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A list of all pages that have property "Headline" with value "A Truly "Grand" Game of Massachusetts Base Ball". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 51 results starting with #1.

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List of results

  • 1862.90  + (8th NY Plays Baseball Near Yorktown)
  • 1861.53  + (8th New York Intersquad game)
  • 1861.81  + (9th NY Plays to 49-49 tie)
  • 1863.129  + (9th NY plays for a barrel of ale)
  • 1859.32  + (<i>Morning Express</i> Opposes Bound Rule, Tag-up Rule: Wants More Runs!)
  • 1859.14  + (<i>New York Tribune</i> Compares the NY "Baby" Game and NE Game)
  • 1853.4  + (<i>School Reader</i> has Description of Bat and Ball)
  • 1855.13  + (<i>Spirit</i> Gives Season Plans for 5 Base Ball Clubs)
  • 1858.21  + (<i>Times</i> Editorial: "We Hail the New Fashion With Delight")
  • 1805.3  + (<u>Book of Games</u> Covers Cricket, Trap-Ball)
  • 1835.1  + (<u>Boy's Book of Sports</u> Describes "Base Ball", "Base or Goal Ball")
  • 1828.1  + (<u>Boy's Own Book</u> [London] Describes "Rounders," Stoolball, Feeder)
  • 1859.16  + (<u>Boy's Own Toy-Maker</u> Covers Tip-cat and Trap-ball)
  • 1858.9  + (<u>Brooklyn Daily Eagle</u> Contrasts Base Ball and Cricket)
  • 1830.1  + (<u>Children's Amusements</u> Describes Bat/Ball Play for Brits and Yanks)
  • 1857.33  + (<u>Clipper</u> Thinks Base Ball is Catching On)
  • 1859.15  + (<u>Games and Sports</u> Covers Rounders, Feeder, Trap-ball, Northern Spell)
  • 1859.18  + (<u>Harper's</u> Suggests Plugging Still Used in Base-ball)
  • 1800.5  + (<u>History of North America</u>: Cricket and Football are "Universally Practiced.")
  • 1836.3  + (<u>Little Learners</u> Chapbook Shows Trap-ball)
  • 1832.3  + (<u>Mary's Book of Sports</u> [New Haven CT] Has Drawing of "Playing at Ball")
  • 1859.26  + (<u>NY Herald</u> Weighs Base Ball against Cricket)
  • 1823.1  + (<u>National Advocate</u> Reports "Base Ball" Game in NYC)
  • 1859.21  + (<u>Porter's</u><i>:</i> MA Game Will Surely Die)
  • 1841.6  + (<u>School Reader</u> Shows Batter and Pitcher)
  • 1855.21  + (<u>Spirit</u> Eyes Three-Year Knicks-Gothams Rivalry)
  • 1792.1  + (<u>Sporting Magazine</u> Begins Its Cricket Reports in England)
  • 1861.6  + (<u>The Clipper</u> Looks Back on the 1861 Season)
  • 1846.21  + (A "Badly Defined" and Soggy April Game, In Brooklyn Alongside Star Cricket Club?)
  • 1804.3  + (A "Match at Ball" in Northwest Louisiana?)
  • 1831.1  + (A Ball Club Forms in Philadelphia; It Later Adopts Base Ball, and Lasts to 1887)
  • 1835.4  + (A Ballplayer's Progress: "Bound and Catch," "Barn Ball," "Town Ball")
  • 1834.8  + (A Ballplaying Death in PA)
  • BC3000c.1  + (A Baserunning Ballgame in the Stone Age?)
  • 1861.86  + (A Battalion of Base Ballists?)
  • 1863.113  + (A Change from Dodging Leaden Balls)
  • 1867.24  + (A Cool Treat for Kansas Fans)
  • 1862.113  + (A Different View of Alexander Cartwright)
  • 1310c.2  + (A Drawing of "A Game of Ball," with a Player in a Batting Pose)
  • 1850.61  + (A Drawing of Ballplaying in New York -- in the area where Central Park would later be, possibly??)
  • 1850c.51  + (A Form of Cricket)
  • 1709.1  + (A Form of [Two-man and Four-man] Cricket Played in Virginia)
  • 1837.1  + (A Founder of the Gothams Remembers "First Ball Organization in the US")
  • 1833.9  + (A Morale Tale: "Lazy Lawrence" Won't Play Ball)
  • 1540.1  + (A Pitcher, a Catcher and a Batter in a Golf History Book?)
  • 1852.14  + (A Pleasant Beech Grove, Where the Boys Played Bass Ball)
  • 1789.1  + (A Tale of Two Cricket Traditions?)
  • 1856.34  + (A Three-Inning Game of Wicket at Great Barrington)
  • 1821.4  + (A Three-Times-and-Out Rule in ME Cricket?)
  • 1827.6  + (A Tip for Good Health: Cricket for the Blokes, Bass-ball for the Lasses)
  • 1860.50  + (A Truly "Grand" Game of Massachusetts Base Ball)
  • 1771.3  + (A Wider Bat? Even in Cricket, There's Always a Joker)
  • 1820c.13  + (A Wry View of Cricket Match on Yale Campus)
  • 1863.120  + (A bully game of base ball)
  • 1849c.4  + (A. G. Mills and Boyhood Friend Recall "Base Ball" at a Brooklyn School)
  • 1810c.7  + (Abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison Plays Ball as Barefoot Youth)
  • 1850s.1  + (Accounts of Ballplaying by Slaves)
  • 1861.22  + (Ad Biz)
  • 1866.4  + (Admission charged for Atlantic - Athletic championship matches)
  • 1860.15  + (Adolescent Novel Describes Base Ball Game)
  • 1858.14  + (Adult Play [Finally!] Signaled in New Manual for Cricket and Base Ball)
  • 1852.8  + (Adult Town Ball Seen in on a Sunday in IL)
  • 1853.21  + (Advertisement for sale of "Three Old Cat" and "Bass" balls)
  • 1855.36  + (African American Clubs Play in NJ)
  • 1859.6  + (African-American Game is Played by "Henson Club" July 4 and/or November 15)
  • 1850s.39  + (African-American Girl Sees Base Ball at Elysian Fields)
  • 1749.2  + (Aging Prince Spends "Several Hours" Playing Bass-Ball in Surrey)
  • 1854.23  + (Ah, Spring! Base-ball! Wicket! Gould! (Gould?))
  • 1774.2  + (Ah, The Good Ol' Days: Cricket Now No Longer "Innocent Pastime")
  • 1865.39  + (Al Pratt learns baseball in the army)
  • 1863.92  + (Alabama soldiers play ball near Fredericksburg)
  • 1863.151  + (Alabama soldiers play bull-pen, cat and town ball)
  • 1860.57  + (Alabamans Choose Cricket)
  • 1845.14  + (All-England Eleven Tours England)
  • 1860.35  + (All-Out-Side-Out Town Ball Played in Indiana)
  • 1677.1  + (Almanac's Easter Verse Mentions Stool-ball)
  • 1740.2  + (Almanack Sees Time Wasted at Stool-ball)
  • 1633c.1  + (Ambiguous Reference to Stoole Ball Appears in a Drama)
  • 1000c.1  + (America Sees First European "Games?")
  • 1833c.12  + (America's First Interclub Ballgame, in Philadelphia)
  • 1868.9  + (American Baseball introduced to England?)
  • 1825c.7  + (American Chapbook Reprises Couplets on Cricket, Trap-ball)
  • 1832.4  + (American Chapbook Reuses "Playing at Ball" Woodcut)
  • 1840s.40  + (American Cricketers Play in Canada)
  • 1861.17  + (American Guard [71<sup>st</sup> NY Regt] 42, Nationals BB Club 13)
  • 1778.1  + (American Surgeon Sees Ball-Playing in English Prison)
  • 1780.9  + (Americans and Englishmen Encouraged to Meet on NYC Cricket Field)
  • 1809.1  + (Americans in London Play "A Game Called Ball," Seen as a "Novelty" By Locals)
  • 1840s.45  + (Amherst Alum Cites Round Ball, Wicket, Cricket on Campus in the Past)
  • 1846.8  + (Amherst Alum Recalls How Wicket Was Played)
  • 1846.7  + (Amherst Juniors Drop Wicket Game, 77 to 53: says Young Billjamesian)
  • 1858.34  + (Amusements at Duchess' Birthday Party Includes Base Ball)
  • 1835.19  + (An "Out-door Professor" is Appreciated by Former Student Ballplayers of Base, Cricket)
  • 1863.140  + (An exciting game of base ball)
  • 1862.86  + (An interesting game of base ball in Oxford, MS)
  • 1859.43  + (And It's <i>Pittsburgh</i> We Call the Pirates?)
  • 1859.29  + (Annual Meeting of NABBP Decides: Bound Rule, No Pros)
  • 1833.4  + (Another CT Chapbook, Another Recycled Woodcut)
  • 1820c.8  + (Another Chapbook - This One Celebrates the Fielder)
  • 1804.2  + (Another Chapbook, Another Trap-ball Engraving)
  • 1858.63  + (Another Early African American Club)