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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.

Search by property

A list of all pages that have property "Headline" with value "Stoolball-20Said-20to-20Originate-20Among-20Sussex-20Milkmaids". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 50 results starting with #1.

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List of results

  • 1865.40  + (Soldiers Play Baseball while waiting to be mustered out)
  • 1862.84  + (Soldiers Play Philadelphia Champs)
  • 1863.121  + (Soldiers Play Wicket in Little Rock)
  • 1863.143  + (Soldiers Play cricket in Virginia)
  • 1863.72  + (Soldiers confront idleness with ball playing)
  • 1864.55  + (Soldiers on leave play ball in Chicago)
  • 1862.111  + (Soldiers play Round Town Ball in camp)
  • 1861.56  + (Soldiers play ball in Denver)
  • 1863.149  + (Soldiers play the "New York game")
  • 1862.23  + (Soldiers' Christmas in Virginia - Ballplaying "on Many a Hillside")
  • 1867c.17  + (Some First Female teams and games in US cities)
  • 1621.1  + (Some Pilgrims "Openly" Play "Stoole Ball" on Christmas Morning: Governor Clamps Down)
  • 1862.114  + (Some interesting games of ball)
  • 1850s.43  + (South Carolina College Students Make Do with Town Ball, "Cat")
  • 1802c.1  + (South Carolina Man Lists Ball-Playing Among Local Amusements)
  • 1864.85  + (South Carolina soldiers Play Ball near Petersburg)
  • 1862.53  + (Southern Brigade’s Play Base . . . Somewhere)
  • 1859.7  + (Southern Game Takes Place in Aristocratic Setting)
  • 1863.114  + (Southern Girls Play Town Ball and Cat in Clarksville)
  • 1859.73  + (Southern Militia Members Visit Elysian Fields on NY Tour)
  • 1862.27  + (Southern Newspaper Urges: “More Manly Sports Like Cricket and Base Ball, Less Cardplay”)
  • 1864.23  + (Southern Officers Play Ball in Ohio Prison)
  • 1790s.4  + (Southern Pols Calhoun and Crawford: Ballplaying Schoolmates?)
  • 1864.1  + (Southern Soldier Notes Repeated Ballplaying, Including Game of Cat)
  • 1860.70  + (Space Wanted)
  • 1255.1  + (Spanish Drawing Seen as Early Depiction of Ballplaying)
  • 1842.5  + (Spelling Book Seems to Show a Fungo Game)
  • 1830s.32  + (Spiked Egg-Nog Between Innings?)
  • 1860.3  + (Split Doubleheader:Mass Game, NY Game)
  • 1851.1  + (Sport of Cricket Gets its First Comprehensive History Book)
  • 1855.34  + (Sporting Press Notices Base Ball, Regularizes Reporting)
  • 1800c.1  + (Sports at Exeter Academy include "Old-Fashioned Bat and Ball". . . and Football)
  • 1846.13  + (Spring Sports at Harvard: "Bat & Ball" and Cricket)
  • 1844.18  + (Springtime Ballplaying on the Common -- by Girls)
  • 1853.22  + (St. Augustine bans Shinny and any "game of ball")
  • 1838.2  + (St. George Cricket Club Forms in NYC)
  • 1845.21  + (St. George's Cricket Club Plays Series with All-Canada Eleven)
  • 1840.10  + (St. George, NY Cricket Club, [Accidentally] Plays Toronto for a $250 Side Bet)
  • 1862.4  + (State Championship Base Ball Game in PA)
  • 1871.9  + (State-wide Base Ball Association for California?)
  • 1855.18  + (Stodgy Novel Makes Brief Mention of Former Ballplaying)
  • 1831.7  + (Stool ball, Cricket, Bread, and Beer for Crowd of 500)
  • 1640.1  + (Stoolball Attracts Gentry, Rascals, Boys)
  • 1450.2  + (Stoolball Dated by NSA to 1450 in "Don Quixote")
  • 1630c.2  + (Stoolball Play Makes Maidstone a "Very Profane Town")
  • 1789.3  + (Stoolball Played at Brighthelmstone in Sussex)
  • 1630.4  + (Stoolball Played in Sherston, England)
  • 1861.2  + (Stoolball Played, in Co-ed Form)
  • 1300s.3  + (Stoolball Said to Originate Among Sussex Milkmaids)
  • 1866.18  + (Stoolball in Selmeston)
 (Stoolball-20Said-20to-20Originate-20Among-20Sussex-20Milkmaids)
  • 1615.1  + (Stoole Ball Goes North with Early Explorer)
  • 1585c.1  + (Stoole-ball, Nine Holes Included Among Country Sports)
  • 1600.3  + (Stooleball popular in 1600)
  • 1827.2  + (Story Places Baseball in Rochester NY)
  • 1853.9  + (Strolling Past a Ballgame in Elysian Fields)
  • 1855.12  + (Students Bring Cricket to Saint John and Fredericton NB)
  • 1823.6  + (Students Play Ball Game at Progressive School in Northampton MA)
  • 1808.3  + (Students get 10 lashes for playing bandy)
  • 1659.1  + (Stuyvesant: No Tennis, Ball-Playing, Dice on Fast Day)
  • 1801.5  + (Sunday Ballplaying Eyed Everywhere: "Is This a Christian Country?")
  • 1858.64  + (Sunday Mercury Acknowledges English Origin of Base Ball)
  • 1857.14  + (Sunrise Base Ball)
  • 1773.1  + (Surrey/Kent Cricket Match Draws 12,000, Spawns Poetic Duel)
  • 1737.1  + (Surreymen Play Londoners in Cricket for 500 Pounds a Side)
  • 1795.2  + (Survey Reports Cricket in New England, Playing at Ball in TN)
  • 1846.11  + (Suspicious Rochester NY Idler Observed Playing Wicket)
  • 1855.41  + (Swift and Wild)
  • 1586c.1  + (Sydney Cites Stoolball)
  • 1820s.18  + (Syracuse NY Ball Field Remembered as Base Ball Site)
  • -2500.2  + (Tale of Game in Sumer, Possibly Using Ball and Mallet.)
  • 1869.15  + (Teams Hassle Over Choice of Game Ball -- The Redstockings Liked the Less-elastic Variety)
  • 1778.2  + (Teamster Sees Soldiers Play Ball.)
  • 1848.3  + (Teen Diarist in NY/NJ Records Ballplaying)
  • 1781.1  + (Teen Makes White Leather Balls for British Officers' Ball-Playing)
  • 1860.2  + (Ten Thousand Players!)
  • 1874.2  + (Tennessee Visitor Lauds Local "Base-ball, Shinny, Baste Grounds")
  • 1864.34  + (Tenth MA Plays Inter-regimental Games of Base Ball and Wicket in VA)
  • 1865.33  + (Texas Confederate Plays Town Ball Near Petersburg)
  • 1862.50  + (Texas Ranger Plugs Waaay Too Hard)
  • 1855.25  + (Text Perceives Rounders and Cricket, in Everyday French Conversations)
  • 1862.37  + (Thanksgiving and Foot-ball . . . and Base-Ball)
  • 1861.63  + (Thanksgiving game of 25th Massachusetts)
  • 1855.28  + (Thanksgiving is for Football? Not in Gotham, Not Yet)
  • 1634.1  + (That Archbishop Laud, He Certainly Doesn't Laud Stoolball)
  • 1694.2  + (Thaw Arrives; Cricket Added to Old List of "Evening" English Pastimes)
  • 1676.1  + (The "Citty of New Yorke" Sets a Fine for Sunday "Gameing or Playing: Ten Guilders)
  • 1865.19  + (The "Slide Game" Protested)
  • 1857.42  + (The "X" Letters)
  • 1861.54  + (The "best players" of NYC and Brooklyn play in the army)
  • 1862.19  + (The 39<sup>th</sup> Massachusetts Plays Ball)
  • 1865.9  + (The Abolition of Suppers to Clubs)
  • 1850s.59  + (The Antiquarian Knicks -- Purveyors of "The Greatest Game of Base Ball Ever Played")
  • 1840s.46  + (The Balk -- From the Knicks, Prior US Games, or Abroad?)
  • 1830s.33  + (The Balk Rule Existed Before the 1845 Knick Rules?)
  • BC2000 to 1000ADc.1  + (The Ball in Ancient Play)
  • 1836c.4  + (The Ballgames "Old Cat" and "Base" Played in Concord MA)
  • 1871.13  + (The Beginning of Base Ball Trivia?)
  • 1851.9  + (The Beginning of Match Play Between Organized Clubs)
  • 1840c.37  + (The Boyhood of Fallen Ohio Union Officer Had Included "Touch the Base")
  • 1863.87  + (The Colonel umpired the game)