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A list of all pages that have property "Headline" with value "Galileo-20Galilei-20Discovers-20.-20.-20.-20Backspin!". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 250 results starting with #1.

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List of results

  • 1771.1  + (Dartmouth President Finds Gardening "More Useful" Than Ballplaying)
  • 1857.32  + (Daybreak Club Forms in Providence RI)
  • 1870.6  + (Dead Ball Adopted)
  • 1870s.2  + (Debra Shattuck lists early female base ball)
  • 1859.67  + (Debunking DeBost)
  • 1795.4  + (Deerfield's Fine for Playing Ball: Six Cents)
  • 1728.1  + (Delaware Resident Writes of Playing Trap Ball, with Cider as Reward)
  • 1844.21  + (Delhi NY bans Goal, Ball)
  • 1857.43  + (Deliberate Bad Pitches Noted)
  • 1855c.3  + (Demo Game of Wicket, Seen as a CT Game, Later Played in Brooklyn)
  • 1865.6  + (Detachment Forms BB Club in Trenton)
  • 1859.40  + (Devotion to MA Game Erodes Significantly)
  • 1869c.4  + (Diana Base Ball Club of Northwestern Female Seminary)
  • 1863.3  + (Diarist Records 12 References to Ball-Playing, 1863-1864)
  • 1863.37  + (Diarist at White Oak Church Camp in VA Plays Ball)
  • 1863.13  + (Diarist in 8th Minnesota Mentions Ballplaying 4 Times – Maybe 5 Times)
  • 1852.17  + (Dickens Names Cricket, but not Stoolball or Rounders, Among "Merriest" Games)
  • 1849.13  + (Did Cartwright Play Ball on His Way to California?)
  • 1853.7  + (Didactic Novel Pairs "Bass-Ball" and Rounders at Youths' Outing)
  • 1862c.56  + (Dime Admission Free Adopted at More Sites)
  • 1864.50  + (Dime for Admission, Two Dimes for Carriages)
  • 1780s.5  + (Diminished in its Range, Stoolball Still Played at Brighton)
  • 1393.1  + (Disconfirmed Poetry Lines Said to Denote Stoolball in Sussex)
  • 1860.34  + (Disparate Ball Games Seen in New Hampshire)
  • 1863.107  + (Dispute between MA and NY rules)
  • 1823.7  + (Ditty: "You Take the Bat, and I'll carry the Ball")
  • 1850c.54  + (Doc Adams Creates Modern Shortstop Position)
  • 1839c.6  + (Doc Adams Enters the Field)
  • 1840.1  + (Doc Adams Plays a Ball Game in NYC He [Later] Understands to be Base Ball)
  • 1832.10  + (Doc Adams' Sister Writes of Bat and Ball Play)
  • 1845c.15  + (Doc Adams, Ballmaker: The Hardball Becomes Hard)
  • 1737.2  + (Doctor Writes of North Carolina Game Resembling Ireland's Trap Ball)
  • 1790s.1  + (Doctor in DE Recalls His "Youthfull Folley": Includes Ball-playing)
  • 1310.1  + (Documents Said to Describe Baseball-like Romanian Game of Oina)
  • 1741c.1  + (Does Alexander Pope "Sneer" at Cricket in Epic Poem?)
  • 1823.3  + (Don't Play Ball Inside the House!)
  • 1861.43  + (Donkey Ball)
  • 1863.86  + (Draftees Play Ball on Rikers Island)
  • 1631.1  + (Drama by Philip Massenger Refers to Cat-Stick)
  • 1863.61  + (Drawing Shows 1st NJ Artillery Playing Ball Game on a Diamond)
  • 1863.141  + (Drill, baseball and glee clubs)
  • 1862.70  + (Drummers defeat Fifers on Hilton Head)
  • 1478.1  + (Du Cange Mentions "Criquet" Game in his Glossary)
  • 1725.2  + (Duke of Richmond Issues Challenge to Play Single-Wicket Cricket)
  • 1842.4  + (Duke of Wellington Requires Cricket Ground for Every Military Barrack.)
  • 1853.2  + (Dutch Handbook for Boys Covers "Engelsch Balspel," Trap-ball, Tip-cat)
  • 1656.1  + (Dutch Prohibit "Playing Ball," Cricket on Sundays in New Netherlands.)
  • 1845.29  + (Dutch Publication Covers "Engelsch Balspel," "Kat," Other Batting Games)
  • 1860.11  + (Eager for Base Ball)
  • 1835c.14  + (Eagle Article Describes Early Ball-Making)
  • 1852.3  + (Eagle Ball Club Rulebook Appears)
  • 1865.20  + (Eagle Eyes Height and Weight)
  • 1862.8  + (Earliest Base Ball in Colorado Territory)
  • 1744.3  + (Earliest Full Cricket Scorecard for the "Greatest Match Ever Known")
  • 1858.33  + (Earliest Games in Chicago IL?)
  • 1704.4  + (Earliest Published Rules of Cricket [?])
  • 1866.2  + (Early African American Club in Philly Plays Initial Game Agains Albany Visitors)
  • 1820c.30  + (Early African American baseball)
  • 1840s.21  + (Early Ball Contents: Nuts, Bullets, Rocks, Fish-eyes)
  • 1851.2  + (Early Ballplaying on the SF Plaza (Horses Beware!))
  • 1845c.25  + (Early Cricket Clubs in the South)
  • 1705.1  + (Early Cricket Match "To Be Plaid . . . for 11 Guineas a Man")
  • 1749.1  + (Early Cricket: Addington Club Takes On All-England, Five on Five)
  • 1796.4  + (Early Geographer Sees Variety of Types New England Ballplaying)
  • 1676.2  + (Early Limeys Take "Krickett" to Far Mediterranean Coast)
  • 1855.30  + (Early Season Game Goes to Knicks, 27-14; Wadsworth Chided)
  • 1591.1  + (Early Spanish-English Dictionary Mentions the "Trapsticke")
  • 1845.27  + (Early Town-Ball Mention)
  • 1864.58  + (Early Use of "Battery" As Pitcher-Catcher Pairing)
  • 1653.2  + (Early Use of "Cricket" Seen in Rabelais Translation)
  • 1857.16  + (Early Use of the Term "Town Ball" in <i>NY Clipper</i>)
  • 1861.89  + (Early-Days Monster in Left Field?)
  • 1866.8  + (Earned Runs Concept Advanced)
  • 1538.1  + (Easter Ball Play at Churches Ends in France)
  • 1822.6  + (Eastport bans "bat and ball")
  • 1470c.1  + (Editor Sees Stoolball in Verse on Bachelorhood)
  • 1858.24  + (Editorial Rips Base Ball "Mania" as a "Public Nuisance")
  • 1743.1  + (Editorial: Cricket is OK, But Only for Rural Holiday Play)
  • 1860.22  + (Educatin' the Readers)
  • 1365.1  + (Edward III Prohibits Playing of Club-Ball.)
  • BC2000c.3  + (Egyptian Tomb Has Earliest Depiction of Catching (Fielding) a Ball?)
  • BC1460.1  + (Egyptian Tomb Inscriptions Show Bats, Balls)
  • 1868.1  + (Elizabeth Cady Stanton describes Female Baseball Game in Peterboro, NY)
  • 1865.13  + (Elysian? Yes. Sacred? No.)
  • 1854.20  + (Empire Club Begins Play)
  • 1854.7  + (Empire Club Constitution Appears)
  • 1856.32  + (Empire Club Fields Two Catchers at Elysian Fields)
  • 1838.7  + (English Anthology of Games Puts "Squares" Among Safe-Haven Ballgames)
  • 1385.1  + (English Boys Play Ball "To the Grave Peril of Their Souls")
  • 1853.12  + (English Cleric Promotes Co-ed Rounders)
  • 1846.14  + (English Crew Teaches Rounders to Baltic Islanders)
  • 1820.3  + (English Cricketers Play Two-Day Match Again New Yorkers)
  • 1821.8  + (English Essayist Praises Youth Playing Bass-ball and Cricket)
  • 1844.7  + (English Gent in NYC Goes Off to a Ball Game)
  • 1818c.5  + (English Immigrants from Surrey See Cricket, Trap Ball in IL)
  • 1850.23  + (English Novel Briefly Mentions Base-Ball)
  • 1848.15  + (English Novel Mentions, Thread-the-Needle, "Base-Ball:" "Such Games!)
  • 1658.1  + (English Parish Rewards Informant for Ratting on Sunday Trap-baller)
  • 1555c.1  + (English Poet Condones Students' Yens "To Tosse the Ball, To Rene Base, Like Men of War")
  • 1857.36  + (English Residents of Richmond, VA Try Unsuccessfully to Form A Cricket Club, Then Try Base Ball)
  • 1859.44  + (English Social Event Includes Base Ball as Well as Cricket)
  • 1567.1  + (English Translation of Horace Refers to "the Stoole Ball")
  • 1820c.28  + (English Village Green Had Cricket, Bass-Ball)
  • 1854.13  + (English Visitor Sees Wicket at Harvard)
  • 1824c.3  + (English Writing Cites Base-ball as Girls'; Pastime, Limns Cricket Match)
  • 1856.37  + (English excursion features cricket and "base-ball")
  • 1840.9  + (Englishman Sees Base-ball as Commonly Played by Adult Men and Women)
  • 1850.7  + (Englishman's Book of Games Refers to Rounders, Feeder)
  • 1363.1  + (Englishmen Forbidden to Play Ball; Archery Much Preferred)
  • 1793.1  + (Engraving Shows Game with Wickets at Dartmouth College)
  • 1805.4  + (Enigmatic Report: NY Gentlemen Play Game of "Bace," and Score is Gymnastics 41, Sons of Diagoras 34.)
  • 1864.63  + (Entire Regiment Plays Sports)
  • 1837c.12  + (Erasmus Hall School Alum Recalls Three-Base Game with Plugging)
  • 1796.3  + (Eton Cricketers Flogged at School for Playing Match. Ouch.)
  • 1867.22  + (Eureka! A Press Credential)
  • 1855.29  + (Even the Australians Are Bothered by Sunday Baseball)
  • 1863.19  + (Eventual National League Prexy Sticks with Cricket in War Camp)
  • 1778.4  + (Ewing Reports Playing "At Base" and Wicket at Valley Forge - with the Father of his Country)
  • 1856.15  + (Excelsior Base Ball Club Forms in Albany NY)
  • 1861.70  + (Excelsior Brigade amuses itself)
  • 1863.154  + (Excelsior Brigade plays base ball in camp)
  • 1863.67  + (Excelsior Club Expels Turncoat Surgeon)
  • 1854.5  + (Excelsior Club Forms in Brooklyn)
  • 1860.7  + (Excelsiors Conduct Undefeated Western NY Road Trip. . ."First Tour Ever? First $500 Player Ever?)
  • 1856.2  + (Excelsiors Publish Constitution)
  • 1859.9  + (Excelsiors and Union Club play for $500 and MA Championship)
  • 1856.20  + (Exciting Round Ball Game Played on Boston Common, Ends With 100-to-98 Tally)
  • 1852.6  + (Exciting [Adult] Rounders in the Arctic)
  • 1862.79  + (Exhilarating Game of Ball)
  • 1815.8  + (Eyewitness On the Massacre of Seven U.S Soldiers at Dartmoor Prison in England)
  • 1860.82  + (Famous Baseballists Turn To Cricket)
  • 1841.16  + (Fast Day Choice in ME: Hear a "Fact Sermon" or Play Ball?)
  • 1844.10  + (Fast Day Game in NH on the Common - Unless Arborism Goes Too Far)
  • 1848.16  + (Fast-Day Notice to NH Subscribers)
  • 1858c.65  + (Fat and Lean Base Ball Club Organized in Buffalo)
  • 1797.3  + (Fayetteville NC Bans Sunday Ballplaying by African-Americans)
  • 1852.10  + (Fictional "Up-Country" Location Cites Bass-Ball and Wicket)
  • 1830c.28  + (Fictional Mom Recalls Liking to Bat Ball as a Girl)
  • 1858.1  + (Fifty Clubs Said Active in New York Area - Plus Sixty Junior Clubs)
  • 1821.6  + (Fifty-cent Fine in New Bedford for Those Who Play at Ball)
  • 1854.14  + (Finally, Cricket Played in America Without Mostly English Immigrants!)
  • 1866.7  + (Finally, Substitutes Make the Box Score)
  • 1861.44  + (Fire Zouaves Play Baseball in DC)
  • 1857.48  + (First Known Appearance of Term "New York Game")
  • 1862.9  + (First Admission Fees for Baseball?)
  • 1856.33  + (First Ball of the Base Ball Clubs Attracts 200 Couples at Niblo's Saloon)
  • 1860.52  + (First Base Ball Match in St. Louis MO)
  • 1857.39  + (First Baseball Attendance of a Thousand or More)
  • 1845.34  + (First Baseball played in Brooklyn?)
  • 1870c.7  + (First Catcher's Glove? About 1870, Perhaps)
  • 1858.58  + (First Chicago Club Forms)
  • 1858.55  + (First Club Forms in St. Paul MN)
  • 1869.11  + (First Club to Wear Checked/Plaid Stockings)
  • 1871.8  + (First Co-Ed college baseball game?)
  • 1808.2  + (First Cricket Club in Boston is Established, Then Fades)
  • 1867.20  + (First Cricket Match in Memphis)
  • 1867.28  + (First Detailed Set of Rules for Stoolball Appear)
  • 1727.1  + (First Documented Cricket Playing Rules Agreed to, for One-time Use)
  • 1859.55  + (First Fly Baseball Game)
  • 1859.41  + (First Game in Canada Played by New York Rules?)
  • 1865.8  + (First Integrated (Adult) Club Takes the Field?)
  • 1862.102  + (First Inter-City AA Game?)
  • 1867.18  + (First Inter-Racial Baseball Game?)
  • 1859.1  + (First Intercollegiate Ballgame: Amherst 73, Williams 32)
  • 1860.46  + (First International Game Played by New York Rules)
  • 1855.40  + (First Jr. Base Ball Club Founded)
  • 1858.19  + (First KY Box Score Appears in Louisville Newspaper)
  • 1869.14  + (First Known Inter-racial Game of Base-Ball)
  • 1739.1  + (First Known Picture of Cricket Appears)
  • 1866.6  + (First Known Table-top Base Ball Game Appears)
  • -700c.1  + (First Known Written Depiction of Ball Play?)
  • 1744.1  + (First Laws of Cricket are Written in England)
  • 1886.1  + (First League Championship Trophy is Commissioned)
  • 1867.17  + (First Multi-Racial Baseball Team?)
  • 1838.12  + (First Murder in a Baseball Game?)
  • 1863.34  + (First New Jersey Brigade Plays Ball in 1863 and 1864.)
  • 1854.2  + (First New England Team, the Olympics, Forms to Play Round Ball)
  • 1856.7  + (First Official Use of the Term "Rounders" Appears?)
  • 1865.27  + (First Organized Base Ball Game in NC?)
  • 1827.3  + (First Oxford-Cambridge Cricket Match Held)
  • 1867.30  + (First Patented Baseball Object)
  • 1855.38  + (First Printing of Rules)
  • 1871.18  + (First Pro League Game Doesn't Feature Offense)
  • 1838.4  + (First Recorded Base Ball game in Canada [as reported in 1886]?)
  • 1858.29  + (First Recorded College Game at Williams College)
  • 1756.1  + (First Recorded Game by Hambledon Cricket Club)
  • 1751.1  + (First Recorded US Cricket Match Played, "For a Considerable Wager," in NYC; New Yorkers Win, 167-80)
  • 1859.54  + (First Reference to Change-of-Pace Pitching?)
  • 1856.18  + (First Reported Canadian Base Ball Game Occurs, in Ontario)
  • 1856.31  + (First Scholastic Play?)
  • 1859.69  + (First Seasonal Analysis Includes Primordial Batting Statistic)
  • 1861.15  + (First Sunday in the Army: "Ball-playing, Wrestling, and Some Card-Playing")
  • 1866.13  + (First Team Name on Uniform Shirt)
  • 1859.13  + (First Tour of English Eleven to US and Canada)
  • 1838c.8  + (First US Baseball Poem[?]: There is No "Puling Cry" in Baseball)
  • 1844.2  + (First US-Canada Cricket Match Held)
  • 1866.14  + (First Uniform with Graphic Design)
  • 1867.15  + (First Uniform with Serif Letter on Shirt)
  • 1857.8  + (First Western club, the Franklin Club, forms in Detroit)
  • 1859.5  + (First [or Second?] Pacific Coast Club, the Eagles, Forms)
  • 1863.55  + (First and Second Nines of 9th NY Prevail at Yorktown VA)
  • 1862.99  + (First ball playing in Wyoming)
  • 1865.43  + (First baseball in North Carolina?)
  • 1875.2  + (First female baseball team outside the US?)
  • 1874.1  + (Firsts recorded African-American club in Louisville)
  • 1848.22  + (Fitchburg Levies $1 fine for Striking balls with a bat-stick)
  • 1865.21  + (Fitz Credited With Originating Tournaments)
  • 1852.9  + (Five Fined in Brooklyn NY for Sunday Ballplaying Near a Church)
  • 1570c.1  + (Five Indicted for Stoolball Play on Sunday)
  • 1866.3  + (Five-Home Run game)
  • 1856.19  + (Five-Player Base Ball Reported in NY, WI)
  • 1864.17  + (Florida Regiments Mix it Up in Town Ball)
  • 1863.44  + (Florida Sergeant Notes Baseball Fever – Well, Town-Ball Fever, Actually)
  • 1863.43  + (Floridian: “Game of Ball . . . Has Become a Great Amusement Here”)
  • 1858.27  + (Flour Citys First Base Ball Club in Rochester)
  • 1860.72  + (Fly Game Again Swatted Down)
  • 1860.9  + (Fly Game Wings Its Way to Boston)
  • 1841.12  + (Fond OH Editor on Youthful Ball-playing: "We Like It")
  • 1824.4  + (Fondly Remembering the First Ballplaying Richie Allen)
  • 1872.1  + (Forest City Club Lists Player Duties, Role of Team Captain, Etc.)
  • 1086.1  + (Form of Stool Ball Possibly Found in Domesday Book in Norman England?)
  • 1564.1  + (Formal Complaint in Surrey: Stoolball is Played on Sunday)
  • 1845c.7  + (Former Catcher Recalls Ballgame with Soaking and "Fugleing" in NYS)
  • 1864c.52  + (Former Mass-Game Champs Form Winning Wartime Team)
  • 1861.90  + (Fort Wayne soldiers play town ball)
  • 1858.16  + (Four Jailed for "Criminal" Sunday Play in NJ)
  • 1800c.4  + (Four Old Cat and Three Old Cat Well Known in MA)
  • 1860c.4  + (Four Teams of African-Americans, All in the NYC Area, Are Reported)
  • 1858.10  + (Four-day Attendance of 40,000 Souls Watch Famous Roundball Game in Worcester)
  • 1672c.2  + (Francis Willughby's "Book of Games" Surveys Folkways: Batting/Baserunning Game Described)
  • 1818c.7  + (Franz Schubert Watches a "Game of Ball" Near Vienna)
  • 1779.4  + (French Official Sees George Washington Playing Catch "For Hours")
  • 1856.10  + (French Work Describes Poisoned Ball and La Balle au Baton)
  • 1611.1  + (French-English Dictionary Cites "Cat and Trap" and Cricket)
  • 1440c.1  + (Fresco at Casa Borromeo shows Female Ball Players)
  • 1845c.24  + (Future Congressman Plays Ball at Phillips Andover?)
  • 1850s.40  + (Future Historian Plays Ball in NYC Streets)
  • 1810c.8  + (Future Lord Prefers Studies to Rounders, Cricket)
  • 1850s.45  + (Future NL President Plays ball in Mohawk Valley of New York)
  • 1861.21  + (Future Nurse Muses on Enlistees Playing Ball)
  • 1830s.21  + (Future OH Senator Has Little Interest in Playing Ball)
  • 1825c.14  + (Future Ohio Governor is "Best Ball Player at the College")
  • 1830s.16  + (Future President Lincoln Plays Town Ball, Joins Hopping Contests)
  • 1863.117  + (Future President notes ballplaying in camp)
  • 1770c.3  + (Future Professor Sneaks a Smoke When He Can't Play Bat and Ball)
  • 1790s.11  + (Future Ship Captain Chooses Reading Over Boyish Sports)
  • 1856.35  + (Future Star Dickey Pearce Discovers the Decade-old No-Plugging Rule)
  • 1795.6  + (Future Tennessee Governor, at age 50, "Played at Ball")
  • 1840c.33  + (Future University Head Plays Two Types of Ball in NC)
  • 1661.1  + (Galileo Galilei Discovers . . . Backspin!)
 (Galileo-20Galilei-20Discovers-20.-20.-20.-20Backspin!)
  • 1786.2  + (Game Called Wicket Reported in England)
  • 1860.59  + (Game Set for CA Mining Town)
  • 1862.30  + (Game Suspended When BIG Fight Breaks Out)
  • 1836c.12  + (Game With Plugging of Runners Later Recalled in Jersey City)
  • 1850s.60  + (Game of "Round-Ball" Recalled Much Later)
  • 1828.19  + (Game of Base Mentioned in Account of Life at Harvard)
  • 1720c.4  + (Game of Base was "A Peculiar Favorite")
  • 1848.14  + (Game of Baseball Attains Official Perch in Lexicon!)
  • 1850.52  + (Game of Wicket Near Springfield Goes Bad)
  • 1857.27  + (Game of Wicket Reaches IA)
  • 1862.57  + (Games Between NY and MA Regiments Punctuated by Artillery)
  • 1807.2  + (Games Recalled at Phillips Exeter Academy)
  • 1851.8  + (Games of Ball Seen in Sacramento CA in 1851, 1854)
  • 1863.145  + (Games of Foot and Base ball between drills)
  • 1575.1  + (Gascoigne's Poem "The Fruits of War" Refers to Tut-ball)
  • 1863.136  + (Gen. Grant enjoys watching ball game)
  • 1856.13  + (General Base Ball Rules Are Published)
  • 1864.53  + (General Hooker's Players "Pretty Badly Beat", 70-11)
  • 1863.59  + (General Supports Ballplaying by RI Unit)
  • 1869.13  + (George Wright Joins the All-Professional Cincinnati Club)
  • 1836.6  + (Georgetown U Students "play Ball")
  • 1863.57  + (Georgia Corporal Plays Town Ball)
  • 1863.150  + (Georgia solders play town ball)
  • 1862.117  + (Georgia soldiers play town and base ball in NC)
  • 1863.100  + (Georgians change from base to snow-balling)
  • 1815.3  + (German Book Apparently Shows a Batting Game)
  • 1836.2  + (German Book of Games Copies Gutsmuths' Base-ball Piece)
  • 1845.10  + (German Book of Games Lists <i>das Giftball</i>, a Bat-and-Ball Game)
  • 1837.13  + (German-English Dictionary Cites "Base-ball")
  • 1301.1  + (Ghistelles Calendar Depicts Vigorous-Looking Bat/Ball Game)
  • 1859.51  + (Girls Play Base Ball at Eagleswood School)
  • 1852.13  + (Gotham Club Forms; Knicks Have First Rival Team)
  • 1856.12  + (Gothams 21, Knicks 7; Fans Show Greatest Interest Ever; "Revolver" Controversy)
  • 1864.35  + (Government Promotes Base Ball)
  • 1862.13  + (Government Survey: Athletic Games Forestall Woes of Soldiers Gambling)
  • 1835c.16  + (Graduate Grimly Recalls Rounders at Greenwich School in England)
  • 1858.52  + (Grand Wicket Match in Waterbury CT)
  • 1863.104  + (Grant's Men Play Town-Ball in the Swamps)
  • 1839.1  + (Graves Letters of 1905 Say that Doubleday Invented Base Ball)
  • 1815.6  + (Group at Dartmouth Ponders Worth of Ballplaying, Nocturnal Cowhunting)
  • 1835c.15  + (Grown Man Mourns as Trenton's Playing Fields Vanish)
  • 1850s.15  + (Gunnery School in CT Imports Base Ball from NY)
  • 1796.1  + (Gutsmuths describes [in German, yet] "Englische Base-Ball")
  • 1823.10  + (Hagerstown bans ball playing at the Court House)
  • 1847.5  + (Halliwell's 960-Page Dictionary Cites Base-ball, Rounders, Tut-ball)
  • 1861.64  + (Happy Pennsylvanians near DC)
  • 1872.4  + (Harry Wright Offers Game, Players, to Harvard)
  • 1856.1  + (Harry and George Wright Both at St. George CC in New York)
  • 1853.20  + (Hartford Courant describes Long Ball)
  • 1852c.11  + (Hartford Lads Play Early Morning Wicket on Main Street)
  • 1840.44  + (Hartford Players Best Granville MA Players at Wicket)
  • 1810s.5  + (Harvard Library Worker Recalls Occasional Bi-racial Ball Play in Harvard Yard)
  • 1842.3  + (Harvard Man George Hoar Writes of Playing "Simple Game We Called Base")
  • 1760s.1  + (Harvard Man Recalls Cricket, "Various Games of Bat and Ball" on Campus)
  • 1820s.33  + (Harvard Man: "We had Baseball")
  • 1862.6  + (Harvard Seeks Base Ball Rivals, Settles on Brown)
  • 1858.8  + (Harvard Student Magazine Notes "Multitude" Playing Base or Cricket There)
  • 1863.56  + (Have Fast Ball Will Travel)
  • 1842c.9  + (Haverford Students Form Cricket Team of Americans)
  • 1863.76  + (Hawkeyes beat Suckers in Corinth, MS)
  • 1863.126  + (Hawkins' Zouaves Play 51st NY)
  • 1862.47  + (Hawthorne Sees Ballplaying at Washington-area Camp)
  • 1861.87  + (Heavy battle losses don't stop baseball playing)
  • 1865.41  + (Helath Benefits of Baseball to Soldiers)
  • 1864.39  + (Helping the Sanitary Commission)
  • 1861.4  + (Henry Chadwick Links Base Ball to Rounders - But It's More "Scientific")
  • 1847c.1  + (Henry Chadwick Plays a "Scrub" Game of Baseball?)
  • 1868.4  + (Henry Chadwick's Cholera Scare May Have Doomed American Chronicle of Sports and Pastimes)
  • 1865.30  + (Henry Chadwick, Shortstop)
  • 1863.30  + (Herald Reports [Presumably] NY/NJ Match in Army of the Potomac)
  • 1819.3  + (Herefordshire: "Large Parties" Play Wicket ("Old-Fashioned Cricket"))
  • 1859.71  + (Hidden Ball Trick is Effective as a "Dodge" for the Atlantic Club)
  • 1863.41  + (High-Stakes Matches Dot VA as Winter Camps Thaw Out)
  • 1844.17  + (Hilarious "Base Ball" and "Two Old Cat" Recalled by Chicagoan)
  • 1613.1  + (His and Her Stool-ball Banter: Play, or Foreplay?)
  • 1794.2  + (Historian Cites "Club-ball")
  • BC100.1  + (Historian Dates Early Cricket to 100 BC - Others Disagree)
  • 1854.8  + (Historian Describes Facet of 1850s "School Boys' Game of Rounders")
  • 1799.1  + (Historical Novel, Set in About 1650, Refers to Cricket, Base-ball)
  • 1869.5  + (Hits Elevated to Prominent Status in Box Scores)
  • 1862.25  + (Hitting Creighton: Patience Pays)
  • 1837.9  + (Hoboken, NJ - Already a Mecca for Ballplayers)
  • 1860.89  + (Holder Whiffs Smoking)
  • 1847.14  + (Holiday Encroached by Round Ball, Long Ball, Old Cat)
  • 1847.18  + (Holiday Round Ball in NH)
  • 1720.2  + (Holiday in Kent: Cricket, Stool-Ball, Tippling, Kissing)
  • 1820s.20  + (Horace Greeley Lacks the Knack, Fears Getting Whacked)
  • 1820c.35  + (Horace Greeley No Ballplayer)
  • 1861.24  + (Houston, We Have A Problem)
  • 1727.2  + (How To Score at Cricket, Olde Style)
  • 1804.5  + (Hudson (NY) Bee Prints "The Laws of Cricket")
  • 1800.10  + (Hudson NY Council Prohibits Boys' Ballplaying, Preserves Turf. Etc.)
  • -2000000c.2  + (Humans Evolve as Runners)
  • 1857.46  + (Hundreds Gather to Watch Exciting Game of Corner Ball)
  • 1858.61  + (IL "Base Ball and Wicket Club" Takes the Field for 3.6 Hour Game)
  • 1856.38  + (IL Ballclubs Play Town Ball in 1856, 1858)
  • 1868.3  + (IL Club Supplies Public Bulletin Board for Trip Updates)
  • 1847.10  + (Ice Bowl)
  • 1853.8  + (If Balls and Bats Were Coinage, They Were Millionaires)
  • 1850s.25  + (If It's May Day, Boston Needs All its Sam Malones at the Commons!)
  • 1865.2  + (Illinois Soldier Plays Wicket Near War’s End)
  • 1862.18  + (Impact of War Lessens in NYC)
  • 1820s.34  + (Impromptu Ballplaying Recalled at Transylvania University)
  • 1816.5  + (In "The Year Without a Summer," CT Lads Play Ball on Christmas Day)
  • 1863.38  + (In 10th MA: Ballplaying Has “Become a Mania” in 1863 Camp, Wicket Also Played in 1864)
  • 1863.17  + (In 19th MA Camp, “Base Ball Fever Broke Out” in 1863)
  • 1844.16  + (In Bass Ball, Club is "Skinned from Top to Stem")
  • 1790s.7  + (In Boston, "Boys Played Ball in the Streets?")
  • 1855.43  + (In Boston, Olympic Beats Elm Tree, 75-46)
  • 1828.18  + (In Brighton England, 'Women of the Mill' Play Stool Ball Alongside Cricketers)
  • 1855.27  + (In Brooklyn, the Washington Club and Putnams Lift Off)
  • 1817.4  + (In Brunswick ME, Bowdoin College Sets 20-Cent Fine for Ballplaying)
  • 1830s.15  + (In Buffalo NY, Balls Formed from Fish Noses)
  • 1859.42  + (In Chicago IL, Months-old Atlantic Club Claims Championship)
  • 1828.13  + (In Christian Story, a Young Girl Chooses Batting Over Tatting)
  • 1848.13  + (In Cincinnati OH, Game of "Batt and Ball" Played at Picnic)
  • 1863.9  + (In Coastal SC: Union Men Played Ball “In Almost Every Camp”)
  • 1845.23  + (In Cricket, Pha Foursome Defeats NY Quad, 27-19, Pockets $500)
  • 1818.2  + (In Cricket, Well, It's . . ."One Man Out")
  • 1858.42  + (In Downstate Illinois, New Club Wins by 134 Rounds)
  • 1858.37  + (In English Novel, Base-Ball Doesn't Occupy Boys Very Long)
  • 1830s.20  + (In GA, Men Played Fives, Schoolboys Played Base and Town Ball)
  • 1838.5  + (In Georgia, "Baseball and Cricket Had Not Evolved")
  • 1632.1  + (In Germany, Ballplaying Associated With Scabies, Other Diseases)
  • 1847.20  + (In Harlem, Men Play 330- Minute Game of Single Wicket for $100 Stake)
  • 1819.4  + (In Hartford CT: Legislative Session Associated with Ball-playing?)
  • 1830s.11  + (In MO, the Slowly Migrating Mormons Play Ball)
  • 1820s.9  + (In Middletown CT, "Wicket" Recalled, but Not Base Ball.)
  • 1859.45  + (In Milwaukee, Base Ball is [Cold-] Brewing)
  • 1797.5  + (In NC, Negroes Face 15 Lashes for Ballplaying)
  • 1850s.24  + (In NYC - Did "Plugging" Actually Persist to the mid-1850s?)
  • 1860.39  + (In Oberlin OH, It's Railroad Club 49, Uptown Club 44.)
  • 1850s.58  + (In Paterson NJ, Old Fashioned Game Played After Civil War)
  • 1872.11  + (In Rare Extramural Game, Knickerbockers Fade, Lose 26-17 in Base Ball Game with Cricketers)
  • 1837.10  + (In Recession, Doughty Ex-Workers Play Ball, Leave Town for Home)
  • 1869.10  + (In Reconstruction SC, Riot Follows a Ball Game)
  • 1854.6  + (In Rome, Sculptor Fashions Statue of a Boy Playing Ball)
  • 1840c.13  + (In Rural OH, Boy Takes Risk of Being "Knocked Breathless" in Sock-About)
  • 1805.6  + (In SC, Some Slaves Use Sundays for Ballplaying)
  • 1830s.23  + (In South-Central Illinois, Teachers Joined in On Town Ball)
  • 1860.36  + (In Thick Gloves All Encased)
  • 1829.4  + (In Upstate NY, A Teen's Death on the Ballfield)
  • 1863.54  + (In VA Camp, “Base Ball was the Popular Amusement”)
  • 1864.12  + (In Virginia, Two PA Regiments Play “Great Base Ball Game”)
  • 1863.32  + (In Virginia: Select Nine 29, 2nd NJ Brigade 15)
  • 1863.53  + (In Virginia: Tenth Mass 15, First New Jersey 13)
  • 1820s.25  + (In Western MA, Election Day Saw Town vs. Town Wicket Matches)
  • 1834.6  + (In Wicket, It's Hartford CT 146, Litchfield CT 126)
  • 1859.37  + (In Wisconsin, Bachelors Win 100-68)
  • 1862.66  + (In camp near Rochester, New York)
  • 1861.88  + (In camp on Rikers Island)
  • 1865.35  + (Indiana Regiment plays Town Ball in NC)
  • 1850s.42  + (Indianans Play Town Ball, Two Old Cat)
  • 1858.70  + (Indirect acknowledgement of varying size of baseballs.)
  • 1830c.9  + (Indoor Batsman Reappears in Publication)
  • 1840c.3  + (Influx of English Immigrants Brings "Rough Form" of Cricket to NE and Philadelphia PA?)
  • 1853.17  + (Initial Regular Newspaper Coverage Pairs Base Ball with Cricket)
  • 1849.6  + (Inmates Play Base Ball at Worcester MA "Lunatic Hospital")
  • 1872.9  + (Innovator Harry Wright's Custom on Called Strikes)
  • 1869.3  + (Inter-Racial Game in Philadelphia)
  • 1845.17  + (Intercity Cricket Match Begins in NY)
  • 1855.42  + (Interclub Meeting Attempt Fizzles)
  • 1857.2  + (Interclub Meeting Reshapes the Game)
  • 1854.21  + (Interclub Second Nine Play)
  • 1740s.1  + (Intervillage Cricket Played by Women in Surrey and Sussex)
  • 1862.83  + (Irish Brigade plays near Richmond)
  • 1861.71  + (Irish Soldiers play ball with Rebel shells)
  • 1772.1  + (Irish soldiers play Hurling in NYC)
  • 1819.5  + (Irving Surveys Pastimes at Fictional British School; Includes Tip-cat)
  • 1864.42  + (Is THIS How Bunting Started?)
  • 1598.4  + (Italian Dictionary's "Cricket-a-wicket" doubted as reference to the Game of Cricket)
  • 1598.2  + (Italian-English Dictionary Includes Cat, Trap)
  • 1816c.11  + (Jane Austen Writes of "Baseball" in <u>Northanger Abbey</u><i>.</i>)
  • 1855.6  + (Jersey City Club is Set Up)
  • 1745c.1  + (John Adams Recalls Youthful Bat and Ball Play)
  • 1790.5  + (John Adams Refers to Cricket in Argument about Washington's New Title)
  • 1666.1  + (John Bunyan is Very Seriously Interrupted at Tip-Cat, one of his Four "Chief Sins")
  • 1680.3  + (John Bunyan's Son Yields to "Drunkenness, Card-playing, Stoolball," Maypole Dancing)
  • 1800.2  + (John Knox Owns a "Ball Alley" and Racquets Court in NYC, 1800-1803.)
  • 1450.1  + (John Myrc Repeats Warning Against Ball Play in the Churchyard, Including "Stoil Ball")
  • 1825c.4  + (John Oliver Plays Base Ball in Baltimore)
  • 1755.1  + (Johnson Dictionary Defines Stoolball and Trap)
  • 1860.84  + (Jolly Good Fellows)
  • 1801.1  + (Joseph Strutt Says Stoolball Still Played in North of England; But He Slights Cricket)
  • 1685.1  + (Juicy Early Description of Stool-ball is Written, Then Unread for 162 Years)
  • 1872.7  + (Junior Championship for Philadelphia, Using Pro Rules)
  • 1860.18  + (Juniors Organize in NYC)
  • 1843.10  + (Juvenile Book's Chapter: "A Game at Ball": 'Cheating play never prospers')
  • 1850c.9  + (Juvenile Story Book has Two Woodcuts with Ballplaying)
  • 1858.71  + (Kansans discuss the merits of base ball, bull pen, cat ball)
  • 1853.16  + (Kelly Deserves Credit for Originating Shorthand Scoring System)
  • 1823c.9  + (Kentucky Abolitionist Recalls Playing Base-ball)
  • 1862.109  + (Kershaw's SC Brigade Plays Base Ball and Snow Balling)
  • 1617.1  + (King James' Controversial "Book of Sports" Omits Mention of Ballplaying)
  • 1847.21  + (Knickerbocker Property at Hoboken is Robbed -- Three Coats Taken)
  • 1856.8  + (Knickerbocker Rules Meeting Held)
  • 1845.28  + (Knickerbocker Rules Reflect Use of Pickoff Move)
  • 1848.1  + (Knickerbocker Rules and By-laws Are Printed; Original Phrase Deleted)
  • 1849.15  + (Knickerbockers Lose Impromptu Match to Group of "Amateurs")
  • 1860.69  + (Knickerbockers, Inc.)
  • 1845.1  + (Knicks Adopt Playing Rules on September 23)
  • 1848.20  + (Knicks Begin the Year's Play Days at Hoboken, Cricket Club Chooses Manhattan.)
  • 1856.28  + (Knicks Call for Convention of Clubs)
  • 1858.20  + (Knicks Compose 17-Verse Song on Current Base Ball)
  • 1846.1  + (Knicks Play NYBBC in First Recorded Match Game)
  • 1846.5  + (Knicks Play Only Intramural Games Through 1850.)
  • 1846.25  + (Knicks Prepare for 1846 Season: Early Match Game in Brooklyn Rained out.)
  • 1849.1  + (Knicks Sport First Uniform - White Shirt, Blue Pantaloons)
  • 1845.33  + (Knicks and "Other Gentlemen of Note" Hold Season-Ending Banquet)
  • 1853.5  + (Knicks, Gothams Play Season Opener on July 1 and Again on October 18)
  • 1840c.43  + (Lad in Southern Illinois Played Four Old Cat)
  • 1873.12  + (Ladies BB Club Forms in Kansas)
  • 1849.12  + (Ladies Cricket Match Reported in London)
  • 1858.59  + (Ladies and Gentlemen of Dansville NY Play Ball in Afternoons)
  • 1849.10  + (Ladies' Wicket in England?)
  • 1793.5  + (Lady Cricketers Play Again in Sussex)
  • 1748.1  + (Lady Hervey Reports Royal 'Base-ball' in a Letter": Game Is 'Well Known to English Schoolboys')
  • 1816.7  + (Lambert's Cricket <i>Rules</i> Published)
  • 1869.8  + (Largest Margin of Victory)
  • 1860.37  + (Late Surge Lifts Douglas' over Abe Lincoln's Side in Chicago IL)
  • 1872.15  + (Late-season Pro-league Proto-standings)
  • 1863c.144  + (Lawrence MA soldiers play cricket near D.C.)
  • 1755.2  + (Laws of Cricket are Revised)
  • 1861.80  + (Left and Right Wings of 9th NY Play)
  • 1864.41  + (Legal Pitching Deliveries)
  • 1840s.31  + (Lem: Juvenile Fiction's Boy Who Loved Round-ball)
  • 1830c.27  + (Lenox Academy Students Play Wicket)
  • 1856.17  + (Letter to "Spirit" Describes Roundball in New England)
  • 1833.10  + (Letter to Student Refers to "That Beautiful game - Base Ball")
  • 1859.34  + (Lexicographer: "Base Ball" is English!)
  • 1847.9  + (Li'l Prince's Birthday Party Includes Cricket, Rounders.)
  • 1779.2  + (Lieutenant Reports Playing Ball, and Playing Bandy Wicket)
  • 1864.43  + (Like It or Lump It, Gents)
  • 1860.20  + (Lincoln Awaits Nomination, Plays Town Ball . . . or Handball?)
  • 1861c.3  + (Lincoln and Baseball: The Presidential Years)
  • 1863.12  + (Line Officers of 17th Maine Play 9 Innings for an Oyster Dinner)
  • 1477.1  + (List of Banned Games May Include Distant Ancestors of Cricket?)
  • 1852.2  + (Lit Magazine Cites "Roaring" Game of "Bat and Base-ball")
  • 1848.18  + (Litchfield CT Bests Wolcottville in Wicket)
  • 1690.1  + (Literary Simile: "Catch it Like a Stool-Ball")
  • 1827.8  + (Lithograph Shows Ballplaying in City Hall Park, NY)
  • 1864.69  + (Lithograph shows soldiers playing bat-ball game)
  • 1870.9  + (Lively Ball Suspected in Mutual-Olympic Game)
  • 1848.6  + (London Book Describes Two Rounders Variants)
  • 1839.4  + (London Magazine Covers "Games with a Ball," Including Stoolball, Tip-Cat)
  • 1857.4  + (London Rounders Players Arrested)
  • 1860.83  + (Long Ball)
  • 1781s.4  + (Long Ball in Vermont)
  • 1857.3  + (Long Island Cricket Club Forms)
  • 1733.1  + (Long Poem Describes Stool-Ball in Some Detail; First Evidence of Use of a Bat?)