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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
- 1847.12 + (Mainers' "Bat and Ball" Event Leads to Delayed Catharsis)
- 1843.8 + (Man Flashes Large Wad at New York-Philly Cricket Match, Is Then Nabbed for Robbery)
- 1860c.11 + (Man Played Base Ball in CT Before the War)
- 1828.17 + (Man Recalls July 4th Game Sixty Years Earlier)
- 1856.27 + (Manhattan Cricket Club Forms)
- 1856.14 + (Manly Virtues of Base Ball Extolled; 25 Clubs Now Playing in NYC Area)
- 1855c.24 + (Manufacture of Base Balls Begins in NYC)
- 1344.1 + (Manuscript Shows a Club-and-Ball Game with Stool-like Object)
- 1860.58 + (Many Tackle the New Game in Macon, But a Few Secede)
- 1862.87 + (Maryland Confederates Play Town Ball)
- 1862c.3 + (Marylander Sees Officers Play Base Ball)
- 1754.1 + (Marylanders Play "Great Cricket Match for a Good Sum")
- 1787.3 + (Marylebone Cricket Club, Later Official Custodian of the Game, is Founded)
- 1865.17 + (Mass Game Survived the Civil War)
- 1777.2 + (Mass. Sailor Plays Ball in English Prison)
- 1860.74 + (Massachusetts Group Extends Reach)
- 1862.35 + (Massachusetts Officers Play Ball in May, on July 4)
- 1863.24 + (Massachusetts Private Notes Eight April Games of Ball [One was Wicket])
- 1863.36 + (Massachusetts Regiments Play NY Game Most, Mass Game Some)
- 1855c.11 + (Master Trap-ball, Meet Mister Window)
- 1864.21 + (Match at Coney Island Proposed for Two Returned Regiments)
- 900c.1 + (Mayan Games Played at Chichen Itza, Mexico)
- 640s.1 + (Medieval Writer: Saint Cuthbert [born 634c] "Pleyde atte balle")
- 1861.11 + (Meeting of National Association is Subdued)
- 1715.1 + (Men Top Women in "Merry-Night" of Stoole Balle)
- 1863.25 + (Men in 59th NY Play Ball, Run, Pitch Quarters, Etc)
- 1785.3 + (Men's Stool Ball Match Set in Kent: Winner to Receive 150 Guineas . . . and Some Roasted Lamb!)
- 1860.16 + (Mercantile BB Club of Philadelphia Subject to Light Poetry)
- BC1500c.1 + (Mexican Game Believed to Use Bat, Rubber Ball)
- 1862.21 + (Michigan Colonel Plays Ball in Tennessee, Still Rebuffs Rebs)
- 1803.4 + (Middlebury College VT Bans Ballplaying)
- 1860.24 + (Mighty Nat at the Bat: A Morality Story)
- 1758.1 + (Military Unit Plays "Bat and Ball" in Northern NYS)
- 1658.2 + (Milton's Nephew Eyes Cricket with Apprehension)
- 1836.9 + (Milwaukee Ballplaying Recalled, and the Ball Long Preserved)
- 1860.32 + (Milwaukee Press Not Unanimous About the "Miserable" New York Rules)
- 1810c.10 + (Minister Reflects on Early Nineteenth Century Sports and Entertainments)
- 1806.4 + (Minister from New England Plays Ball in Western Reserve [OH])
- 1865.5 + (Minnesotans Play Ball in Near Selma Alabama.)
- 1864.2 + (Minnesotan’s Diary Shows Ballplaying on Ten Days Over Ten Weeks)
- 1842.6 + (Missing Poem Describes Ball Playing)
- 1806.3 + (Mister Beldham Really Loads One Up on Cricket Pitch)
- 1825.16 + (Mitford Story Centers on Cricket, Touches on Juvenile Baseball)
- 1867.10 + (Mitts in Michigan)
- 1861.12 + (Modern Base Ball Comes to Sanford ME)
- 1858c.57 + (Modern Base Ball Gets to Exeter Prep [from Doubleday's Home Town!])
- 1861.37 + (Modern Base Ball Played Widely At Outset of War)
- 1855.23 + (Modern Base Ball Rules Appear in NYC, Syracuse Papers)
- 1861.13 + (Modern Game Comes to the Eastern OH Town)
- 1866.5 + (Modern Game Compared to Traditional Town Ball in IL)
- 1820c.6 + (Modified Version of Rounders Played in New England.)
- 1867.13 + (Moneyball 1867)
- 1849.17 + (Montpelier Threatens Ball Players with prosecution)
- 1592c.1 + (Moralist Lists Things for Scholars to Avoid, Including Playing "Stoole Ball Among Wenches")
- 1862.100 + (Mormon soldiers play ball in Wyoming)
- 1867.5 + (Morrisania Club Takes 1867 Championship, 14-13)
- 1800c.9 + (Most English Counties Play Cricket)
- 1863.127 + (Mozart Regiment gets beaten)
- 1858.56 + (Mr. Babcock Shows Base Ball to San Franciscans)
- 1864.56 + (Muffin Game Tactics)
- 1860.80 + (Muffin Matches--Low Skills, High Comedy)
- 1694.1 + (Musical Play Includes Baudy Account of Stoolball)
- 1872.12 + (NA Clubs Struggle to Meet Payroll)
- 1863.63 + (NABBP Curbs Swift Pitching, Swats Fly Rule Again)
- 1867.14 + (NABBP Draws Color Line)
- 1864.48 + (NABBP Hobbles Pitchers)
- 1864.36 + (NABBP Holds Special Meetings)
- 1859.58 + (NABBP Makes One Little Rule Change)
- 1865.23 + (NABBP Meeting Sets Attendance Record)
- 1861.73 + (NC Lt. mentions baseball)
- 1850.32 + (NH Ballplaying Washed Out on Fast Day)
- 1782.3 + (NH Diarist Notes that Local Youths "Play Ball Before My Barn")
- 1830s.19 + (NH Lad Had Happy Games of Ball)
- 1778.6 + (NH Loyalist Plays Ball in NY; Mentions "Wickett")
- 1828c.4 + (NH Man Recalls Boyhood Habit of Playing Ball)
- 1864.27 + (NH Officers and Men Together on the Ball Field)
- 1805c.7 + (NH Versfier Recalls Ballplaying at Exeter)
- 1863.147 + (NJ Artillerymen Play Ball in Virginia)
- 1776.2 + (NJ Officer Plays Ball Throughout His Military Service)
- 1863.5 + (NJ Regiment Plays Ball on the Rappahannock in VA)
- 1864.11 + (NJ Regiment Takes on Massachusetts and New York Units)
- 1855.4 + (NY <i>Herald</i> Previews Several June Games for Five Area Clubs)
- 1864.13 + (NY Artilleryman Notes Two Inter-regimental Games)
- 1845.32 + (NY Atlas Advises: THE OLD GAME OF BASE REVIVED)
- 1827.7 + (NY Boy Celebrates "Releasement" from School By Playing Ball)
- 1833.6 + (NY Chapbook: Jack Hall Will Play at Ball)
- 1799.2 + (NY Cricket Club Schedules Match Among Members)
- 1860.23 + (NY Game Gets to ME)
- 1838c.1 + (NY Game Reportedly Played on Long Island Well Before Knicks Formed)
- 1849.3 + (NY Game Shown to "Show Me" State of MO)
- 1860.5 + (NY Game is Called Dominant in CA)
- 1864.32 + (NY Horseman Gets Banged Up Playing Ball)
- 1845c.6 + (NY Man: "We Used to Say Come Let Us Play Ball or Base Ball")
- 1821.5 + (NY Mansion Converted to Venue Suitable for Base, Cricket, Trap-Ball)
- 1787.5 + (NY Newspaper Prints "Laws of the Noble Game of Cricket")
- 1811.3 + (NY Paper Carries Notice for "English Trap Ball" at a Military Ground)
- 1863.6 + (NY Private Plays a Lot of Ball Over Seven Weeks)
- 1861.16 + (NY Regiment Plays "Favorite Game" After Dress Parade in Elmira NY)
- 1858.36 + (NY Rules Printed in Georgia)
- 1841.14 + (NY State Senator Tests the Sabbath Law)