong (and is also one-eightieth of a mile), and that a 22-yard chain was commonly used as a standard starting in the 1600's; in fact, the "chain" became itself a word for this distance in 1661; email of 2/1/2008.]</p> <p>Scholefield, Peter, <u>Cricket Laws and Terms</u> [Axiom Publishing, Kent Town Australia, 1990], page 16. <b>Note:</b> Scholefield does not provide a citation for this claim; keep an eye out!</p>  +
<p>"We know that the first wicket, comprising two stumps with a bail across them, was pitched somewhere about 1683, as John Nyren recalled long afterward." Thomas Moult, "The Story of the Game," in Thomas Moult, ed., <u>Bat and Ball: A New Book of Cricket</u> (The Sportsmans Book Club, London, 1960: reprint from 1935), page 31.</p> <p><b>Note:</b> We should locate Nyren's original claim. Does this imply that cricket was played without wickets, or without bails, before 1683?</p>  +
<p>Aubrey, John, <u>Natural History of Wiltshire</u> [London, Nichols and Son, 1847], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 210. Folklorist Alice Gomme [see below] called this the earliest description of stool-ball. Aubrey says "it is peculiar to North Wilts, North Gloucestershire, and a little part of Somerset near Bath. They smite a ball, stuffed very hard with quills and covered with soale leather, with a staffe, commonly made of withy, about three feet and a half long. Colerne down is the place so famous and so frequented for stobbal playing. The turfe is very fine and the rock (freestone) is within an inch and a halfe of the surface which gives the ball so quick a rebound. A stobball ball is of about four inches diameter and as hard as stone. I do not heare that this game is used anywhere in England but in this part of Wiltshire and Gloucestershire adjoining." From A. B. Gomme, <u>The Traditional Games of England, Scotland, and Ireland</u>, 1964 reprint of 1898 text [New York, Dover], page 217.</p>  +
<p>"It is reported that William III watched the game soon after he landed at Torbay, and that subsequently Queen Anne was an interested spectator."</p> <p>M. S. Russell-Goggs, page 320. <strong>Note:</strong> we need to locate the full citations for this and all other Russell-Goggs references; short of this, we need to confirm the date of the Torbay landing. A cursory Google search does not reveal confirming evidence of this anecdote.</p>  +
<p>Anon., <u>The Pagan Prince: or a Comical History of the Heroik Atchievements of the Palatine of Eboracum</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 175. In this comical prose work, protection in battle was said to be provided by four Arch Angels - who, "when they see a Cannon Ball coming toward ye from any corner of the Wind, will catch it like a stool-ball and throw it to the Devil."</p>  +
<p>D'Urfey, Thomas, <u>The comical history of Don Quixote</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 175. Block sees a "long, silly, bawdy rap song" in this play. It starts "Come all, great, small, short tall, away to Stoolball," and depicts young men and women becoming pretty familiar. It ends "Then went the Glasses round, then went the lasses down, each Lad did his Sweet-heart own, and on the Grass did fling her. Come all, great small, short tall, a-way to Stool Ball." Sounds like fun.</p>  +
<p>"With a relaxation of attitudes towards sports at the Restoration cricket began to emerge from its position of relative obscurity with the printed word beginning to define it, along with other folk games, as an element of the national culture. Edward Chamberlyne's <u>Anglia Notitia</u>, a handbook on the social and political conditions of England, lists cricket for the first time in the eighteenth edition of 1694. 'The natives will endure long and hard labour; insomuch, that after 12 hours of hard work, they will go in the evening to foot-ball, stool-ball, cricket, prison-base, wrestling, cudgel-playing, and some such vehement exercise, for their recreation.'"</p> <p>Source: Bateman, Anthony, "More Mighty than the Bat, the Pen . . . ;' Culture, Hegemony, and the Literaturisaton of Cricket," <u>Sport in History</u>, v. 23, 1 (Summer 2003), page 30. </p> <p>Upon further examination, Protoball notes that <u>Anglia Notitia</u> actually has two ongoing areas of special interest. The first is the text above in part 1, chapter V, which had evolved through earlier editions - the 1676 edition - if not earlier ones - had already mentioned stow-ball [changed to "stoolball" as of 1694 or earlier], according to Hazlitt's <u>Faith and Folklore.</u> Cricket historian Diana Rait Kerr agrees that cricket was first added in the 18<sup>th</sup> edition of 1694.</p> <p>Another section of <u>Anglia Notitia</u> catalogued English recreations. Text for this section - part 3, chapter VII - is accessible online for the 1702, 1704, 1707, and later editions. These recreations were listed in three parts: for royalty, for nobles and gentry, and for "Citizens and Peasants." Royal sports included tennis, pell mell and billiards. The gentry's sports included tennis, bowling, and billiards. And then: "The Citizens and Peafants have Hand-ball, Stow-ball, Nine-Pins, Shovel-board [and] Goffe," said the 20<sup>th</sup> edition [1702]. In the 22<sup>nd</sup> edition [1707], cricket had been inserted as something that commoners also played. We find no reference to club ball, stick ball, trap ball, or other games suggested as precursors of baseball. The full title of Chamberlayne is <u>Anglia Notitia, or the Present State of England: With Divers Remarks on the Ancient State Thereof.</u> Chamberlayne's first edition apparently appeared in 1669; the 37<sup>th</sup> was issued in 1748. Another Chamberlayne excerpt is found at entry #1704.2 below.</p> <p>John Thorn supplied crucial input for this entry. <b>Note:</b> It would be interesting to see whether earlier and later editions of Chamberlayne cite other games of interest.</p>  
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Foreign Post</span>, July 7, 1697 reports that in Sussex, two sides of eleven each, eyeing a prize of 50 guineas, played "a great match at cricket."</p> <p>Contributed by Beth Hise, January 12, 2010.</p>  +
<p>"Of course, there are many bare announcements of matches played before that time [the 1740's]. In 1700 <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Postboy</span> advertised one to take place on Clapham Common."</p> <p> </p> <p><strong>Note:</strong> An excerpt from a Wikipedia entry accessed on 10/17/08 states: <strong>"</strong>A series of matches, to be held on Clapham Common [in South London - LMc] , was pre-announced on 30 March by a periodical called <em>The Post Boy</em>. The first was to take place on Easter Monday and prizes of £10 and £20 were at stake. No match reports could be found so the results and scores remain unknown. Interestingly, the advert says the teams would consist of ten <em>Gentlemen</em> per side but the invitation to attend was to <em>Gentlemen and others</em>. This clearly implies that cricket had achieved both the patronage that underwrote it through the 18th century and the spectators who demonstrated its lasting popular appeal."</p>  +
<p>"Close of the 17<sup>th</sup> century: . . . The Common was always a playground for boys - wicket and flinging of the bullit was much enjoyed . . . . No games were allowed to be played on the Sabbath, and a fine of five shillings was imposed on the owner of any horse seen on the Common on that day. People were not even to stroll on the Common, during the warm weather, on Sunday."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"[T]he growth of a commercial London failed to raise the tone of sporting tastes. While the countryman exercised vehemently at football, stool-ball, cricket, pins-on-base, wrestling, or cudgel-playing, there was fiercer and more blood-stirring excitement for the Londoner. Particularly at Hockley-in-the-Hole, one could find bear-baiting, bull-baiting and cock-fighting to his heart's content."</p> <p>Chamberlayne, Edward, <u>Anglia Notitia: The Present State of England</u> [London, 1704 and 1748], page 51. Submitted by John Thorn, 7/9/04.</p>  +
<p>"[The following] text is, as far as we know, the earliest published rules of cricket that have come down to us. They are more than eighty years older than the first official Laws of Cricket, published in 1789." The ensuing text calls for the 4-ball over, unregulated runner and fielder interference, and has no rule to keep a batsman from deflecting bowled balls with his body.</p> <p><a href="http://www.seatllecricket.com/history/1704laws.htm">http://www.seatllecricket.com/history/1704laws.htm</a>, accessed 10/2/02. The site offers no source. Most sources date the easiest rules to 1744; could this date stem from a typo? No source is given for the rules themselves. Beth Hise, on January 12, 2010, expressed renewed skepticism about the 1704 date. <b>Caution:</b> we have requested confirmation and sources from this website, and have not had a reply as of Feb. 2010.</p>  +
<p>Madame Knight, "in her inimitable journal of her ride from Boston to New York in 1704, speaks of ball-playing in Connecticut."</p> <p>"The Game of Wicket and Some Old-Time Wicket Players," in George Dudley Seymour, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Papers and Addresses of the Society of Colonial Wars in the State of Connecticut, Volume II of the Proceedings of the Society</span><em>,</em> [n. p., 1909.] page 284. Submitted by John Thorn, 7/11/04. John notes 9/3/2005 that Seymour observes that Madame Knight does not specifically name the sport as wicket, but he excludes cricket as a possibility because cricket was not then known to have been played in America before 1725; however, John adds, we now have a cricket reference in Virginia from 1709. [See #1709.1, below.]</p>  +
<p>An account in the July 24 issue of <u>The Postman</u> reads, "This is to give notice that a match of cricket is to be plaid between 11 gentlemen of the west part of Kent, against as many of Chatham, for 11 guineas a man at Maulden in Kent on August 7<sup>th</sup> next." Thomas Moult, "The Story of the Game," in Thomas Moult, ed., <u>Bat and Ball: A New Book of Cricket</u> (Sportsmans Book Club, London, 1960; reprint of 1935), page 27. </p>  +
<p>Goldwin, William, <i>In Certamen Pilae</i>. Per John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 15. Ford does not provide a full citation for this source. He reports the poem, written Latin, as "describing the early game and suggesting, perhaps, that it is becoming 'respectable.' He adds that "there was academic controversy over its translation in 1923." John Thorn offers that the poem was published in Goldwin's <u>Musae Juveniles</u> in 1706, and was translated by Harold Perry as "The Cricket Match" in 1922 [email of 2/1/2008]. John also sent Protoball the original text, for you Latin speakers out there.</p>  +
<p>[Author?] <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Scotch rogue; or, The life and actions of Donald MacDonald, a Highland Scot</span> [London], per David Block, <span><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball Be</span><span style="text-decoration: underline;">fore We Knew It</span></span>, page 176. The [apparently fictional] hero recalls; "I was but a sorry proficient in learning: being readier at <em>cat and doug, cappy-hole,</em> riding the <em>burley hacket,</em> playing at <em>kyles and dams</em>, <em>spangboder, wrestling, and foot-ball</em> (and such other sports as we use in our country) than at my book."</p> <p>Block identifies "cat and doug," or cat and dog, as a Scots two-base version of the game of cat that was most commonly played in Scotland.  It was the likely forbear of the American game of two-old-cat."</p>  +
<p>From <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1697_to_1725_English_cricket_seasons">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1697_to_1725_English_cricket_seasons</a>, accessed 10/17/08:</p> <p>"The earliest known match involving county teams or at any rate teams bearing the names of counties. The match was advertised in the <i>Post Man</i> dated Saturday June 25, 1709. The stake was £50.</p> <p>"Some authors have suggested the teams in reality were "Dartford and a Surrey village", but this contradicts evidence of patronage and high stakes. It is likely that Dartford, as the foremost Kent club in this period, provided not only the venue but also the nucleus of the team, but there is no reason at all to doubt that the team included good players from elsewhere in the county. The Surrey team will equally have been drawn from a number of Surrey parishes and subscribed by their patron."</p> <p>The Wikipedia entry credits the website "From Lads to Lords: The History of Cricket 1300-1787", at <a href="http://www.jl.sl.btinternet.co.uk/stampsite/cricket/main.html">http://www.jl.sl.btinternet.co.uk/stampsite/cricket/main.html</a></p>  +
<p>W. Winstanley and Successors, <u>Poor Robin 1709. An almanack after a new fashion</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 176. A selection begins, "Thus harmless country lads and lasses/ In mirth the time away so passes:/ Here men at foot-ball they do fall;/ There boys at <i>cat</i> and trap-ball."</p>  +
<p>"The playing of round ball, as the game was formerly called, but since changed to 'base ball,' was, in 1844, much in vogue, and was an exhilarating and agreeable amusement . . . ."</p> <p> </p> <p> </p>  +
<p>In an April 25, 1709 diary entry, William Byrd, owner of the Virginia plantation Westover, wrote: "I rose at 6 o'clock and said my prayers shortly. Mr. W-l-s and I fenced and I beat him. Then we played at cricket, Mr. W-l-s and John Custis against me and Mr. [Hawkins], but we were beaten. I ate nothing but milk for breakfast . . ."</p> <p>On May 6 of the same year he noted: "I rose about 6 o'clock and Colonel Ludwell, Nat Harrison, Mr. Edwards and myself played at cricket, and I won a bit [presumably an eighth of a Spanish dollar]. Then we played at whist and I won. About 10 o'clock we went to breakfast and I ate some boiled rice." Another undated entry showed that cricket was not just an early-morning pastime: "About 10 o'clock Dr. Blair, and Major and Captain Harrison came to see us. After I had given them a glass of sack we played cricket. I ate boiled beef for my dinner. Then we played at shooting with arrows...and went to cricket again till dark."</p> <p>Wright, Louis B., and Marion Tinling, eds., <u>The Secret Diary of William Byrd of Westover 1709-1712</u> [Dietz Press, Richmond, 1941], pages 25-26 and 31. We have no page reference for the third mention of cricket, which appears in a short article on Smithsonian.com, as accessed 1/20/2007. Thanks to John Thorn for reference data [email of 2/1/2008].</p>  +
<p>"James before he beheld Betty, was vain of his strength, a rough wrestler . . . ; Betty [was] a publick Dancer at May-poles, a Romp at Stool-Ball. He was always following idle Women, she playing among the Peasants; He a Country Bully, she a Country Coquet."</p> <p>Steele, <i>Spectator</i> number 71, May 22, 1711, page 2. Provided by John Thorn, emails of 6/11/2007 and 2/1/2008. The implication of the passage appears to be that women who played a game like stool-ball were unlikely to be chaste.<b> </b></p>  +
<p>"Connecticut lexicographer and writer Noah Webster may have been referring to a baseball- type game when he wrote his journal entry for March 24-25, 1788: 'Take a long walk. Play at Nines at Mr Brandons. Very much indisposed.'"</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>The Duke of Marlborough and Viscount Townsend are publicly criticized for currying favor with electors by playing cricket with children "on a Sabbath day," and for wagering 20 guineas on the outcome. Bateman cites and quotes from a broadsheet report on this match at <u>The Devil and the Peers, or a Princely Way of Sabbath Breaking</u> [source not otherwise identified] at Bateman, Anthony,"'More Mighty than the Bat, the Pen . . . ;' Culture,, Hegemony, and the Literaturisaton of Cricket," <u>Sport in History</u>, v. 23, 1 (Summer 2003), page 30. John Thorn identifies the broadsheet as having been published by J. Parker [email of 2/1/2008].</p>  +
<p>"The Rain-water grievously runs into my son Joseph's Chamer . . . . I went on the Roof, and found the Spout next Slater's stopped . . . . Boston went up . . . came down a Spit, and clear'd the Leaden-throat, by thrusting out a Trap-Ball that stuck there."</p> <p> Diarist Samuel Sewall (1652-1730)is known as a Salem Witch Judge.  He later apologized.</p>  +
<p>"The Young Folks of this Town had a Merry-Night . . . . The Young Weomen treated the Men with a Tandsey as they lost to them at a Game at Stoole Balle."</p> <p>T. Ellison Gibson, ed., <u>Blundell's Diary, Comprising Selections from the Diary of Nicholas Blundell, Esq.</u> (Gilbert G. Walmsley, 1895), diary entry for May 14, 1715, page 134. <b>Note:</b> "Tandsey" presumably refers to tansey-cakes, traditionally linked to springtime games. </p>  +
<p>"Thus all our lives we're Frolick and gay,/And instead of Court Revels we merrily Play/ At Trap and Kettles and Barley-break run,/ At Goff, and at Stool-ball, and when we have done/ These innocent Sports, we Laugh and lie down,/ And to each pretty Lass we give a green Gown."</p> <p>D'Urfey, Thomas, <u>Wit and Mirth: or Pills to Purge Melancholy</u> [London], Vol. 3, per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 177. <b>Note:</b> This closely mimics the verse found above at #1671.1. </p>  +
<p>In 1907, a kindred spirit of ours reported [in a listserve-equivalent of the day] on his attempts to find early news coverage of cricket. He reports on a 1720 article he sees as "the first newspaper reference I have yet found to cricket as a popular game:"</p> <p>"The Holiday coming on, the Alewives of Islington, Kentish Town, and several adjacent villages . . . . The Fields will swarm with Butchers'; Wives and Oyster-Women . . . diverting themselves with their Offspring, whilst their Spouses and Sweethearts are sweating at Ninepins, some at Cricket, others at Stool-Ball, besides an amorous Couple in every Corner . . . Much Noise and Cutting in the Morning; Much Tippling all Day; and much Reeling and Kissing at Night."</p> <p>Alfred F. Robbins, "Replies: The Earliest Cricket Report," <u>Notes and Queries: A Medium of Intercommunication for Literary Men, General Readers, Etc</u>, September 7, 1907, page 191. Provided by John Thorn, 2/8/2008, via email. He reports his source as <u>Read's Weekly Journal, or British-Gazeteer</u>, June 4, 1720, and advises that he has omitted phrases not "welcome to the modern taste. Accessed via Google Books 10/18/2008.</p>  +
<p>In a strong anti-Presbyterian tract, Thomas Lewis noted that among Puritans "all Games where there is any hazard of loss are strictly forbidden; as Tennis, Bowles and Billiards; not so much as a Game at stool-ball for a Tansy, . . . upon Pain of Damnation."</p> <p>Thomas. Lewis, <u>English Presbyterian Eloquence: Or, Dissenters Sayings Ancient and Modern</u> (T. Bickerton, London, 1720), page 17. Citation provided by John Thorn, email of 2/1/2008. </p>  +
<p>A month later [see #1720.2, above], Islington was in the news again. <u>The Postman</u> reported on July 16, 1720 that:</p> <p>"Last week a match was played in The White Conduit Fields, by Islington, between 11 Londoners on one side and elevent men of Kent on the other side, for 5s a head, at which time being in eager pursuit of the game, the Kentish men having the wickets, two Londoners striving [p.27/p.28] for expedition to gain the ball, met each other with such fierceness that, hitting their heads together, they both fell backwards without stirring hand or foot, and lay deprived of sense for a considerable time, and 'tis not yet known whether they willl recover. The Kentish men were beat." Thomas Moult, "The Story of the Game," in Thomas Moult, ed., <u>Bat and Ball: A New Book of Cricket</u> (Sportsmans Book Club, London, 1960 - reprint from 1935), pp 27-28.</p>  +
<p>"March, 15. Sam. Hirst [Sewall's grandson, reportedly, and a Harvard '23 man -- (LMc)] got up betime in the morning, and took Ben Swett with him and went into the [Boston MA] Common to play at Wicket. Went before any body was up, left the door open; Sam came not to prayer; at which I was most displeased.</p> <p>"March 17<sup>th</sup>. Did the like again, but took not Ben with him. I told him he could not lodge here practicing thus. So he lodg'd elsewhere. He grievously offended me in persuading his Sister Hannam not to have Mr. Turall, without enquiring of me about it. And play'd fast and loose in a vexing matter about himself in a matter relating to himself, procuring me great Vexation."</p> <p>.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"In 1725, he [the Duke of Richmond] challenged Sir William Gage in a two-a-side single-wicket competition. . . ."</p> <p>Simon Rae, <u>It's Not Cricket: A History of Skulduggery, Sharp Practice and Downright Cheating in the Noble Game</u> (Faber and Faber, 2001), page 57. <b>Note:</b> is there a fuller account for tis match? A primary source?</p>  +
<p>An Essex official worries that a local game of cricket was simply a way of collecting a crowd of disaffected people in order to foment rebellion. Per John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 16. Ford does not provide a citation for this account.</p>  +
<p>Two sides forged "Articles of Agreement" that specify 12 players to a side, a 23-yard pitch, two umpires to be named by each side, and "mentions catches but not other forms of dismissal." Per John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 16. <b>Note:</b> Ford does not provide a citation for this account.</p>  +
<p>In order to score a run, a batsman/runner had to touch a staff held by an umpire with his bat. The modern rule appeared in the 1744 rules.</p> <p>Scholefield, Peter, <u>Cricket Laws and Terms</u> [Axiom Publishing, Kent Town Australia, 1990], page 22.</p>  +
<p>"James Gordon & I Plaid Trabbel against John Horon and Th Horon for an anker of Syder We woun. We drunk our Syder."</p> <p>Hancock, H. B., ed., "'Fare Weather and Good Helth:' the Journal of Caesar Rodeney, 1727 - 1729," <u>Delaware History</u>, volume 10, number 1 [April 1962], p. 64. Thomas L. Altherr, "A Place Leavel Enough to Play Ball," reprinted in David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It,</u> ref # 19.</p>  +
<p>"In the infancy of the game [cricket] the batsman stood before a circular hole in the turf, and was put out, as in 'rounders,' by being caught, or by the ball being put in this hole. A century and a half ago this hole was still in use, though it had on each side a stump only one foot high, with a long cross-bar of two feet in length laid on top of them."</p> <p>Robert MacGregor, <u>Pastimes and Players</u> (Chatto and Windus, London, 1881), page 4, accessed 1/30/10 via Google Books search ("pastimes and players"). MacGregor gives no source for this claim. Note that MacGregor does not say that such practice was uniformly used in this period. <b>Query:</b> have later writers specified in more detail when the hole and the low long wicket disappeared from cricket?</p>  +
<p>"I can't say I am sorry I was never quite a school-boy: an expedition against bargemen or a match at cricket may be very pretty things to recollect; but thank my stars, I can remember things very near as pretty."</p> <p>Letter from Horace Walpole to George Montagu, May 6, 1736. One interpretation of this letter: "Horace Walpole was sent to Eton in 1726. Playing cricket, as well as bashing bargemen, was common at that time:" Pycroft, John, <u>The Cricket Field; or, The History and the Science of the Game of Cricket</u>, second edition (Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans, London, 1854), page 43.</p>  +
<p>"The Great Cricket Match, between the Duke of Richmond and Mr. Chambers, 11 men on each side, for 200 Guineas, was begun to be played on Monday at two in the Afternoon, on Richmond Green. By agreement they were not to play after 7 o'clock. . . . when the Hour agreed being come, they were obliged to leave off, tho' beside the Hands then playing, they [chambers' side] had 4 or 5 more to have come in. Thus it proved a drawn Battle. There were many Thousand Spectators, of whom a great number were Persons of Distinction of both Sexes." </p> <p>Source: <u>The Daily Journal</u>, August 25, 1731, as uncovered by Alfred Robbins in his 1907 digging. Robbins finds the article of "historical interest, for it is the earliest I have yet traced of a drawn game." Alfred Robbins, "The Earliest Cricket Report," <u>Notes and Queries: A Medium of Intercommunication for Literary Men, General Readers, Etc.</u>, September 7, 1907, page 192. <b>Note:</b> does this match still stand as the first recorded drawn match?</p>  +
<p>David Block calls this account "the most complete and detailed portrayal of the game to date." It provides the earliest reference to the use of a bat, describes a game that does not involve running after the young [female] players hit the ball, and includes a description of the field and the assembled audience.<strong> </strong></p> <p><strong>See Supplemental Text for more.</strong></p> <p><strong> </strong></p>  +
<p>"On Wednesday next a great Match at Cricket is to be play'd at Moulsey-Hurst in Surrey, between eleven Men of the said County, chose by his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, and the same Number chose out of the London Club by his Grace the Duke of Marlborough, for 500 [pounds] a Side." <u>Country Journal of The Craftsman</u> (London), July 16, 1737. Excavated by John Thorn, 2/1/2008. <b>Note:</b> So who won? And was the bet really paid off? </p>  +
<p>Brickell, an Irishman, writes of NC Indians: "They have [a] game which is managed with a <i>Battoon</i>, and very much resembles our <i>Trap-ball</i>."</p> <p>Brickell, John., <u>The Natural History of North Carolina</u> [James Carson, Dublin, 1737], p. 336. Thomas L. Altherr, "A Place Leavel Enough to Play Ball," reprinted in David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It,</u> ref # 20. </p>  +
<p>Georgia planter William Stephens: "Many of our Townsmen, Freeholders, Inmates, and Servants were assembled in the principal Square, at Cricket and divers other athletick Sports."</p> <p><i>A Journal of the Proceedings in Georgia</i>, II, page 217, as cited in Lester, ed., <u>A Century of Philadelphia Cricket</u> [U Penn, 1951], page 4. Lester cites this account as the first mention of American cricket.</p>  +
<p>"The earliest known cricket picture was first displayed in 1739. It is an engraving call "The Game of Cricket", by Hubert-Francois Gravelot (1699-1773) and shows two groups of cherubic lads gathered around a batsman and a bowler. The wicket shown is the "low stool" shape, probably 2 feet wide and 1 foot tall, with two stumps and a single bail." Received in an email from John Thorn, 2/1/2008. Source:</p> <p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1739_English_cricket_season">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1739_English_cricket_season</a>. </p> <p>Another fan's notes: "Art is immortal, and the M.C.C. has acquired a new work of Art in connection with cricket. This is a drawing in pencil on grey paper, representing a country game in the [eighteenth] century. . . . The two notched stumps with one bail are only about six inches high, and the bowler appears to be "knuckling" the ball like a marble. I have very little doubt that the artist was Gravelot." Andrew Lang, "At the Sign of the Ship," <u>Longmans' Magazine</u> (London) Number LXIX, July 1888, page 332.</p> <p>On 2/24/10, an image was available via a Google Web search (christies "gravelot (1699-1773)" cricket).</p>  +
<p>"Dear Boy: . . . Therefor remember to give yourself up entirely to the thing you are doing, be it what it will, whether your book or play: for if you have a right ambition, you will desire to excell all boys of your age at cricket, or trap ball, as well as in learning." P.D.S. Chesterfield, <u>Lord Chesterfield's Letters of His Son</u> (M. W. Dunne, 1901), Volume II, Letter LXXI, to his son. Citation provided by John Thorn, email of 2/1/2008.</p> <p>Cited by Steel and Lyttelton, <u>Cricket,</u> (Longmans Green, London, 1890), pp 8 - 9.. Steel and Lyttelton introduce this quotation as follows: "When once the eighteenth century is reached cricket begins to find mention in literature. Clearly the game was rising in the world and was being taken up, like the poets of the period, by patrons."<b> </b></p>  +
<p>Cashman, Richard, "Cricket," in David Levinson and Karen Christopher, <u>Encyclopedia of World Sport: From Ancient Times to the Present</u> [Oxford University Press, 1996], page 88.</p>  +
<p>"Much time is wasted now away/ At pigeon-holes and nine-pin play/. . . ./ At stool-ball and at barley-break,/Wherewith they at harmless pastime make."</p> <p>W. Winstanley and Successors, <u>Poor Robin 1740. An almanack after a new fashion</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 178. </p>  +
<p>"The judge to dance his brother serjeant call,</p> <p>The senator at cricket urge the ball"</p> <p>Pope, "The Dunciad," per Steel and Lyttelton, <u>Cricket,</u> (Longmans Green, London, 1890) 4<sup>th</sup> edition, page 9. Steel and Lyttelton date the writing to 1726-1735. Their remark: "Mr. Alexander Pope had sneered at cricket. At what did Mr. Pope not sneer?"</p> <p>Alexander Pope, <u>The Dunciad, Complete in Four Books, According to Mr. Pope's Last Improvements</u> (Warburton, London, 1749), Book IV, line 592, page 70. <b>Note;</b> This fragment does not seem severely disparaging. Is it clear from context what offense he gives to cricketers? It is true that this passage demeans assorted everyday practices, particularly as pursued by those of high standing. Book IV, the last, is now believed to have been written in 1741. Other entries that employ the "urge the ball" phrasing are #1747.1, #1805c.7, #1807.3, and #1824.4.</p>  +
<p>"Cricket is certainly a very innocent and wholesome, yet it may be abused if either great or little people make it their business. It is grossly abused when it is made the subject of publick advertisements to draw together great crowds of people who ought all of them to be somewhere else.</p> <p>"The diversion of cricket may be proper in holiday time, and in the country, but upon days when men ought to be busy, and in the neighbourhood of a great city, it is not only improper, but mischievous, to a high degree. It draws number of people from their employments to the ruins of their families . . . it gives the most open encouragement to gaming."</p> <p><u>British Champion,</u> September 8, 1743. Provided by Gregory Christiano, 12/2/09, as reprinted in The <u>Gentlemans Magazine, 1743.</u> The piece appears, perhaps in its entirety, in W. W. Read, Annals of Cricket (St. Dunston's Press, 1896), page 27ff [accessed 1/30/10 via Google Books search ("very innocent" "annals of cricket")].</p>  +
<p>"We may see how the game was played about this time from the picture, of date 1743, in the possession of the Surrey County Club. The wicket was a 'skeleton hurdle,' one foot high and two feet wide, consisting of two stumps only, with a third laid across. The bat was curved at the end, and made for free hitting rather than defence. The bowling was all along the ground, and the great art was to bowl under the bat. All play was forward of the wicket, as it is now in single wicket games of less that five players a side. With these exceptions, the game was very much the same as it is today [1881]." </p> <p>Robert MacGregor, <u>Pastimes and Players</u> (Chatto and Windus, London, 1881), page 16. Note that the circular hole, described in #1730.1, is not seen. <b>Caveat:</b> It is not clear from this account whether forward hitting was common in the 1740s or whether MacGregor is simply drawing inferences about this single painting.</p>  +
<p>"July 11. In the Artillery Ground. Three of Kent - Hodswell, J. Cutbush, V. Romney vs. Three of England - R. Newland, Sawyer, John Bryan. Kent won by 2 runs."</p> <p>Cited in Thomas Moult, "The Story of the Game," Thomas Moult, ed., <u>Bat and Ball: A New Book of Cricket</u> (Sportsmans Book Club, London, 1960 - reprinted from 1935), page 29. Moult's commentary: "Several features of this match are to be emphasized [besides the fact that the score was reported, not simply the name of the winning side - LM]. The convention of eleven a side was not yet established . . . . Also the match was played before 10,000 spectators." <b>Note:</b> Moult does not cite the original source.</p>  +
<p>Writing as James Love, the poet and actor James Dance [1722-1774] penned a 316-line verse that extols cricket. The poem, it may surprise you to learn, turns on the muffed catch by an All England player [shades of Casey!] that, I take it, allows Kent County to win a close match. Protoball's virtual interview with Mr. Dance:</p> <p><i>Protoball</i>: Are you a serious cricket fan?</p> <p><i>Dance:</i>" Hail, cricket! Glorious manly, British Game! / First of all Sports! be first alike in Fame!" [lines 13-14]</p> <p><i>PBall:</i> Isn't billiards a good game too?</p> <p><i>Dance:</i>"puny Billiards, where, with sluggish Pace / The dull Ball trails before the feeble Mace" [lines 40-41]</p> <p><i>PBall:</i> But you do appreciate tennis, right?"</p> <p><i>Dance:</i> "Not Tennis [it]self, [cricket's] sister sport can charm, /Or with [cricket's] fierce Delights our Bosoms warm".[lines 55-56] . . . to small Space confined, ev'n [tennis] must yield / To nobler CRICKET, the disputed field." [lines 60-61]</p> <p><i>PBall:</i> But doesn't every country have a fine national pastime?</p> <p><i>Dance:</i> "Leave the dissolving Song, the baby Dance, / To Sooth[e] the Slaves of Italy and France: / While the firm Limb, and strong brac'd Nerve are thine [cricket's] / Scorn Eunuch Sports; to manlier Games [we] incline" [lines 68-71]</p> <p><i>PBall:</i>Manlier? You see the average cricketer as especially manly?</p> <p><i>Dance:</i> "He weighs the well-turn'd Bat's experienced Force, / And guides the rapid Ball's impetuous course, / His supple Limbs with Nimble Labour plies, / Nor bends the grass beneath him as he flies." [lines 29 - 32]</p> <p>James Love, <u>Cricket: an Heroic Poem. illustrated with the Critical Observations of Scriblerus Maximus</u>(W. Bickerton, London, undated)" The poet writes of a famous 1744 match between All England and Kent [#1744.3, above.] Thanks to Beth Hise for a lead to this poem, email, 12/21/2007. John Thorm, per email of 2/1/2008, located and pointed to online copy. <b>Note:</b> Are we sure the versified game account is from the 1744 Kent/England match - not 1746, for example? </p>  
<p>The match it describes: All England vs. Kent, played at the Artillery Ground. The same year, admission at the Ground increased from tuppence to sixpence. Per John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 17. </p> <p>John Thorn [email of 2/1/2008] located an account of the match: "Yesterday was play'd in the Artillery-Ground the greatest Cricket-Match even known, the County of Kent again all England, which was won by the former [the score was 97-96 - LM] . . . . There were present the their Royal Highnesses the Princeof Wales and Duke of Cumberland, the Duke of Richmond, Admiral Vernon, and many other Persons of Distinction." <u>The London Evening-Post</u> Number 2592, June 16-19, 1744, page 1 column 3, above the fold. <b>Note:</b> Is the scorecard available somewhere?</p>  +
<p>[A] Ford's crisp summary of the rules: "Toss for pitching wickets and choice of innings; pitch 22 yards; single bail; wickets 22 inches high; 4-ball overs; ball between 5 and 6 ounces; 'no ball' defined; modes of dismissal - bowled, caught, stumped, run out, obstructing the field."</p> <p>The 5-ounce ball is, likely, heavier than balls used in very early US ballplaying.</p> <p>[B] Includes the 4-ball over, later changed to 6 balls. [And to 8 balls in Philadelphia in 1790 -LMc]. The 22 yard pitching distance is one-tenth of the length of a furlong, which is one-eighth of a mile.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>John Newbery's <span style="text-decoration: underline;">A Little Pretty Pocket-Book</span>, published in England, contains a wood-cut illustration showing boys playing "base-ball" and a rhymed description of the game:</p> <p>"The ball once struck off,/Away flies the boy/To the next destined post/And then home with joy."</p> <p>This is held to be the first appearance of the term "base-ball" in print. Other pages are devoted to stool-ball, trap-ball, and tip-cat [per David Block, page 179], as well as cricket. Block finds that this book has the first use of the word "base-ball."</p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> </span></p>  +
<p>Saying that his first fifteen years "went off like a fairy tale," John Adams [1735-1826] wrote fondly "of making and sailing boats . . swimming, skating, flying kites and shooting marbles, bat and ball, football, . . . wrestling and sometimes boxing."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>In July 1747 two ladies' sides from Sussex communities played cricket at London's Artillery-Grounds, and the announced admittance fee was sixpence. At a first match, according to a 7/15/1747 news account, play was interrupted when "the Company broke in so, that it was impossible for the [match] to be play'd; and some of them [the players? - LM] being very much frighted, and others hurt . . . ." That match was to be completed on a subsequent morning . . . . "And in the Afternoon they wil play a second Match at the same Place, several large Sums being depended between the Women of the Hills of Sussex, in Orange colour'd Ribbons, and the Dales in blue!"</p> <p>This item was contributed by David Block on 2/27/2008. David notes that the source is a large scrapbook with thousands of clippings from 1660 to 1840 as collected by a Daniel Lysons: "Collectanea: or A collection of advertisements and paragraphs from the newspapers, relating to various subjects. Publick exhibitions and places of amusement," Vol IV, Pt 2, page 227, British Library shelfmark C.103.k.11. David adds, "Unfortunately, Lysons, or whoever assembled this particular volume, neglected to indicate which paper the clippings were cut from."</p>  +
<p>"What idle progeny succeed</p> <p><a></a>To chase the rolling circle's speed,</p> <p><a></a>Or urge the flying ball?"</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>Lady Hervey (then Mary Lepel) describes in a letter the activities of the family of Frederick, Prince of Wales:</p> <p>"[T]he Prince's family is an example of innocent and cheerful amusements All this last summer they played abroad; and now, in the winter, in a large room, they divert themselves at base-ball, a play all who are, or have been, schoolboys, are well acquainted with. The ladies, as well as gentlemen, join in this amusement . . . . This innocence and excellence must needs give great joy, and well as great hope, to all real lovers of their country and posterity."</p> <p>[The last sentence may well be written in irony, as Lady Hervey was evidently known to be unimpressed with the Prince's conduct.]</p> <p>Hervey, Lady (Mary Lepel), <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Letters</span> (London, 1821), p.139 [Letter XLII, of November 14, 1748, from London]. Google Books now has uploaded the letters: search for "Lady Hervey." Letter 52 begins on page 137, and the baseball reference is on page 139. Accessed 12/29/2007. <strong>Note:</strong> David Block, page 189, spells the name "Lepel," citing documented family usage; the surname often appears as "Leppell." In a 19CBB posting of 2/15/2008, David writes that it is "George III, to whom we can rightly ascribe the honor of being the first known baseball player. The ten-year-old George, as [Prince] Frederick's eldest son, was surely among the prince's family members observed by Lady Hervey in 1748 to be 'divert[ing] themselves at base-ball.'"</p>  +
<p>"A newspaper advertisement announced a match on the [London Artillery] ground on July 24<sup>th</sup>, 1749, between five of the Addington Club and an All England five. The advertisement gave the names of the players, and thus concluded: NB - The last match, which was played on Monday the 10<sup>th</sup> instant, was won by All England, notwithstanding it was eight to one on Addington in the playing.'"</p> <p>Joseph Strutt, <u>The Sports and Pastimes of the People of England</u> [Methuen, London, 1903], page 102. This edition of Strutt [originally published in 1801] was "much enlarged and corrected by L. Charles Cox;" the cited text was inserted by Cox.</p>  +
<p>"Of formalized games, choices for males [in NC] appear to have been 'town-ball, bull-pen,' 'cat,' and 'prisoner's base,' whatever exhibitions of dexterity they may have involved." </p> <p>-- Biographer C. G. Davidson, on local pastimes in North Carolina</p> <p> </p> <p> </p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"Dear Spirit:  . . .</p> <p>"I shall state [here] that which has come under my observation, and also some of my friends, during the last four years of the ball-playing mania . . .   </p> <p>Base ball cannot date back to so far as [cricket], but the game has no doubt, been played in this country for at least one century.  Could we only invoke the spirit of some departed veteran of he game, how many items of interest might we be able to place before the reader.</p> <p>"New England, we believe, has always been the play-ground for our favorite game; and the boys of the various villages still play by the same rules their fathers did before them.  We also find that many games are played, differing but little from the well-known game of Base.</p> <p>" . . .  Although I am a resident of State of New York, I hope to do her no wrong by thinking that the New England States were, and are, the ball grounds of this country, and that many of our  present players were originally from those States.  </p> <p>"The game of Base, as played there, was as follows: They would take the bat, 'hand over hand,' as the present time, 'whole hand or none.'  After the sides  were chosen, the bases would be placed so as to form a square, each base about twenty yards from the other.  The striker would stand between the first and fourth base, equi-distant from each.  The catcher was always expected to take the ball without a bound and it was always thrown by  a player who would stand between the second and third bases. A good catcher would take the ball before the bat cold strike it.  A hand was out if a man was running the bases should be struck with the ball which was thrown at him while he was running.  He was allowed either a pace or a jump to the base which he was striving to reach; or if a ball was caught flying or on first bound.  There was no rule to govern the striker as to the direction he should knock the ball, and of course no such thing as foul balls. The whole side had to be put out, and if the last man could strike a ball a sufficient distance to make all the bases, he could take in one of the men who had been put out. The ball was not quite the same as the one in present use, and varied very much in size and weight, it also was softer and more springy.  </p> <p>"The bats were square, flat, or round -- some preferring a flat bat, and striking with it so that th4  edge, or small side, would come in contact with the ball.  Another arrangement of bases is, to have the first about two yards from the striker (on this right), the second about fifty down the field, and the third, or home, about five. . . .</p> <p>"Yours, respectfully,  X"</p> <p>  </p> <p> </p>  
<p>"Originally bowling literally meant 'to bowl the ball along the ground' as in the style of lawn bowls. By 1750, however, a mixture of grubbers and fully pitched balls were seen."</p> <p>Peter Scholefield, <u>Cricket Laws and Terms</u> [Axiom Publishing, Kent Town Australia], page 34.</p>  +
<p>RIP, sweet Prince. [The prince was the father of King George III.]</p> <p><strong>[A] </strong>"Death of Frederick Lewis, Prince of Wales, as a result of a blow on the head from a cricket ball." </p> <p><strong>[B] </strong> "It's generally said his late Royal Highness the Prince of Wales got a Blow on his Side with a Ball about two Years ago, playing at Cricket, which diversion he was fond of, and 'tis thought was the Occasion of his Death . . . ."</p> <p> </p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"Last Monday afternoon, a match at cricket was play'd on our Common for a considerable Wager, by eleven Londoners, against eleven New Yorkers: The game was play'd according to the London Method; and those who got most notches in two Hands, to be the Winners: The New Yorkers went in first, and got 81; Then the Londoners went in, and got but 43; Then the New Yorkers went in again, and got 86; and the Londoners finished the Game with getting only 37 more."</p> <p>This was the first recorded cricket match played in New York City, and took place on grounds where Fulton Fish Market now stands, "by a Company of Londoners - the London XI - against a Company of New Yorkers." (The New Yorkers won, 167-80.)</p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> </span></p>  +
<p>Gideon Hawley (1727-1807), traveling through the area where Binghamton now is, wrote: "even at the celebration of the Lord's supper [the Dutch boys] have been playing bat and ball the whole term around the house of God."</p> <p>Hawley, Gideon, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Rev. Gideon Hawley's Journal</span> [Broome County, NY 1753], page 1041. Collection of Tom Heitz. Per Patricia Millen, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">From Pastime to Passion</span> [2001], page 2.</p>  +
<p>"We hear that there is to be a great cricket match for a good sum played on Saturday next, near Mr. Aaron Rawling's Spring, between eleven young men of this city [Annapolis] and the same number from Prince George's County [now a Washington suburban community]"</p> <p><em>Bradford's Journal</em>, August 1, 1754, as cited in Lester's <span style="text-decoration: underline;">A Century of Philadelphia Cricket</span> (UPenn Press, Philadelphia, 1951), page 5.</p> <p>This game was at/near Annapolis. See the Annapolis <em>Maryland Gazette</em>, July 25, Aug. 8, Nov. 14, 1754. [ba]</p>  +
<p>Several sources, including the Smithsonian, magazine, report that "The rules of the game on this side of the Atlantic were formalized in 1754, when Benjamin Franklin brought back from England a copy of the [ten year old - LMc] 1744 Laws, cricket's official rule book." Simon Worrall, "Cricket, Anyone?" <u>Smithsonian Magazine</u>, October 2006. The excerpt can be found in the seventh paragraph of the article [as accessed 10/19/2008] at: </p> <p><a href="http://www.smithsonianmagazine.com/issues/2006/october/cricket.php">http://www.smithsonianmagazine.com/issues/2006/october/cricket.php</a>:</p> <p>Lester adds this: "Benjamin Franklin was sufficiently interested in the game [cricket] to bring back with him from England a copy of the laws of cricket, for it was this very copy which was presented to the Young America Club . . .on June 4, 1867." Lester, <u>A Century of Philadelphia Cricket</u> (U Penn, 1951), page 5. <b>Caveat:</b> we have not located a contemporary account of the Franklin story.</p>  +
<p>". . . the younger Part of the Family, perceiving Papa not inclined to <i>enlarge</i> upon the Matter, retired to an <i>interrupted</i> Party at <i>Base-Ball</i>, (an <i>infant</i> Game, which as it advances in its <i>Teens</i>, improves to <i>Fives</i> [handball], and in its State of <i>Manhood</i>, is called <i>Tennis)</i><i>.</i>"</p> <p>Kidgell, John, <u>The Card</u> (John Newbery, London, 1755), page 9. This citation was uncovered in 2007 by David Block. He tells the story of the find in Block, David, "The Story of William Bray's Diary," <i>Base Ball,</i> volume , no. 2 (Fall 2007), pp. 9-11.</p>  +
<p>"1755: Minor revision of the Laws of Cricket." John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 18. Ford does not give a source.</p>  +
<p>Stoolball is simply defined as "A play where balls are driven from stool to stool," and trap is defined as "A play at which a ball is driven with a stick."</p> <p>Johnson, Samuel, <u>A dictionary of the English language</u> [London, 1755], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 179. </p>  +
<p>The publication is <u>The Game at Cricket; as Settled by the Several Cricket-Clubs, Particularly that of the Star and Garter in Pall Mall</u> (London, 1755). </p> <p>Contributed by Beth Hise, January 12, 2010. Beth adds: "This is the first discrete publication of the laws of cricket, a version of which was printed in the <u>New Universal Magazine</u>, and as such enabled the laws to be widely distributed. This is the version generally regarded as containing the original laws of cricket."</p>  +
<p>On the day after Easter in 1755, 18-year-old William Bray recorded the following entry in his diary:</p> <p>"After Dinner Went to Miss Seale's to play at Base Ball, with her, the 3 Miss Whiteheads, Miss Billinghurst, Miss Molly Flutter, Mr. Chandler, Mr. Ford, H. Parsons & Jolly. Drank tea and stayed till 8."</p> <p> </p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"1756: The Hambledon Club plays its first recorded game." John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 18. Ford does not give a source.</p>  +
<p>A description of Parisian sights: "The grand Walk forms a most beautiful Visto, which terminates in a Wood called Elysian Fields, or more commonly known by the name "La Cours de la Rein (Queen's Course). This is the usual place where the Citizens celebrate their Festivals with the Bat and Ball, a Diversion which is much used here." Provided by David Block, 2/27/2008. <b>Note:</b> Is this the same location as what we now know as the Champs Elysee? Can we learn what bat/ball games were so popular the mid 1700s - Soule? Some form of street tennis? A form of field hockey? Not croquet, presumably.</p>  +
<p>Writing of the Buttery on the Harvard campus in Cambridge MA, Sidney Willard later recalled that "[b]esides eatable, everything necessary for a student was there sold, and articles used in the play-grounds, as bats, balls, &c. . . . [w]e wrestled and ran, played at quoits, at cricket, and various games of bat and ball, whose names perhaps are obsolete."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"A minute of the Princeton faculty of May, 1761, frowns upon students "playing at ball."</p> <p>Bentley, et. al., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">American College Athletics</span> [Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, New York, 1929], pages 14-15. Submitted by John Thorn, 6/6/04.</p>  +
<p>"None shall climb over the Fences of the College Yard, or come in or out thro the Windows, or play Ball or use any Kind of Diversion within the Walls of the Building; nor shall they in the Presence of the Trustees, Professors or Tutors, play Ball, Wrestle, make any indecent Noise, or behave in any way rudely in the College Yard or Streets adjacent."</p> <p>Sack, Saul, <u>History of Higher Education in Pennsylvania</u>, vol. 2 [Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, Harrisburg, 1963], page 632. Submitted by John Thorn, 10/12/2004. <b>Note:</b> do we know the college? UPa?</p>  +
<p><b>Note:</b> This version, published in 1762 by Hugh Gaine, was advertised in <u>The New York Mercury</u> on August 30, 1762, but no copy has been found. Per RH, p. 135. Henderson says that this is the first use of "base-ball" in an American source. In his note #107, RH gives 1760 as the year of publication.</p>  +
<p>". . . no Person shall use the Exercise of playing or Kicking of Foot-ball, or the Exercise of Bat-and-Ball, or Cricket . . .  within the Body of this Town, under a Penalty of One Shilling and Six Pence."</p> <p>By-Laws and Orders of the town of Salem MA, July 26, 1762.</p>  +
<p>In 1766 "James Rivington imported battledores and shuttlecocks, cricket-balls, pillets, best racquets for tennis and fives, backgammon tables with men, boxes, and dice."</p> <p>Singleton, Esther, <u>Social New York Under the Georges</u> [New York, 1902], page 265. [Cited by Dulles, 1940.] <b>Caveat:</b> Singleton does not provide a source at this location; however, from context [see pp. 91-92] her direct quotation seems likely to be taken from a contemporary Rivington advertisement.<b> Caution:</b> John Thorn is unable to find online evidence of cricket ball imports before 1772, per email of 2/2/2008.</p>  +
<p>"A Challenge is hereby given by the Subscribers, to Ashbel Steel, and John Barnard, with 18 young Gentlemen . . . to play a Game of BOWL for a Dinner and Trimmings . . . on Friday next." <i>Connecticut Courant</i> , May 5, 1766, as cited in John A. Lester, <u>A Century of Philadelphia Cricket</u> [University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 1951], page 6. <b>Note:</b> is "game of bowl" a common term for cricket? Could this not have been a wicket challenge, given the size of the teams?</p>  +
<p>"Whereas a Challenge was given by Fifteen Men South of the Great Bridge in Hartford . . . the Public are hereby inform'd that that Challenged beat the Challengers by a great majority. And said North side hereby acquaint the South Side, that they are not afraid to meet them with any Number they shall chuse . . . ." Source: "Hartford and Her Sons and Daughters of the Year <i>The Courant</i> was Founded," <u>Hartford Daily Courant</u>, 10/25/1914. The original Courant notice was dated June 1, 1767. Sleuthwork provided by John Thorn, email of 2/2/2008.</p>  +
<p>"William Hickey plays in a match at Moulsey Hurst for the old boys of Westminster School against eleven old boys of Harrow." John Ford, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</span> [David and Charles, 1972], page 18. Ford does not give a source.</p>  +
<p>"On Friday last a cricket match was played on Barnet Common between Mess. Cock, and Draper and Athey, against Mess Grey, Langley, and Tapiter, for 100 guineas, which was won with great difficulty by the latter; they went against 44 notches, and beat by only one notch."</p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Bingley's Weekly Journal</span>, Saturday, September 15, 1770. Contributed by Gregory Christiano, 12/2/09. Barnet is a borough of London located to the northwest of the city.</p>  +
<p>"the presence of large numbers of British troops quartered in the larger towns of the [eastern] seaboard brought the populace into contact with a new attitude toward play. Officers and men, when off duty, like soldiers in all ages, were inveterate seekers of amusement. The dances and balls, masques and pageants, ending in Howe's great extravaganza in Philadelphia, were but one expression of this spirit. Officers set up cricket grounds and were glad of outside competition. . [text refers to cock-fighting in Philadelphia, horseracing and fox hunts on Long Island, bear-baiting in Brooklyn].</p> <p>"There is little indication, however, that the British occupation either broke down American prejudices against wasting time in frivolous amusements or promoted American participation and interest in games and sports."</p> <p>Krout, John A., <u>The Pageant of America: Annals of American Sport</u> (Oxford U Press, 1929), page 26.</p>  +
<p>"When Saturday afternoon chanced to be rainy, and no prospect of bat and ball on the common, some half a dozen of us used now and then, to meet in an old wood-shed, that we shall never forget, and fume it away to our own wonderful aggrandizement."</p> <p>"Use of Tobacco from Dr. Waterhouse's Lecture before Harvard University," <span style="text-decoration: underline;">American Repertory</span>, September 3, 1829 ("from the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Columbian Centinel</span>.") Accessed via subscription search, May 5, 2009. From internal references, this appears to be an account of the well-known public anti-smoking lecture by Professor Benjamin Waterhouse in November 1804.</p>  +
<p>"There was no size limit [on a cricket bat] until 1771, when a Ryegate batsman came to the pitch with a bat wider than the wicket itself! A maximum measurement was then drawn up, and this has remained the same since." The Hambledon Committee new resolution, appearing two days later, specified that the bat much be no wider than 4.25 inches. The rule stuck.</p> <p>Peter Scholefield, <u>Cricket Laws and Terms</u> [Axiom Publishing, Kent Town Australia, 1990], page 15.</p>  +
<p> </p> <p>"WHEREAS as iit often happens that many disorders are occasioned within the town of Portsmouth . . . by boys and fellows playing with balls in the public street: . . . [when] there is danger of breaking the windows of any building, public or private, may be ordered to remove to any place where there shall be no such danger."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>Dartmouth College's founding president Eleazar Wheelock thought his students should "turn the course of their diversions and exercises for their health, to the practice of some manual arts, or cultivation of gardens and other lands at the proper hours of leisure." That would be "more useful" than the tendency of some non-Dartmouth students to engage in "that which is puerile, such as playing with balls, bowls and other ways of diversion."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"On Wednesday and Thursday Last a grand match at cricket was played in the Artillery ground, between the Duke of Dorset and ___ Mann, Esq; which, being a strong contest, was won by his Grace, notwithstanding the odds on the second day were 12 to one in favor of Mr. Mann.</p> <p><u>Bingley's Weekly Journal</u>, Saturday, September 14, 1771. Contributed by Gregory Christiano, 12/2/09. </p>  +
<p>Pett's of Sevenoaks was selling "best bats" for 4s 6d. Per John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 18. Ford does not give a citation for this account.</p>  +
<p>Surrey beat Kent at Bourne Paddock, July 19-21, 1773. The Rev J. Duncombe described the match in a poem entitled "Surrey Triumphant; or, the Kentish-Men's Defeat. A New Ballad, Being a Parody on 'Chevy Chase'," which [cheeeeeky indeed] appeared in the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Kentish Gazette</span> of July 24. Then "a Gentleman" penned a reply, "Kentish Cricketers." This exchange is amply told in H. T. Waghorn, compiler, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Cricket Scores, Notes, Etc. from 1730-1773</span> (Blackwood, London, 1899)pp 116 - 126. Accessed via Google Books 10/19/2008.</p>  +
<p>"We present as a growing Evil, the frequent assembling of Negroes in the Town [Beaufort, SC] on Sundays, and playing games of Trap-ball and Fives, which is not taken proper notice of by Magistrates, Constables, and other Parish Officers."</p> <p>Tom Altherr, <u>Originals</u>, Volume 2, Number 11 (November 2009), page 1. Tom sees this reference as "possibly the earliest which refers to African Americans, slaves or also possibly a few free blacks, playing a baseball-type game [although it is not clear if it involved any running], and playing frequently. Beaufort SC is about 40 miles NE of Savannah GA, near the coastline.</p>  +
<p>"The game at cricket, which requires that utmost exertion of strength and agility, was followed, until of late years, for manly exercise, animated by a noble spirit of emulation. This sport has too long been perverted from diversion and innocent pastime to excessive gaming and public dissipation." <u>Morning Chronicle and London Advertiser</u> (London) August 23, 1774, Column 1, seventh paragraph.</p>  +
<p>A "Committee of Noblemen and Gentlemen of Kent, Hampshire, Surrey, Sussex, Middlesex, and London" agree on rule changes. Ford's summary: "Particular reference is made to the requirements of gambling. Ball between 5.5 and 5.75 ounces. LBW [leg-before-wicket, a form of batman interference - LM] for the first time; short runs; visiting side gets the choice of pitch and first innings. Per John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 18. Ford does not give a citation for this account.</p> <p>Writing in 1890, Steel and Lyttelton say that "[t]he earliest laws of the game, or at least the earliest which have reached us, are of the year 1774:" See A.G. Steel and R. H. Lyttelton, <u>Cricket,</u> (Longmans Green, London, 1890) 4<sup>th</sup> edition, page 12.<b> </b></p>  +
<p>"Wednesday the 6. We played ball all day"</p> <p>Lyman, Simeon, "Journal of Simeon Lyman of Sharon August 10 to December 28, 1775," in "Orderly Book and Journals Kept by Connecticut Men While Taking Part in the American Revolution 1775 - 1778," <u>Collections of the Connecticut Historical Society</u>, volume 7 (Connecticut Historical Society, 1899), p. 117. Per Thomas L. Altherr, "A Place Leavel Enough to Play Ball," reprinted in David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, ref # 26. Lyman was near New London CT.</p>  +
<p>Thomas Altherr writes in 2008: "Ephriam [Ephraim? - TA] Tripp, a soldier at Dorchester in 1775, also left a record, albeit brief, of ball playing: 'Camping and played bowl,' he wrote on May 30. 'Bowl' for Tripp meant ball, because elsewhere he referred to cannonballs as 'cannon bowls.' On June 24 he penned: 'We went to git our meney that we shud yak when we past muster com home and played bawl.'"<b> Note</b>: Dorchester MA, presumably? Is it clear whether Tripp was a British soldier? May 1775 was some months before an American army formed.</p> <p>E. Tripp, "His book of a journal of the times in the year 1775 from the 19<sup>th</sup> day," Sterling Memorial Library Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University: "Diaries (Miscellaneous) Collection, Group 18, Box 16, Folder 267. Per Thomas L. Altherr, "Chucking the Old Apple: Recent Discoveries of Pre-1840 North American Ball Games," <u>Base Ball</u>, Volume 2, number 1 (Spring 2008), page 39.</p>  +
<p>Lt. Ebenezer Elmer, a New Jersey office, noted several instances of ball-playing in New York State in 1776 and in New Jersey in 1777.  His initial entries cite the game of whirl, and later ones note that ball was played "again."</p>  +
<p>"The days would follow without incident, one day after another. An officer with a company of Pennsylvania riflemen [in Washington's army] wrote of nothing to do but pick blueberries and play cricket." David McCullough, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">1776</span> (Simon and Schuster, 2005), page 40. McCullough does not give a source for this item. Provided by Priscilla Astifan, 19CBB posting of 8/5/2008 and email of 11/16/2008. McCullough notes that the majority of the army comprised farmers and skilled artisan [ibid, page 34].</p>  +
<p>Michel Angelo, <u>Juvenile Sports and Pastimes</u> [London], 2<sup>nd</sup> edition. per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 179. The text decries the use of a broad flat bat instead of a thin round one, which had evidently been used formerly.</p>  +
<p>Jabez Fitch, an officer from Connecticut, noted in March 1777, as a prisoner in British-held New York: "we lit [sic] a number of our Offrs . . . who were Zealously Engaged at playing ball . . . .</p> <p>His diary mentioned two other times he saw comrades playing ball.</p>  +
<p>Held as a POW in Plymouth, England, Newburyport MA sailor Charles Herbert wrote on April 2, 1777: "Warm, and something pleasant, and the yard begins to dry again, so that we can return to our former sports; these are ball and quoits . . . "</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>Says Ford: "Third (middle) stump introduced." Per John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 18. Ford does not give a citation for this account.</p>  +
<p>"The game of Cricket, to be played on Monday next, the 14th inst., at Cannon's Tavern, at Corlear's Hook. Those Gentlemen that choose to become Members of the Club, are desired to attend. The wickets to be pitched at two o'Clock"</p> <p>Per John Thorn, 6/15/04: from Phelps-Stokes, Vol. VI, Index—ref. against Chronology and Chronology Addenda (Vol. 4aA or 6A); also, Vol. V, p.1068 (6/13/1778): <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Royal Gazette</span>, 6/13/1778. Later, the cricket grounds were "where the late Reviews were, near the Jews Burying Ground <span style="text-decoration: underline;">" Royal Gazette</span>, 6/17/1780.</p>  +
<p>Benjamin Gilbert, a Sergeant from Brookfield MA, mentioned ball-playing in his diary several times between 1778 and 1782.  The locations included the lower Hudson valley.</p>  +
<p>The journal of Enos Stevens, a NH man serving in British forces, mentions playing ball seven times from 1778 to 1781. Only one specifies the game played in terms we know: "in the after noon played Wickett" in March of 1781. </p>  +
<p>[A] George Ewing, a Revolutionary War soldier, tells of playing a game of "Base" at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania: "Exercisd in the afternoon in the intervals playd at base."</p> <p>Ewing also wrote: "[May 2d] in the afternoon playd a game at Wicket with a number of Gent of the Arty . . . ." And later . . .  "This day [May 4, 1778] His Excellency dined with G Nox and after dinner did us the honor to play at Wicket with us."</p> <p>[B]</p> <p>"Q. What did soldiers do for recreation?</p> <p>"A: During the winter months the soldiers were mostly concerned with their survival, so recreation was probably not on their minds. As spring came, activities other than drills and marches took place. "Games" would have included a game of bowls played with cannon balls and called "Long Bullets." "Base" was also a game - the ancestor of baseball, so you can imagine how it might be played; and cricket/wicket. George Washington himself was said to have took up the bat in a game of wicket in early May after a dinner with General Knox! . . . Other games included cards and dice . . . gambling in general, although that was frowned upon."</p> <p>Valley Forge is about 20 miles NE of Philadelphia.</p> <p> </p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"23rd [May 1778]. This forenoon as some of the prisoners was playing ball, it by chance happened to lodge n the eave spout. One climbed up to take the ball out, and a sentry without the wall seeing him, fired at him, but did no harm."</p>  +
<p>[Joslin, Joseph], "Journal of Joseph Joslin Jr of South Killingly A Teamster in the Continental Service March 1777 - August 1778, in "Orderly Book [sic?] and Journals Kept by Connecticut Men While Taking Part in the American Revolution 1775 - 1778," <u>Collections of the Connecticut Historical Society</u>, volume 7 Connecticut Historical Society, 1899, pp. 353 - 354. Per Thomas L. Altherr, "A Place Leavel Enough to Play Ball," reprinted in David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, ref # 27.</p>  +
<p>"If any student shall play ball or use any other diversion that exposes the College or hall windows within three rods of either he shall be fined two shillings . . . " In 1782 the protected area was extended to six rods.</p> <p>-- Dartmouth College, 1779.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>Lieutenant Michael Dougherty, 6<sup>th</sup> Maryland Regiment, was cashiered at a General Court Martial at Elizabeth Town on April 10, 1779, in part for a breach of the 21<sup>st</sup> article, 14<sup>th</sup> section of the rules and articles of war "unofficer and ungentlemanlike conduct in associating and playing ball with Serjeants on the 6<sup>th</sup> instant."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"To-day he [George Washington] sometimes throws and catches the ball for whole hours with his aides-de-camp."</p> <p>-- from a letter by Francois Marquis de Barbe-Marbois, September 1779.  Observed at a camp at Fishkill NY.  </p>  +
<p>"Samuel Shute, a New Jersey Lieutenant, jotted down his reference to playing ball in central Pennsylvania sometime between July 9 and July 22, 1779; 'until the 22<sup>nd</sup>, the time was spent playing shinny and ball.'  Incidentally, Shute distinguished among various sports, referring elsewhere in his journal to 'Bandy Wicket.' He did not confuse baseball with types of field hockey [bandy] and cricket [wicket] that the soldiers also played." Thomas Altherr. </p> <p> </p>  +
<p>August 9, 1779, match between Brooklyn and Greenwich Clubs: "A Set of Gentlemen" propose playing a cricket match this day, and every Monday during the summer season, "on the Cricket Ground near Brooklyn Ferry." The company "of any Gentleman to join the set in the exercise" is invited. A large Booth is erected for the accommodation of spectators:" <em>New York Mercury</em>, 8/9/1779</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"In the spring of 1779, Henry Dearborn, a New Hampshire officer, was a member of the American expedition in northeast Pennsylvania, heading northwards to attack the Iroquois tribal peoples.  In his journal for April 3rd, Dearborn jotted down . . . 'all the Officers of the Brigade turn'd out & Played at a game of ball the first we have had this yeare.' </p> <p>On April 17th, he wrote: 'we are oblige'd to walk 4 miles to day to find a place leavel enough to play ball.'</p> <p>Dearborn's two notations, meager as they were, suggests that the game of ball that they played was more than whimsical recreation." </p>  +
<p>"Mr. Stoddard believes that Round Ball was played by his father in 1820, and has the tradition from his father that two generations before, i.e., directly after the revolutionary war, it was played and was not then a novelty."</p> <p>Letter from Henry Sargent, Grafton MA, to the Mills Commission, May 23, 1905. Stoddard was an elderly gentleman who had played round ball in his youth. <b>Note:</b> The Sargent letter also reports that Stoddard "believed that roundball was played as long ago as Upton became a little village." Upton MA was incorporated in 1735. <b>Caveat:</b> One might ask whether a man born around 1830 can be certain about ballplaying 50 years and 100 years before his birth.</p>  +
<p>"The apparent former wide diffusion of stoolball was reduced in the 18<sup>th</sup> century to a few geographical survivals. It was played in Brighton to celebrate a royal birthday in the 1780s and by the early 19<sup>th</sup> century appeared to be limited to a few Kent and Sussex Wealden settlements."</p> <p>John Lowerson, "Conflicting Values in the Revivals of a 'Traditional Sussex Game,' <u>Sussex</u><u>Achaeological Collections 133 [1995],</u> page 265. Lowerson's source for the 1780s report seems to be F. Gale, <u>Modern English Sports</u> [London, 1885], pages 8 and/or 11.</p>  +
<p>On August 19, 11 New Yorkers issued this challenge: "we, in this public manner challenge the best eleven Englishmen in the City of New York to play the game of Cricket . . . for any sum they think proper to stake." On August 26, the Englishmen accepted, suggesting a stake of 100 guineas. On September 6, the news was that the match was on: "at the Jew's Burying-ground, WILL be played on Monday next . . . the Wickets to be pitched at Two O'Clock." We seem to lack a report of the outcome of this match.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>Writing on early baseball in the year 1883, W. W. Newell says:</p> <p>"The present scientific game . . . was known in Massachusetts, twenty years ago, as the 'New York game.' A ruder form of Base-ball has been played in some Massachusetts towns for a century; while in other parts of New England no game with the ball was formerly known except "Hockey." There was great local variety in these sports."</p> <p>Newell, William W., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Games and Songs of American Children</span> (Dover, New York, 1963 - originally published 1883) page 184. <strong>Note:</strong> The omission of wicket - and arguably cricket - from Newell's account is interesting here. The claim that hockey was seen as a ball game is also interesting.</p>  +
<p>A cricket match is advertised to be played on this day, and continued every Monday throughout the summer, "on the Ground where the late Reviews were, near the Jews Burying Ground."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>Josiah Quincy was sent off to Phillips Academy at Andover MA in about 1778 at age six. It was a tough place. "The discipline of the Academy was severe, and to a child, as I was, disheartening. . . [p24/25]. I cannot imagine a more discouraging course of education that that to which I was subjected. The truth was, I was an incorrigible lover of sports of every kind. My heart was in ball and marbles." <strong>Note:</strong> Biographer Edmund Quincy sets this passage in direct quotes, but does not provide a source.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"These officers [British soldiers captured at the Battle of Saratoga] were full of cash and frolicked and gamed much.  One amusement in which they indulged much, was playing at ball.  A Ball-Alley was fitted up at the Court-House, where some of them were to be seen at almost all hours of the day."</p> <p>"Whilst the game of ball was coming off one day at the Court House, an American officer and a British officer, who were among the spectators, became embroiled in a dispute."</p> <p>The writer, Samuel Dewees, went on to describe how, as a teen, he had fashioned balls and sold them to the British for a quarter each.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"The Freshmen shall furnish Batts, Balls, and Foot-balls, for the use of the students, to be kept at the Buttery."</p> <p>Rule 16, "President, Professors, and Tutor's Book," volume IV. The list of rules is headed "The antient Customs of Harvard College, established by the Government of it."</p> <p>Conveyed to David Block, April 18, 2005, by Professor Harry R. Lewis, Harvard University, Cambridge MA. Dr. Lewis adds, "The buttery was a sort of supply room, not just for butter. Who is to say what the "Batts" and "Balls" were to be used for, but it is interesting that any bat and ball game could already have been regarded as ancient at Harvard in 1781."</p>  +
<p>"And that no other person was present in said area, except a boy who, they say was playing with a Ball From the testimony some of the persons in the kitchen it appeared that the company there assembled were very noisy That some game at Ball was played That some of the company called on the Boy to keep tally; which Boy was seen by the same person, repeated by running after the Ball, with a penknife & stick in his hand, on which stick notches were cut That a Person who tarried at home at Dr. Appleton's was alarmed by an unusual noise about three o'clock, & on looking out the window, saw in the opening between Hollis & Stoughton, four or five persons, two of whom were stripped of their coats, running about, sometimes stooping down & apparently throwing something . . ."</p>  +
<p>"We passed muster [late in the war] and layed about in Albany about six weeks . . . . The officers would bee a playing at Ball on the comon, their would be an other class piching quaits, an other set a wrestling." </p> <p>-- Joel Shepard, a farmer in Montague MA.</p>  +
<p>"Caleb Washburn, young Benjamin Hall, Tom Wells the younger and El play ball before my barn."</p>  +
<p>Cricket is to be played on July 15th "on the green, near the Ship-Yards." <u>Royal Gazette</u><i>,</i> 7/13/1782, page 1 column 2. Submitted by John Thorn 6/15/04 and extended by George Thompson, 8/2/2005.</p>  +
<p>"Rounders not a serious game until 1889 in Britain. But at least close resemblance. Evidence Town Ball introduced by Amer. to Br. 1784 - between Rounders and Base Ball."</p> <p>Seymour, Harold - Notes in the Seymour Collection at Cornell University, Kroch Library Department of Rare and Manuscript Collections, collection 4809. <b>Note:</b> it would be good to find such evidence soon.</p>  +
<p>"[The college] yard is intended for the exercise and recreation of the youth . . . [but don't] "play ball against any of the wall of the University, whilst the windows are open."</p>  +
<p>"It is difficult to believe that the English soldiers who flooded into Scotland in 1745/1746 did not bring cricket with them, but evidence has not yet emerges. The well-known 'first cricket match in Scotland' took place at Earl Cathcart's seat at Schow Park, Alloa, in September 1785, when Hon. Colonel Talbot's XI played the Duke of Atholl's XI. . . . Most of the players were English: no further matches in Scotland followed from it. However, a Scot, the Duke of Hamilton, had already joined the MCC, and a traveler hoping to inspect Hamilton Place in 1785 found that 'as the Duke plays cricket every afternoon, strangers don't get admittance then.'" John Burnett, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Riot, Revelry and Rout: Sport in Lowland Scotland before 1860</span> (Tuckwell Press, 2000), page 252. Burnett footnotes this passage <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Scottish Antiquary</span>, 11 (1897), 82. <strong>Note:</strong> we don't yet know which of the events are documented there.</p> <p>Another source reports that the Talbot/Atholl match was played on September 8, 1785, for 1000 pounds per man. L. Stephen and S. Lee, eds., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Dictionary of National Biography</span> (Macmillan, New York, 1908), entry on Thomas Graham, Baron Lynedoch, page 359.</p>  +
<p>"Games played with the ball and others of that nature, are too violent for the body and stamp no character on the mind."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"The late game of Wicket was decided by an extraordinary catch made by Mr. Lenox, to which he ran more than 40 yards, and received the ball between two fingers." <u>Morning Post and Daily Advertiser</u> (London), 6/27/1786. Provided by Richard Hershberger, email of 2/3/2008. Richard adds: "I know of only one other English citation of "wicket" as the name of a game. I absolutely do not assume that it was the same as the game associated with Connecticut."</p>  +
<p>From a Princetlon student's diary:</p> <p>"A fine day, play baste ball in the campus but am beaten for I miss both catching and striking the ball."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>Interview with Stephen Green at Lords.<b> Note:</b> needs verification. Also Per John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 19. Ford does not give a citation for this account.</p>  +
<p> The last page of a US-printed reader encourages the reader to come to Thomas' book store, where "they may be suited with Something ore valuable than Cakes, prettier than Tops, handsomer than Kites, more pleasurable than Bat and Ball, more entertaining than either Scating or Sliding, and durable as marbles."</p>  +
<p>"It appearing that a play at present much practiced by the smaller boys . . . with balls and sticks," the faculty of Princeton University prohibits such play on account of its being dangerous as well as "low and unbecoming gentlemen students."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"At the request of several of our Correspondents, we insert the following <i>Laws</i> of the noble Game of Cricket, which govern all the celebrated Players in Europe."</p> <p><i>Independent Journal</i> [New York], May 19, 1787. Accessed via subscription genealogybank.com search, 4/9/09. <b>Note:</b> the rules do not use the term "innings," and instead employ "hands."</p>  +
<p>"Three times is Out at wicket, next year if Something is not done I will retire to the Green Mountains."</p>  +
<p>Says John Ford: "Tom Walker is said to have experimented with round-arm bowling." John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 19. Ford does not give a citation for this account. <b>Caveat:</b> The <u>Encyclopedia Brittanica</u> on Nyren's estimate of about 1790 for Walker's innovation; <u>A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and General Information</u>, Eleventh Edition, (Encyclopeida Brittanica Company, New York, 1910) Volume VII, page 439, accessed 10/19/2008, as advised by John Thorn, email of 2/2/2008..</p>  +
<p>Ford reports that "A cricket tour to France arranged, but cancelled at the last minute because of the French Revolution. Per John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 19. Ford does not give a citation for this account.</p>  +
<p>"From the 'Jernal' of John Burgess of Ditchling (Sussex) he wrote on Augest 17<sup>th</sup> 1789 that he went to Brighthelmstone 'to see many divertions which included Stoolball'."</p> <p>The XVth (1938) Annual Report of the Stoolball Association for Great Britain [unpublished]. Provided by Kay and John Price, Fall 2009.</p> <p>A web search doesn't lead to this journal entry, but does locate a similar one:</p> <p>"[August 19, 1788] Went to Brighthelmstone to see many Divertions on account of the Rial Family that is the Duke of Yorks Berth day Cricketing Stool Ball Foot Ball Dancing &c. fire works &c." A side note was that some estimated that 20,000 persons attended.</p> <p>Sussex Archaeological Society, <u>Archaeololgical</u> Collections, Volume XL. (1896), "Some Extracts from the Journal and Correspondence of Mr. John Burgess, of Ditchling, Sussex, 1785-1815," page 156. Accessed 1/31/10 via Google Books search ("john burgess" ditchling).</p>  +
<p>" . . . outside school hours, the boys and girls of 1789 probably had as good a time as childhood ever enjoyed. Swimming and fishing were close to every doorstep The streets, vacant lots, and nearby fields resounded with the immemorial games of old cat, rounders, hopscotch, I spy, chuck farthing and prisoner's base . . . . The Dutch influence made especially popular tick-tack, coasting, and outdoor bowling."</p> <p>Monaghan, Frank, and Marvin Lowenthal, <u>This Was New York: The Nation's Capital in 1789</u> (Books for Libraries Press, 1970 - originally published 1943 , Chapter 8, "The Woman's World," pages 100-101. Portions of this book are revealed on Google Books, as accessed 12/29/2007. According to the book's index, "games" were also covered on pages 80, 81, 115, 177, and 205, all of which were masked. The volume includes "hundreds of footnotes in the original draft," according to accompanying information. <b>Caveat:</b> We find no reference to the term "rounders" until 1828. See #1828.1 below.</p>  +
<p>"Cricket was certainly known in Boston as early as 1790, for John Adams, then Vice-President of the United States, speaking in the debate about the choice of an appropriate name for the chief officer of the United States, declared that 'there were presidents of fire companies and of a cricket club.'" John Lester, <u>A Century of Philadelphia Cricket</u> [UPenn Press, Philadelphia, 1951], page 5.</p>  +
<p>"My sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth yeares were spent in youthfull folley.  Fidling, frolicking, ball playing and hunting . . . .  These are called inocent amusements and were not caried very far by me."      -- Future Doctor William Morgan.</p>  +
<p>"Stickball is a game played on a street or other restricted area, with a stick, such as a mop handle or broomstick, and a hard rubber ball. Stickball developed in the late 18<sup>th</sup> century from such English games as old cat, rounders, and town ball. Stickball also relates to a game played in southern England and colonial Boston in North America called stoolball. All of these games were played on a field with bases, a ball, and one or more sticks. The modern game is played especially in New York City on the streets where such fixtures as a fire hydrant or an abandoned car serve as bases."</p> <p><u>Britannica</u> Online search conducted 5/25/2005. <b>Note:</b> No sources are provided for this unique report of early stickball. It also seems unusual to define town ball as an English game. <b>Caveat:</b> We find no reference to the term "rounders" until 1828. See #1828.1 below.</p>  +
<p>Example: Samuel Britcher, Scorer, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Complete List of All the Grand Matches of Cricket that Have Been Played in the Year of 1793, with a Correct State of Each Innings</span> (London), 26 pages. Included are one-page scoresheets for 25 games from May 13 to September 9, 1793. Provided by John Thorn, email of 1/17/2008. Each scoresheet includes the match's stake: 12 are played for 1000 guineas, 11 are for 500 guineas, one is for 50 guineas, and one is for 25 guineas. In four matches, a side of 22 men played a side of 11 men, in one match each side had three men, and one match was between just Mr. Brudennall and Mr. Welch. An All England club played in 5 matches, and the Mary-Le-Bone played in 9 matches. Three matches took 4 days, 8 took 3 days, 13 took two days, and one took one day. Now you know.</p> <p>Beth Hise adds, January 12, 2010: "Britcher appears to have been the first official MCC scorer. He published small books annually between 1790 and 1803, with an additional volume covering 1804/5. He recorded matches that he attended, shedding considerable light onto the early days of cricket. Those matches ranged widely, from those between the Kennington and Middlesex Clubs, to one between the One Arm and One Leg sides (won by the One Legs by 103 runs).</p>  +
<p>"These two illustrious statesmen [southern leaders John C. Calhoun and William H. Crawford], who had played town ball and marbles and gathered nuts together . . . were never again to view each other except in bonds of bitterness."</p> <p>J. E. D. Shipp, <u>Giant Days: or the Life and Times of William H. Crawford</u> [Southern Printers, 1909], page 167. <b> Caveat:</b> Crawford was ten years older than Calhoun, so it seems unlikely that they were close in school. Both leaders had attended Waddell's school [in GA] but that school opened in 1804 [see #1804.1] when Crawford was 32 years old, so their common school must have preceded their time at Waddell's.</p>  +
<p>" [Five of us] were playing ball on the common before breakfast: and the ball fell into a hole where one of the booth's stakes had been driven the day before . . . putting the hand down something jingled and we found several dollars in silver . . .  We were small boys then all of us, and I was the youngest."     -- Jonathan Mason</p>  +
<p>"The Grand Match between the Noblemen of Mary-le Bonne Club, and the County of Middlesex, is put off, owing to the gentlemen going out of town."</p> <p>Their best batter, C. Foxton, does not live in Middlesex, but in Surrey, which is unknown to the Noblemen."</p> <p>"Cricket," <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Morning Post and Daily Advertiser</span>, Monday June 21, 1790. Contributed by Gregory Christiano, 12/2/09.</p>  +
<p>"[D]escriptions of the game [cricket] from Hamburg in the 1790s show significant variations often quite similar to outdated provisions of American "Wicket," which may well not be due to error on the part of the author, but rather to acute observation. For example, the ball was bowled alternatively from each end (i.e. not in 'overs'). Moreover, the ball has to be 'rolled' and not 'thrown' (i.e., bowled in the true sense, not the pitched ball). And the striker is out if stops the ball from hitting the wicket with his foot or his body generally. There is no more reason to believe that there was uniformity in the Laws covering cricket in England, the British Isles, or in Europe than there was in weights and measures." Rowland Bowen, <u>Cricket: A History of its Grown and Development Throughout the World</u> (Eyre and Spottiswoode, London, 1970), page 72. <b>Note:</b> Bowen does not give a source for this observation.</p>  +
<p>Boston MA, with only 18,000 inhabitants, was sparsely populated. "Boys played ball in the streets without disturbance, or danger from the rush of traffic." Edmund Quincy, <u>Josiah Quincy of Massachusetts</u> (Fields, Osgood and Company, 1869), page 37. Writing 70 years later, the biographer here is painting a picture of the city when his father Josiah finished school and moved there at 18. He does not document this observation. One might speculate that Josiah had told Edmund about the ballplaying. Accessed on 11/16/2088 via Google Books search for "'life of josiah quincy.'"</p>  +
<p>In Pittsfield, Massachusetts, in order to promote the safety of the exterior of the newly built meeting house, particularly the windows, a by-law is enacted to bar "any game of wicket, cricket, baseball, batball, football, cats, fives, or any other game played with ball," within eighty yards of the structure. However, the letter of the law did not exclude the city's lovers of muscular sport from the tempting lawn of "Meeting-House Common." This is the first indigenous instance of the game of <em>baseball</em> being referred to by that name on the North American continent. It is spelled herein as <strong>ba<em>f</em>eball. "</strong>Pittsfield is baseball's Garden of Eden," said Pittsfield Mayor James Ruberto.</p> <p>An account of this find (a re-find, technically) is at John Thorn, "1791 and All That: Baseball and the Berkshires," <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Base Ball: A Journal of the Early Game</span>, Volume 1, Number 1 (Spring 2007) pp. 119-126. </p> <p>See also http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=1799618.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"Both the meeting-house and the Court House suffered considerable damage, especially to their windows by ball playing in the streets, consequently in 1791, a by-law was enacted by which 'foot ball, hand ball, bat ball and or any other game of ball was prohibited within ten rods of the Court House easterly or twenty rods of the Meeting House southwesterly, neither shall they throw any stones at or over the said Meeting House on a penalty of 5s, one half to go to the complainant and the rest to the town.'"</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"Puerile Sports usual in these parts of New England . . . . Afterwards the Bat & Ball and the Game at Rickets. The Ball is made of rags covered with leather in quarters & covered with double twine, sewed in Knots over the whole. The Bat is from 2 to 3 feet long, round on the back side but flattened considerable on the face, & round at the end, for a better stroke. The Ricket is played double, & is full of violent exercise of running."</p> <p><u>The Diary of William Bentley, D.D.</u>, Volume I (Essex Institute, Salem MA, 1905), pp 253-254. Contributed by Brian Turner, March 6, 2009. Bentley later noted that Bat & Ball is played at the time of year when "the weather begins to cool." Bentley [1759-1819] was a prominent and prolific New England pastor who served in Salem MA. <b>Query: </b> Any idea what the game of rickets/ricket was?</p>  +
<p>Ford reports that this 1792 saw "First publication of the <i>Sporting Magazine</i> which featured cricket scores and reports. . . . Per John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 19. Ford does not give a citation for this account, but John Thorn [email, 2/2/2008] found an ad announcing the new magazine: "Sporting Magazine," <u>The General Evening Post</u> (London), Tuesday Octobver 23, 1792, bottom of column four. 21 topics are listed as the scope of the new publication, starting with racing, hunting, and coursing: cricket is the only field sport listed.</p>  +
<p>The married women and maids of Bury, in Sussex, are to play their return match of cricket, before the commencement of the harvest; and we hear that considerable bets are depending on their show of Notches, which at the conclusion of their lasst game, the umpires declared to be much in favour of the sturdy matrons."</p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Morning Post</span>, Wednesday, July 17, 1793. Contributed by Gregory Christiano, December 2, 2009.</p>  +
<p>A copper engraving showing Dartmouth College appeared in <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Massachusetts Magazine</span> in February 1793. It is the earliest known drawing of the College, and shows a wicket-oriented game being played in the yard separating college buildings. College personnel suggest is an early form of cricket, given the tall wicket which is not known for the New England pastime of wicket.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"A game of cricket for 1000 guineas a side between sides raised by the Earl of Winchelsea and Lord Darnley." John Ford, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Cricket: A Social History 1770-1835</span> [David and Charles, 1972], page 19. Ford does not give a source for this event.</p>  +
<p>"CURIOUS CRICKET MATCH. A young nobleman, of great notoriety in the [illegible: baut-ton? A corrupton of beau ton?], had made a match of a singular nature, with one of the would-be members of the jockey club, for a considerable sum of money, to be played by Greenwich pensioners, on Blackheath, sometime in the present month. The 11 on one side are to have only one arm each; and the other, to have both their arms and only one leg each. The nobleman has not at present made his election, whether he intends to back the legs or the wings - but the odds are considerably in favour of the latter."</p> <p><u>Independent Chronicle and Universal Advertiser</u><i>,</i> August 29, 1793, as taken from an unknown London newspaper. Posted to 19CBB 7/30/2007 by Richard Hershberger. John Thorn, email of 2/2/2008, found an identical account: "Curious Cricket Match," <u>World</u>, Monday, May 13, 1793, column two, at the fold. Perhaps the <u>Independent</u> found August to be a slow news month?</p>  +
<p>"By 1794 the New York Cricket Club was meeting regularly, usually at Battins Tavern at six o'clock in the evenings. Match games were played between different members of the club, wickets being pitched exactly at two o'clock." Holliman, Jennie, <u>American Sports (1785-1835)</u> [Porcupine Press, Philadelphia, 1975], page 67.</p> <p>Holliman cites Wister, W. R., <u>Some Reminiscences of Cricket in Philadelphia Before 1861</u>, page 5, for the NYCC data. </p>  +
<p>David Block finds an earlier reference to "club-ball" than Strutt's. It is James Pettit Andrews, <u>The History of Great Britain</u> (Cadell, London, 1794.), page 438. Email from David, 2/27/08.</p> <p>David explains" that in <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, "I took the historian Joseph Strutt to task for making it seem as if a 14<sup>th</sup> century edict under the reign Edward III [see #1300s.2 above] offered proof that a game called "club-ball" existed. It now appears that I may have done Mr. Strutt a partial injustice. A history book published seven years before Strutt's translates the Latin <i>pilam bacculoreum</i> the same way he did, as club-ball (which I believe leaves the impression that the game was a distinct one, and not a generic reference to ball games played with a stick or staff.) I still hold Strutt guilty for his baseless argument that this alleged 14<sup>th</sup> century game was the ancestor of cricket and other games played with bat and ball. Andrews, in his history of England, cites a source for his passage on ball games, but I can not make it out from the photocopy in my possession."</p>  +
<p>"Wrestling, jumping, running foot races, and playing at ball, are the common diversions." </p>  +
<p>What are the diversions of the New England people? "Dancing is a favorite one of both sexes. Sleighing in winter, and skating, playing ball, gunning, and fishing are the principal."</p> <p>Johnson, Clifton, and Carl Withers, <u>Old Time Schools and School-Books</u> [Dover, New York, 1963], page 41. Submitted by John Thorn, 10/12/2004.</p>  +
<p>In March 1795 Portsmouth NH imposed a  fine of from 50 cents to $3.30 pus court costs for those who "play cricket or any game in which a ball is used."  </p>  +
<p>Winterbotham, William, <u>An Historical, Geographical, Commercial and Philosophical View of the American United States</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 180. Coverage of New England [volume 2, page 17] reports that "The healthy and athletic diversions of cricket, foot ball, quoits, wrestling, jumping, hopping, foot races, and prison bars, are universally practiced in the country, and some of them in the most populous places, and by people of almost all ranks." The Tennessee section [volume 3, page 235] mentions the region's fondness for sports, including "playing at ball." Block notes that Winterbotham is sometimes credited with saying that bat and ball was popular in America before the Revolutionary War, and that adults played it, but reports that scholars, himself included, have not yet confirmed such wording at this point.</p>  +
<p>A long list of punishable offenses at Deerfield included six cents for "playing ball near school." This was a minor fine, the same sanction as getting a drop of tallow on a book, tearing a page of a book, or leaving one's room during study. In contrast, a one dollar assessment was made for playing cards, backgammon, or checkers, or walking or visiting on Saturday night or Sunday.</p> <p>.</p>  +
<p>A Williams College student's diary begun in 1796 (when he was 19) and continued for several years, includes a half dozen references to playing ball, but they do not describe the nature of the game.  His first such entry, from April 22, 1796, is "I exercise considerable, playing ball." </p>  +
<p>"Q: What is the temper of the New-England people?</p> <p>A: They are frank and open . . . .</p> <p>Q: What are their diversions?</p> <p>A: Dancing is a favorite of both sexes. Sleigh-riding in winter, and skating, playing ball (of which there are several different games), gunning and fishing . . . "</p> <p>Nathaniel Dwight, <u>A Short But Comprehensive System of Geography</u> (Charles R. and George Webster, Albany NY) 1796), page 128. Provided by John Thorn, 2/17/2008 email.</p>  +
<p>Ford summarizes a bad day for Etonians: "Eton were beaten by Westminster School on Hounslow Heath and on return to college were flogged by the headmaster; it would seem that this was for playing rather than for losing." See John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 20. Ford does not give a citation for this account.</p>  +
<p>Johann Gutsmuths, an early German advocate of physical education, devotes a chapter of his survey of games to "Ball mit Freystaten (oder das Englische Base-ball)" that is, Ball with free station, or English base-ball. He describes the game in terms that seem similar to later accounts of rounders and base-ball in English texts. The game is described as one-out, side-out, having a three-strike rule, and placing the pitcher a few steps from the batsman.</p> <p> </p> <p>Block advises [11/6/2005 communication] that Gutsmuths provides "the first hard, unambiguous evidence associating a bat with baseball . . . . We can only speculate as to when a bat was first employed in baseball, but my intuition is that it happened fairly early, probably by the mid-18<sup>th</sup> century."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"A grand Match of Stool-ball, between 11 Ladies of Sussex, in Pink, against 11 Ladies of Kent, in Blue Ribands."</p> <p>Source: an undated reproduction, which notes "this is a reproduction of the original 1797 Diversions programme." The match was scheduled for 10am on Wednesday, August 16, 1797. Provided from the files of the National Stoolball Association, June 2007.</p>  +
<p>Daniel Webster, in private correspondence, writes of "playing at ball," while a student at Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"Voted and ordered, that if any person shall play at foot-ball, cricket,or any other play or game with a ball or balls in any of the streets, lanes, or alleys of this town, . . ." a fine of 25 cents to one dollar was to be assessed.</p>  +
<p>A punishment of 15 lashes was specified for "negroes, that shall make a noise or assemble in a riotous manner in any of the streets [of Fayetteville NC] on the Sabbath day; or that may be seen playing ball on that day."</p>  +
<p>Gilbert, Tom, <u>Baseball and the Color Line</u> [Franklin Watts, NY, 1995], p.38. Per Millen, note # 15.</p>  +
<p>Jane Austen mentions "baseball" in her novel <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Northanger Abbey</span>, published in 1818, after her death.</p> <p>"Mrs. Morland was a very good woman, and wished to see her children everything they ought to be; but her time was so much occupied in lying-in and teaching the little ones, that her elder daughters were inevitably left to shift for themselves; and it was not very wonderful that Catherine, who had nothing heroic about her, should prefer cricket, baseball, riding on horseback, and running about the country at the age of fourteen, to books . . . . But from fifteen to seventeen she was in training for a heroine; so read all such works as heroines must read. . . "</p> <p> </p> <p> </p> <p><span> </span></p>  +
<p>Rule changes: [A] Instead of requiring a single ball to be used throughout a match, a new rule specified a new ball for each innings. [B] Fielders can be substituted for, but the replacement players cannot bat. </p> <p>Peter Scholefield, <u>Cricket Laws and Terms</u> [Axiom Publishers, Kent Town Australia, 1990], pages 14 and 9, respectively.</p> <p>In addition, Ford reports that "the size of the wicket was increased to 24 inches high by 7 inches wide with two bails." John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 20. Ford does not give a citation for this account.</p>  +
<p>"A number of members of the Cricket Club having met on the old ground on Saturday last, by appointment it was unanimously agreed to meet on Thursday next, at the same place, at half past 2 o'clock. Wickets will be pitched at 3 o'clock exactly."</p> <p><u>Commercial Advertiser</u>, June 18, 1799, page 3 column 1. Submitted by George Thompson, 8/2/2005.</p>  +
<p> </p> <p>A fictional character in a novel set in the mid-17th Century recalls how, when his clerkship to a lawyer ended, a former playmate took his leave by saying:</p> <p>"Ah! no more cricket, no more base-ball, they are sending me to Geneva."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"Village cricket spread widely and by the end of the century cricket had been recorded in most counties in England." John Ford, <u>Cricket: A Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], page 20.</p>  +
<p>"At the turn of the century ball-playing at Exeter was commonplace, according to a historian of that school.  'The only games seem to have been old-fashioned 'bat and ball', which, in the spring, was played on the grounds of the Academy building, and football.  The former differed widely from the modern game of base ball, which was introduced later.   The old game had fewer rules, and was played with a soft leather ball.'"  -- Tom Altherr</p>  +
<p>"Four Old Cat and Three Old Cat were as well known to Massachusetts boys as round ball. I knew both games in 1862, and Mr. Stoddard tells me that his father knew them and played them between 1800 and 1820. They bore the same relation to Round Ball that "Scrub" does to Base Ball now. The boys got together when there was leisure for any game and if there were enough to make for a game even if they were 2 or 3 short of the regulation 14 on a side they played round ball. If there were not enough more than a dozen all told, they contented themselves with four old cat, or with three old cat if there were still less players. . . . The main thing to be remembered is that Four and Three Old Cat seem to be co-eval with Massachusetts Round Ball, and even considered a modification of Round Ball for a less number of players than the regular game required."</p> <p>Letter from Henry Sargent, Grafton, MA, to the Mills Commission, May 31, 1905.</p>  +
<p>"I have not mentioned other sports and games of the boys of that day which is to say, of seventy or eighty years since - such as wrestling, running, leaping, base-ball, and the like, for in thee there was nothing to distinguish them from the same pastimes at the present day."</p> <p>William Cullen Bryant, "The Boys of my Boyhood," <i>St. Nicholas: An Illustrated Magazine for Young Folks,</i> December 1876, page 102. Submitted by David Ball 6/4/06</p>  +
<p>Lee was made an honorary member of the Knickerbocker Club in 1846, when he made this observation.</p> <p>Henderson, Robert W., <u>Ball, Bat and Bishop: The Origins of Ball Games</u> [Rockport Press, 1947], p. 150. No ref given. Also referenced in Peterson, p. 68, but again without a citation</p>  +
<p>"An ordinance to preserve the turf or soil on the parade, and to regulate the sale of lamb in the city, and also to prevent boys playing ball or hoop on Warren or Front streets, passed the 14<sup>th</sup> June, 1800."</p> <p>Hudson [NY] Bee, April 19, 1803. Found by John Thorn, who lives 30 minutes south of the town: email of 2/17/2008.</p>  +
<p>Item from John Thorn, 6/25/04. <strong>Note:</strong> It seems possible that a "ball alley" is for bowling, but wicket was also played on what was termed an alley.</p>  +
<p>A story in this popular children's book includes a character who, pleased with the deportment of some youths during a visit, says, "If you do me the honour of another visit, I shall endeavor to provide bats, balls, &c."</p> <p><u>The Prize for Youthful Obedience</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 183. <b>Note:</b> Block notes that American editions of this book appeared in 1803 and thereafter: see #1807.1 below, for example.</p>  +
<p>"The athletic and healthy diversion of cricket, football, etc. . . are universally practiced in this country." Edward Oliphant, <u>History of North America</u> (Edinburgh, 1800), page? Cited in Lester, <u>A Century of Philadelphia Cricket</u> [U Penn, 1951], page 7. </p>  +
<p>"Take care that here on Sunday/None of you play at ball,/For fear that on the Monday/The Devil takes you all." Inscription on the Church Wall of a small village in Wales.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>Strutt, Joseph., <u>The Sports and Pastimes of the People of England</u> [London, 1801]. Need page reference [is on page 102 of 1903 edition]. Strutt's account does not portray stoolball as a running game, or one that uses a bat. Strutt also treats cricket [but only cursorily], trap-ball, and tip-cat . . . but not rounders or base-ball. David Block [page 183] points out that Strutt views a game he calls "club ball" as the precursor to this set of games, but notes that modern scholars are skeptical about this proposition.</p>  +
<p><u>Youthful Recreations</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 184. Versions of this short book were published in Philadelphia in 1802 and 1810.</p>  +
<p>"CRICKET. This play requires more strength than some boys possess, to manage the ball in a proper manner; it must therefore be left to the more robust lads, who are fitter for such athletic exercises. Bat and ball is an inferior kind of cricket, and more suitable for little children, who may safely play at it, if they will be careful not to break windows."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>A New York paper copies a cricket challenge from a Savannah paper that notes "no legs before wickets."</p> <p><u>New York</u><u>Gazette and General Advertiser</u>, March 18, 1801, page 3. Submitted by George Thompson, 8/2/2005.</p>  +
<p>"A few weeks ago I saw on a Sunday afternoon, one party of boys playing at ball in Broad-street; another at the upper end of Pearl-street; and a third in the Park. Is this a Christian country? Are there no laws, human or divine, to enforce the religious observance of the Sabbath? . . . . Are our Magistrates asleep, or are they afraid of losing their popularity, if they should carry the laws into execution?"</p> <p><u>New York Evening Post</u>, December 23, 1801, submitted 10/12/2004 by John Thorn. On 8/2/2005, George Thompson spotted a similar or repeat of this piece in the <u>Evening Post</u>, December 31, 1801, page 3 column 2.</p>  +
<p>"[A]musements are few: consisting of dancing, horse racing, ball playing and rifle shooting."</p>  +
<p>An informal group called the "New York Cricket Club" is headquartered in New York City at the Bunch of Grapes Tavern, No. 11 Nassau Street. The club flourishes for a year and then dies.</p> <p>Per John Thorn, 6/15/04: The source is a Chadwick Scrapbook clip. "St. George was preceded in NYC by a club whose headquarters were at the Old Shakespeare in Nassau St.- This group was called the New York Club- it flourished for a year or so, then died." George Thompson has located an announcement of a club meeting in the <u>Daily Advertiser</u>, March 23, 1803, page 3 column 3, and another that appeared in the <u>Commercial Advertiser</u> on July 2 [page 3, column 2], July 7 [page 3, column 3], and July 8 [page 3, column 3. In early 1804, the <u>Evening</u> Post, February 10, [page 34 column 3] called another meeting at the same Nassau Street address. Submitted to Protoball 8/2/2005.</p>  +
<p>A letter to the editor of the <u>Green Mountain Patriot</u> takes issue with another writer who evidently thinks that "the farmer, the mechanic, and the merchant" should do more dancing when they attend local balls. They attend for another reason - "the same reason, whether criminal or lawful, that they meet together to play a game of ball, of quoits, or ride out on horseback." For "pleasing amusement."</p> <p><u>The Green Mountain Patriot</u> (Peachum, VT), August 17, 1803.</p>  +
<p>"I went to Town [York, Ontario] . . . walk'd out and joined a number of men jumping and playing  Ball, perceived a Mr. Joseph Randle to be the most active."      -- Ely Playter, York tavernkeeper.</p>  +
<p>"The first mention of cricket in Australia is in the <i>Sydney Gazette</i> of 8 January 1804. 'The late intense weather has been very favourable to the amateurs of cricket who have scarce lost a day for the last month.'"</p> <p>Egan, Jack, <u>The Story of Cricket in Australia</u> (ABC Books, 1987), page 6. It is believed that the players included officers and/or men from <i>the Calcutta</i>, which arrived in Sydney in December 1803. (Ibid., page 10.)</p>  +
<p>"Here, on our native soil, we breathe once more./The cock that crows, the smoke that curls, that sound/Of bells; those boys that in yonder meadow-ground/In white-sleev'd shirts are playing; and the roar/Of the waves breaking on the chalky shore/ All, all are English . . ."</p> <p>From Wordsworth's sonnet "Composed in the valley near Dover on the day of Landing," [1802 and 1807] <u>The Complete Poetical Works of Wiliam Wordsworth</u>, Volume IV (Houghton and Mifflin, Boston, 1919), page 98 Accessed via Google Books on 10/20/2008.. </p> <p>According to Bateman, this reference is shown to be cricket because Wordsworth's sister's diary later contains a reference to white-shirted players at a cricket match near Dover. See Anthony Bateman,"'More Mighty than the Bat, the Pen . . . ;' Culture,, Hegemony, and the Literaturisaton of Cricket," <u>Sport in History</u>, v. 23, 1 (Summer 2003), page 33, note 20: Bateman cites the diary entry as <u>The Journals of Dorothy Wordsworth,</u> vol. 2, E. de Selincourt, ed., (London, 1941), page 8. John Thorn [email of 2/3/2008] discovers that Dorothy Wordsworth's diary entry for July 10, 1820 observes: "When within a mile of Dover, saw crowds of people at a cricket-match, the numerous cambatants dressed in 'whitesleeved shirts,' and it was on the very same field where, when we 'trod the grass of England' once again, twenty years ago we has seen an Assemblage of Youths engaged in the same sport,so very like the present that all might have been the same! [footnote2:See my brother's Sonnet 'Here, on our native soil' etc.]" </p>  +
<p>"To prevent, as far as possible, the damages before enumerated, viz. breaking of glass, &c. the students in College and members of the Academy shall not be permitted to play at ball or use any other sport or diversion in or near the College-building." [A first offense brought a fine, a second offense brought suspension.]</p> <p>-- The Laws of Middlebury College, 1803.</p>  +
<p><u>Youthful Sports</u>[London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 185. Block reports that this book is quite different from the 1801 book by the same title.</p>  +
<p>At Moses Waddell's "famous academy" established in Willington, SC in 1804, "instead of playing baseball or football, boys took their recreation in running jumping, wrestling, playing town ball and bull pen."</p> <p>Meriwether, Colyer, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">History of Higher Education in South Carolina[Washington GPO, 1889], chapter II, page 39. Per Seymour, Harold - Notes in the Seymour Collection at Cornell University, Kroch Library Department of Rare and Manuscript Collections, collection 4809. <strong> Note:</strong> The terminology in this source appears more current than 1804, and it would be wise to consider whether it accurately depicts 1804 events. In addition, Seymour's note does not make clear whether the play described occurred at the time of the establishment of the academy, or later in its history.</span></p>  +
<p>A subscription search yields a 20 column-inch printing of cricket rules on May 8, 1804. The paper is <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Bee</span>, of Hudson, NY.</p>  +
<p>In a listing of articles in <u>North Louisiana History</u>, we spy this citation: Morgan Peoples, "Caddoes Host 'Match at Ball," Volume 11, Number 3 (Summer 1980), pp. 353-36.<b> Query:</b> Can we retrieve the actual article and discover the particulars? Caddo Parish is just northwest of Shreveport LA. It appears that Caddo tribe was in this area, and we might speculate that the hosted games were Indian ballgames.</p>  +
<p><strong>[A] </strong>"[N]o person shall play at the game of bat and ball or shall strike any ball with a bat or other machine in the streets, lanes, or squares of the town on penalty of <em>fifty cents."</em></p> <p><em><br/></em><strong>[B] "</strong><em>It is ordered by the town, </em>That no person shall play at the game of bat and ball, or shall strike any ball with a bat or other machine, or throw any stones, brickbats, clubs or snow balls, in the streets, lanes, or squares of the town, on penalty of <em>fifty cents</em> for each offence [sic]."</p>  +
<p>"July 9 [1805, we think] . . . . The mode of playing ball differs a little from that practiced in New-England. Instead of tossing up the ball out of one's own hand, and then striking it, as it descends, they lay is into the heel of a kind of wood shoe; and upon the instep a spring is fixed, which extends within the hollow to the hinder part of the shoe; the all is placed where the heel of the foot would commonly be, and a blow applied on the other end of the spring, raises the ball into the air, and, as it descends, it receives a blow from the bat.</p> <p>"They were playing also at another game resembling our cricket, but differing from it in this particular, that he perpendicular pieces which support the horizontal one, are about eighteen inches high, and are three in number, whereas with us they are only two in number, and about three or four inches high."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"BACE. Prisoner's bace (or base). A game so called. It is an ancient pastime mentioned in the records of Edward 3d (1327 to 1377.)"</p> <p>Jago, Fred W. P. <u>The Ancient Language and the Dialect of Cornwall</u> (Netherton and Worth, Truro, 1882), page 101. <b>Note:</b> cf #1805.4, above. Can we find other reference books on usages in Surrey, Sussex, London, etc.?</p>  +
<p>"Oh, then what fire in every vein, /What health the boons of life endear'd, /How oft the call, / To urge the ball / Across the rapid plain, / I heard."</p> <p>Jeremiah Fellowes, "Irregular Ode, Written Near _____ [sic] Academy," </p>  +
<p>". . . the students in the College and scholars in the Grammar School, shall not be permitted to play at ball, or use any other sport or diversion, in or near the College Edifice, by which the same may be exposed to injury."</p>  +
<p>"Yesterday afternoon a contest at the game of Bace took place on "the Gymnasium," near Tylers' between the gentlemen of two different clubs for a supper and trimmings . . . . Great skill and activity it is said was displayed on both sides, but after a severe and well maintained contest, Victory, which had at times fluttered a little form one to the other, settled down on the heads of the Gymnastics, who beat the Sons of Diagoras 41 to 34."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"High Street, at Hopkins's Corner, was the favorite battle-ground for ball-players, as early as 1805."</p> <p>"<i>Ball-</i>playing seems to have been extensively practiced in 1820. At the town meeting that year, it was voted 'that the game of ball, and the pitching of quoits within [a specified area] be prohibited."</p> <p>Joseph Williamson, <u>History of the City of Belfast</u> (Loring Short and Harmon, Portland, 1877), page 764. Accessed 2/2/10 via Google Books search ("hopkins's corner" ball).</p>  +
<p>Among the games described in this book are cricket and trap-ball, which has this concise account, in the form of a dialog: "you know, of course, that when I hit the trigger, the ball flies up, and that I must give it a good stroke with the bat. If I strike at the ball and miss my aim, or if, when I have struck it, either you or Price catch it before it has touched the ground, or if I have hit the trigger more than twice, without striking the ball, I am out and one of you take the bat, and come in, as it is called."</p> <p><u>The Book of Games, or, a History of Juvenile Sports: Practiced at the Kingston Academy</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 185. </p>  +
<p>"The negroes when not hurried have this day [Sunday] for amusement & great numbers are seen about, some playing ball, some with things for sale & some dressed up going to meeting."   -- Edward Hooker</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>April 8 [1806]: "Visited. Played at little ball."</p> <p>May: "Rainy. Played ball some."</p> <p> Volume 1 of this diary is not available via Google Books as of 11/15/2008. To view Volume 2, which has later New England references, use a Google Books "'robbins d. d.' diary" search.</p>  +
<p>"Edgar and Jane, the protagonists of a British children's book  published in 1806 in Baltimore, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">The Children in the Wood</span>, wanndered into a Briotish town where children were playing at trap and ball.</p>  +
<p>THE VILLAGE GREEN. "On the cheerful village green,/ Skirted round with houses small,/ All the boys and girls are seen,/Playing there with hoop and ball/ . . . ./Then ascends the worsted ball;/ High it rises in the air;/Or against the cottage wall,/Up and down it bounces there."</p> <p>BALL. "My good little fellow, don't throw your ball there/you'll  break the neighbors's window I know/ . . . As the ball had popp'd in, so the neighbor popp'd out/ And with a good horsewhip he beat him about . .  ."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"Ball tampering has been around since time immemorial. The first recorded instance of a bowler deliberately changing the condition of a ball occurred in 1806, when Beldham, Robinson and Lambert played Bennett, Fennex, and Lord Frederisk Beauclerk in a single-wicket match at Lord's. It was a closely fought match, but Beauclerk's last innings looked to be winning the game. As Pycroft recalls in <u>The Cricket Field:</u></p> <p>'"His lordship had then lately introduced sawdust when the ground was wet. Beldham, unseen, took a lump of wet dirt and sawdust, and stuck it on the ball, and took the wicket. This, I heard separately from Beldham, Bennett, and also Fennex, who used to mention it as among the wonders of his long life.'"</p> <p>Simon Rae, <u>It's Not Cricket: A History of Skulduggery, Sharp Practice and Downright Cheating in the Noble Game</u> (Faber and Faber, 2001), page 199. Pycroft's account appears at John Pycroft, <u>The Cricket Field: Or the History and Science of Cricket,</u> American Edition (Mayhew and Baker, Boston, 1859), page 214 - as accessed via Google Books 10/20/2008.</p>  +
<p>Garrett Barry wrote in his sentimental verse "On Leaving College:"</p> <p>"I'll fondly tract, with fancy's aid,/The spot where all our sports were made./ . . .</p> <p>The little train forever gay,/With joy obey'd the pleasing call,/And nimbly urged the flying ball."</p> <p><em> </em></p>  +
<p>In about 1889, Col. George Kent wrote this verse in response to an inquiry about student games from 1807 at Exeter:</p> <p>"But pastimes and games of a much better sort,</p> <p>Lent aid to our outdoor and innocent sport,</p> <p>Such as marbles and foot ball, cat, cricket and base,</p> <p>With occasional variance by a foot race."</p> <p>Bell, Charles H., <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Phillips</span> <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Exeter Academy</span> [1883?], p. 102. Per Seymour, Harold - Notes. the Seymour Collection at Cornell University, Kroch Library Department of Rare and Manuscript Collections, collection 4809.</p>  +
<p>"A hermit who had been watching some children playing ball games approved of their play and promised 'to provide bats, balls, &c' at his next visit."</p>  +
<p>The minutes of the NYC Common Council record a "Petition of sundry inhabitants in Wall Street complaining against the practice of boys playing ball before the Fire Engine House adjoining the City Hall, and other annoyances . . . " </p> <p>Minutes of the Common Council of the city of New York, 1784-1831, April 18, 1808, page 95 [Volume V.] Volume eighteen of manuscript minutes (continued) February 15, 1808 to June 27, 1808.</p>  +
<p>The first formally organized cricket club is established in Boston, Massachusetts.</p> <p>Per John Thorn, 6/15/04: The source is Chadwick Scrapbook, Volume 20. John has found a meeting announcement for the club in the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Boston (MA) Gazette</span> for November 17, 1808. <strong>Note:</strong> Ryczek dates this event as 1809 in <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball's First Inning</span> (2009), page 101.</p> <p>Richard Hershberger [email of 2/4/10] reports that the last mention of the Club he has found is an 1809 notice that the club's annual dinner will take place the following day. Source: <span style="text-decoration: underline;">New England</span> <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Palladium</span>, October 24, 1809.</p>  +
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">"Youthful Recreations</span> . . . [says] that it should be the right of every child to have an hour of recreation each day with sports, among bat and ball-type games."  -- Tom Altherr</p>  +
<p>"Between the college building and Green Street [in Schenectady] was a large [Union] College play-ground.  Their principal game was somewhat of a rudimentary type of base-ball, a crooked stick was used as a bat and a  ball made of yarn took the place of the common ball now used." </p> <p> </p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"Cricket had become a more popular recreation by 1810. . . . [The 1810 proclamation naming Sydney's Hyde Park noted that the area had been previously known as "'the Racecourse,' 'The Exercising Ground,' and 'The Cricket Ground,']"</p> <p>Egan, Jack, <u>The Story of Cricket in Australia</u> (ABC Books, 1987), page 10. Egan does not give a reference for the proclamation itself. </p>  +
<p>"[T]he lovely old town of Newburyport, Massachusetts, in which he spent the fist twenty-five years of his life, was ever dear to him. As a boy, barefoot he rolled the hoop through the streets, played a marbles and at bat and ball, swam in the Merrimack . . ."</p> <p>Wendell Phillips Garrison, "William Lloyd Garrison's Origin and Early Life, <u>The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine</u> Volume 30 (1885), page 592. Accessed via Google Books search 2/2/10 ("garrison's origin"). Newburyport MA is about 35 miles north of Boston and near the New Hampshire border.</p>  +
<p>A book published in Philadelphia and New York depicts trap ball, "one of the most pleasing sports that youth can exercise in.  It strengthens the the arms, exercises the legs [but is not a running game], and adds pleasure to the mind." </p>  +
<p>The rules for "Poisoned Ball" are described in a French book of boy's games: "In a court, or in a large square space, four points are marked: one for the home base, the others for bases which must be touched by the runners in succession, etc."</p> <p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">To See the Text</span></strong>: David Block carries a three-paragraph translation of text in Appendix 7, page 279, of <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball Before We Knew It.</span></p> <p>David notes that the French text does not say directly that a bat is used in this game; the palm may have been used to "repel" the ball.</p>  +
<p>"During my employment at Cambridge [MA] the College yard continued without gates. The Stage passed through it; and though I was very attentive to the hour, I could not always avoid injury from the Stage horn. Blacks and Whites occasionally played together at ball in the College yard."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>Young Thomas Babbington Macaulay "did not take kindly, his co-temporaries tell us, to foot-ball, cricket, or a game of rounders, preferred history to hockey, and poetry to prisoner's base."</p> <p>H. G. J. Clements, <u>Lord Macaulay, His Life and Writings</u> (Whittaker and Co., London, 1860), page 16. Accessed 2/2/10 via Google Books search (macaulay "2 lectures").</p>  +
<p>"A ringing endorsement of trap ball . . . the most detailed description pf [trap ball] in the period."  - Tom Altherr</p>  +
<p>Two noblemen arrange for eleven women of Surrey to play eleven women of Hampshire for a stake of 500 guineas a side.</p> <p>Ford, John, <u>Cricket: and Social History 1700-1835</u> [David and Charles, 1972], pp. 20-21. Ford does not give a reference for this event.</p>  +
<p><u>Remarks on Children's Play</u> [New York], per David Block, page 185-186. Block reports that the trap-ball page included the usual rules for trap-ball, but that the accompanying woodcut depicts a game in which a batter receives a pitched ball, with no trap in sight.</p>  +
<p>"Next to football, baseball has always been the most popular sport at Exeter. Alpheus S. Packard, who entered in 1811, mentions "bat-ball" as played in his day."</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"At Dyde's Military Grounds. Up the Broadway, to-morrow afternoon, September 14, the game of English Trap Ball will be played, full as amusing as Crickets and the exercise not so violent:"</p> <p>[Three days later] "The amusements at Dyde's to-morrow, Tuesday the 17<sup>th</sup> September, will be Rifle Shooting for the prize, and English Trap Ball. The gentlemen who have promised to attend to form a club to play at Trap Ball are respectfully requested to attend."</p> <p>[And four days later] "Trap Ball, Quoits, Cricket, &c." would be played at the ground. However, more space is now given to rifle and pistol shooting contests.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>The notice was signed by G. M'Enery, Secretary.</p> <p><u>New York Evening Post</u>, September 3, 1811, page 3 column 4. Submitted by George Thompson 8/2/2005..</p>  +
<p>Peter Van Smoot, an Army private present at the Battle of New Orleans, writes in his diary: "I found a soft ball in my knapsack, that I forgot I had put there and started playing catch with it."</p> <p><b>Note:</b> Citation needed. John Thorn, 6/15/04: "I don't recognize this one"</p>  +
<p>[At age four] "he spent many hours at games with boys of the neighborhood, his favorite being 'Cat and <strong>Bass Ball</strong> and Bandy,' the last the 'choyst' game of all."</p>  +
<p>"Your Committee will not pretend to bring before the Board the long and offending catalogue of abounding immoralities . . . but point out some . . . . Among the most prevalent on the Lords Day called Sunday, are . . . Horse Riding for pleasure . . . Skating ['] Ball playing, and other Plays by Boys and Men, and even Horse-racing." Minutes of the Common Council of the city of New York, 1784-1831, March 18, 1812, page 72 [Volume VII.] Submitted by John Thorn 1/24/07</p>  +
<p>General Robert Crooks was in Ohio during the War of 1812 to deal with Indian uprisings. One published letter-writer was not impressed: "These troops despise every species of military discipline and all the maxims of propriety and common sense . . . . Gen. Crooks would frequently play ball and wrestle with the lowest description of common soldiers, his troops were never seen on parade . . . "</p> <p>"Extract of a Letter dated Marietta, Feb. 3, 1813," <u>Washingtonian</u>, May 5, 1813. Accessed via subscription search, 4/9/2009.</p>  +
<p>"Parents and Guardians are also requested to forbid, those under their care, playing Ball in the streets of the town; as by this unlawful practice much inconvenience and injury is sustained." <i>Newburyport</i> <i>[MA] Herald,</i> May 4, 1813, Volume 17, Issue 10, page 1 [classified advertisement]. Submitted by John Thorn 1/24/07. Newburyport MA is about 35 miles north of Boston and near the New Hampshire border.</p>  +
<p> </p> <p>A ball game reportedly led to the killing and wounding of many US prisoners in England's Dartmoor prison  in April 1815:</p> <p>"On the 6<sup>th</sup> of April, 1815, as a small party were amusing themselves at a game of ball, some one of the number striking it with too much violence, it flew over the wall fronting the prison and the sentinels on the other side of the same were requested to heave the ball back, but refused; on which the party threatened to break through to regain their ball, and immediately put their threats into execution; a hole was made in the wall sufficiently large for a man to pass thro' - but no one attempted it."</p> <p>500 British soldiers appeared, and the prisoners were fired upon <em>en masse</em>.</p> <p> </p>  +
<p>"On the 29<sup>th</sup> May, a grant [sic] Match of Wicket was played at Chippawa, Upper Canada, by 22 English ship wrights, for a stake of 150 dollars. The parties were distinguished by the Pueetergushene and the Chippawa party. The game was won in 56 runs by the former. It continued 6 hours.</p> <p>"The winners challenge any eleven gentlemen in the state of New York, for any sum they may wish to play for. The game was succeeded by a supper in honor of King Charles, and the evening in spent [sic] with great hilarity."</p> <p><em>Mechanics' Gazette and Merchants' Daily Advertiser,</em> June 9,1815, reprinting from the <em>Buffalo</em> <em>Gazette.</em> Provided by Richard Hershberger, 7/30/2007. <strong>Note:</strong> It seems unusual for Englishmen to be playing wicket, and for wicket to field 11-man teams. Could this be a cricket match reported as wicket? Is it clear why a Buffalo NY newspaper would report on a match in "Upper Canada," or whereever Chippawa is? Do we know what a "grant match" is? A typo for "grand match," probably?</p>  +
<p>Dartmouth College in Hanover NH had a religious society, the Religiosi. "In April, 1815, at one of the meetings, a 'conversation was held on the propriety, or rather the impropriety, of professed [Christians - bracketed in original] joining in the common amusement of ballplaying with the students for exercise.'" Shortly thereafter "there were many spirited remarks on the subject of nocturnal <i>cowhunting</i>, and the society was unanimous in condemning it." John King Lord, <u>A History of Dartmouth College 1815-1909</u> (Rumford Press, Concord NH, 1913), page 564. Accessed 11/16/2008 via Google Books search of "'history of Dartmouth.'" <b>Note:</b> Did they condone <i>diurnal</i> cowhunting?</p>  +
<p>Adin Ballou grew up in a minister's home in Cumberland, RI, and his amusements were of the "homely and simple kinds, such as hunting, fishing, wrestling, wrestling, jumping, ball-playing , quoit-pitching . . .Card-playing was utterly disallowed." </p>  +
<p>"I saw a young man betted upon, for five hundred dollars, at a foot race. Indeed every thing is decided by a wager . . . . What would a northern man think, to see a father, and a sensible and respected one, too, go out with a company, and play marbles? At some cross-roads, or smooth shaven greens, you may a wooden wall, high and broad as the side of a church, erected for men to play ball against."</p> <p>"Arthur Singleton" (Henry Cogswell Knight), "Letters from the South and West," <u>Salem</u> <u>[MA] Gazette</u>, July 30, 1824. This paper extracted portions of a new book, which had been written between 1814 and 1819, by Knight, who was reared in Massachusetts and graduated from Brown in 1812. Online text unavailable 2/3/10. <b>Query:</b> The ballplaying facility as described seems uncongenial for cricket or a baserunning game, unless it was a form of barn-ball. Isn't a form of hand-ball a more likely possibility? Was handball, or fives, common in VA at this stage?</p>  +