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This page provides a simple browsing interface for finding entities described by a property and a named value. Other available search interfaces include the page property search, and the ask query builder.
List of results
- 1858.12 + (Base Ball, Meet Tin Pan Alley)
- 1862.105 + (Base Ball, Old Cat played in camp)
- 1860.91 + (Base Stealing Frequency Before the Civil War)
- 1840.20 + (Base and Cricket are Experimental Astronomy?)
- 1820.29 + (Base ball Seen as "Old-fashioned" Activity For English Girls)
- 1861.67 + (Base ball at Camp Vermont)
- 1861.76 + (Base ball in Rochester Camp)
- 1863.82 + (Base ball in camp part of Muscular Christianity)
- 1863.51 + (Base-Ball and Foot-Ball Were Favorite Amusements”)
- 1828.16 + (Base-ball Cited as a Suitable "Nonsuch for Eyes and Arms" of Australian Ladies)
- 1823.2 + (Base-ball Listed Among Games Played in Suffolk)
- 1820c.27 + (Base-ball Recalled at New York's Battery Grounds)
- 1864.81 + (Baseball "all the rage" in TN)
- 1864.60 + (Baseball "the favorite game of our soldiers")
- 1840.19 + (Baseball Arrives in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada)
- 1865.14 + (Baseball For The Wounded)
- 1866.17 + (Baseball Introduced to the Richmond Public as a Novelty From the North)
- 1858.62 + (Baseball Player Compensation)
- 1858.38 + (Baseball Recommended for Brooklyn Schools-- Easier than Cricket)
- 1861.50 + (Baseball at Benton Barracks)
- 1862.78 + (Baseball at Camp Cleveland)
- 1861.91 + (Baseball at Fortress Monroe)
- 1820.32 + (Baseball in Brooklyn 1820)
- 1864.92 + (Baseball in Culpeper Camp)
- 1768.2 + (Baseball in English Dictionary)
- 1864.73 + (Baseball near Petersburg)
- 1863.111 + (Baseball played at Rhode Island Army Hospital)
- 1850s.18 + (Baseball's Beginnings at U Penn?)
- 1867.16 + (Baseball's Resemblance to English Rounders Discussed)
- 1830c.10 + (Baseball-like Scene Reappears in Children's Book)
- 1865.44 + (Baseballs don't survive one inning)
- 1854.18 + (Bass Ball and Truth-telling)
- 1825.2 + (Bass-Ball Challenge Issued in New York State)
- 1852.4 + (Bass-ball "Quite Too Complicated" for Children's Book on Games)
- 1760.2 + (Bat and Ball . . . in Paris?)
- 1200s.1 + (Bat and Ball Game Illustration Appears in English Genealogical Roll)
- 1824.7 + (Bat and Ball, Cricket are Sunday Afternoon Pastimes)
- 1811.5 + (Bat-ball Recalled at Exeter)
- 1820.1 + (Bat/Ball Game Depicted in <u>Children's Amusements</u>)
- 1867.6 + (Batters' "Hits" First Appear in a Game Report)
- 1871.2 + (Battery Sought for African American Club in St. Louis)
- 1860.73 + (Batting Cage Debuts)
- 1619.1 + (Bawdy Poem Has Wenches Playing "With Stoole and Ball")
- 1865.3 + (Bay Stater to Wife: “We had a gay old time playing ball . . . send me five dollars”)
- 1863.83 + (Bay Staters play ball in NC)
- 1805.9 + (Belfast ME Had Ballplaying as Early as 1805)
- 1754.2 + (Ben Franklin Brings Copy of Cricket Rules Back to U.S.)
- 1660c.2 + (Ben Franklin's Uncle Recalls Ballplaying On an English Barn)
- 1850s.50 + (Benefits for Adults Seen in Ballplaying in English Shire: Tutball Rules Described)
- 1863.40 + (Bettors Beware: NJ Soldiers Upset 2nd NY, 34-11: Daily Inter-regimental Play is Reported)
- 1793.2 + (Big Stakes for Cricket, Indeed)
- 1638.1 + (Bishop Sees Churchyard as Consecrated Ground: No Stool Ball, Drinkings, Merriments)
- 1841.10 + (Bloomfield CT Wicket Challenge: "One Shamble Shall Be Out")
- 1860.88 + (Bloomfield CT has a Long Ball Club)
- 1706.2 + (Book About a Scotsman Mentions "Cat and Doug" and Other Diversions)
- 1807.1 + (Book Includes Hermit's Promise to Bring Children "Bats, Balls &c")
- 1801.3 + (Book Portrays "Bat and Ball" as Inferior to Cricket)
- 1811.1 + (Book Printed in Philadelphia Gives Details of Trap Ball in England)
- 1847.4 + (Book of Children's Tales Includes Recycled Illustrations of Ballplaying)
- 1834.2 + (Book on Farming Contains Ad for Carver Book)
- 1833.1 + (Book on Flowers [Yes, Flowers] Shows Overhand Pitch)
- 1776.1 + (Book on Juvenile Pastimes Comments on Trap Ball)
- 1845.11 + (Bookman Babcock, He Just Keeps On Truckin')
- 1865.16 + (Boom in Base Ball Travel)
- 1858.67 + (Boston Area Ballgames Noted in 1858)
- 1871.6 + (Boston Club Puts City Name on Uniform)
- 1853.19 + (Boston Clubs Play for Ten Boxes of Cigars)
- 1835.7 + (Boston Common Ballplaying Picture Migrates to Religious Chapbook)
- 1841.2 + (Boston Common Ballplaying Scene Appears on Writing Tablet)
- 1830c.7 + (Boston Gent Recalls Old Game of "Massachusetts Run-Around")
- 1713.1 + (Boston Magistrate Finds Trap Ball Clogging a Gutter)
- 1790s.2 + (Boston Merchant Recalls "Playing Ball on the Common Before Breakfast")
- 1856.25 + (Boston Paper Reports 192-187 Squeaker in Western MA)
- 1872.18 + (Boston Pro Club Faces Insolvency on Way to Becoming Longest-Lived)
- 1857.28 + (Boston Sees Eight Hour Match of the Massachusetts Game)
- 1832.5 + (Boston Spelling/Reading Book Describes Cricket and "Playing at Ball")
- 1870.14 + (Boston, Other Towns Eye "First-Class Professional Nines" Like the Red Stockings)
- 1840.38 + (Boston-Style "Bat and Ball" Seen in Honolulu HI)
- 1863.28 + (Box Score Shows D Company Over H Company, 40-15)
- 1843c.11 + (Boy Plays Chermany and Prisoner's Base in Petersburg)
- 1820s.12 + (Boys Are Attracted to Sports of "Playing Ball or Goal" in Bangor ME)
- 1833.13 + (Boys Play Bat Ball in New Orleans)
- 1846.26 + (Boys Play goal and ball)
- 1850s.47 + (Boys and Girls Play Old Cat at Recess in Wisconsin)
- 1832.11 + (Brighton Women Play Stool Ball Despite Weather, Forego Merry Dance)
- 1871.7 + (Brimmed Uniform Caps Introduced)
- 1858.31 + (Bristol CT Bests Waterbury in Wicket)
- 1790s.3 + (Britannica: Stickball Dates to Late 18<sup>th</sup> Century?)
- 1872.16 + (British Base Ball Tour Is Planned)
- 1860c.26 + (British Book Shows Several Safe-Haven Games - Cricket, Rounders, Feeder, Nine Holes, Doutee Stool, and Stoolball)
- 1806.1 + (British Children's Book Includes Scene of "Trap and Ball")
- 1777.4 + (British POWs Linger in Colonies -- Did They Help Sew Base Ball's Seeds?)
- 1790.8 + (British Paper Snitches on Ringer Playing on a County Cricket Club)
- 1819.1 + (British Science Text Uses "Base-ball" Heuristic Example)
- 1770s.1 + (British Soldiers Seek Amusements, Rebels Yawn)
- 1858.11 + (British Sports Anthology Shows Evolved Rounders, Other Safe Haven Games)
- 1850.22 + (British Trade Unionists Play Base Ball)
- 1845.16 + (Brooklyn 22, New York 1: The First-Ever "Modern" Base Ball Match?)
- 1846.2 + (Brooklyn BBC Established, May Become "Crack Club of County?")
- 1862.1 + (Brooklyn Games Organized as Benefits for Sick and Wounded Soldiers)