Tut-Ball

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Game Tut-Ball
Game Family Kickball Kickball
Eras Predecessor, 1800s
Invented No
Description

Also called Tut, this game was in 1777 called “a sort of stool ball much practiced about the Easter holidays,” according to the OED. OED identifies Tut-Ball with Stoolball and Rounders.

Gomme also cites a view that “This game is very nearly identical with ‘rounders.’” Another writer is known to say that Tut-Ball is the same as Pize-Ball. 

Gomme, however reports that balls were hit back with the palm of the hand, not a bat, at least in its earlier form.

Sources

Alice B. Gomme, The Traditional Games of England, Scotland, and Ireland (Davit Nutt, London, 1898), page 314.

Comment

Gomme, writing in the 1890s, reports that tut-ball was played at Shiffnal, a school for young ladies around 1840.  (The town of Shiffnal is northwest of Birmingham.) 

She also wrote that "A game of ball, now only played by boys, but a half century ago by adults on Ash Wednesday, believing that unless they did so they wou'd fall sick in harvest time.  This is a very ancient game, and was elsewhere called "Stool-ball' indulged in by \the clergy as well as laity to avert misfortune."

She cites other sources as noting the similarity of tut-ball and stool-ball. 

One wonders whether some observers may have used “Tut-Ball” generically, to signify any game with “tuts,” or bases.

 

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