Base Ball: A Journal of the Early Game, Vol. 5, No. 1 (Spring 2011)
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About the Book
BACK ISSUE
This is a single back issue only. To order a current subscription, or for more information, please visit the journal’s web page at https://mcfarland.onpressidium.com/imprint/base-ball-new-research-on-the-early-game/. Print copies of back issues from volumes 1-6 are available for $30.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Edited by John Thorn
Format: softcover (7 x 10)
Pages: 156
Bibliographic Info:
Copyright Date: 2011
ISSN:
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Essays are keyed to Protoball Chronology
Editor’s Note 3
1609.1 Polish Workers Play Ball at Jamestown, Virginia: An Early Hint of Continental Europe’s Influence on Baseball
David Block 5
1621.1 Pilgrim Stoolball and the Profusion of American Safe-Haven Ballgames
Brian Turner and Larry McCray 10
1672c.1 The Amazing Francis Willughby, and the Role of Stoolball in the Evolution of Baseball and Cricket
Larry McCray 17
1726.2 Ballplaying and Boston Common: A Town Playground for Boys … and Men
Brian Turner 21
1744.1 “How Is It, Umpire?” The 1744 Laws of Cricket and Their Influence on the Development of Baseball in America
Beth Hise 25
1744.2 John Newbery Publishes A Little Pretty Pocket-Book, and with It Our First Glimpse of the Game of English Baseball
David Block 32
1755.6 “The Bat and Ball”: A Distinct Game or a Generic Term?
Brian Turner 37
1781.2 Protoball at Harvard: From Pastime to Contest
Harry Lewis 41
1791.1 The Pittsfield “Baseball” Bylaw: What It Means
John Thorn 46
1796.1 German Book Describes das englische Base-ball: But Was It Baseball or Rounders?
David Block 50
1805.4 An Enigmatic 1805 “Game of Bace” in New York
George A. Thompson 55
1821.5 New York Mansion Converted to Venue Suitable for Ballplaying: An Early Sighting of Baseball Clubs?
Richard Hershberger 58
1823.1 Game of Baseball Reported in the National Advocate
George A. Thompson 61
1825.1 Thurlow Weed and the Growth of Baseball in Rochester, New York
Priscilla Astifan 65
1829.2 The Rise and Fall of New England–Style Ballplaying
Larry McCray 69
1830c.2 Thoreau’s Diary Entry, and Other Tiny Clues as to Who Played Early Ball, and on What Occasions (Especially Holidays)
Larry McCray 73
1831.1 The Olympic Ball Club of Philadelphia
Richard Hershberger 77
1837.1 The Evolution of the New York Game—The Arbiter’s Tale
Randall Brown 81
1841.12 Barn Ball
Thomas L. Altherr 85
2 BaseBall 5/1 (Spring 2011)
1843.6 Magnolia Ball Club Predates Knickerbocker
John Thorn 89
1845.1 The Knickerbocker Rules—and the Long History of the One-Bounce Fielding Rule
Larry McCray 93
1845.4 Baseball in Brooklyn, 1845–1870: The Best There Was
David Dyte 98
1850.38 Southern Ball-Games: Chermany, Round Cat, Etc.
Thomas L. Altherr 103
1853.5 The Baseball Press Emerges
John Thorn 106
1854.9 William Van Cott Writes a Letter to the Sporting Press: December 1854
William Ryczek 111
1856.4 The New York Game in 1856—Poised for National Launch
Craig B. Waff and Larry McCray 114
1857.1 Nine Innings, Nine Players, Ninety Feet, and Other Changes: The Recodification of Baseball Rules in 1857
Eric Miklich 118
1858.2 The Changes Wrought by the Great Base Ball Match of 1858
Robert H. Schaefer 122
1858.46 Diffusion of the New York Game in Maryland
Marty Payne 127
1859.24 State Championship Wicket Game in Connecticut: A Hearty Hurrah for a Doomed Pastime
Larry McCray 132
1860.6 The Sunday Mercury Summarizes the 1860 Season
Robert Tholkes 136
1860.60 Atlantics and Excelsiors Compete for the “Championship,” July 19, August 9, and August 23, 1860
Craig B. Waff 139
1862.3 American Cricket in the 1860s: Decade of Decline or New Start?
Beth Hise 143
1863.11 On the Battlefront, the New York Game Takes Hold, 1861–1865
Patricia Millen 149
Contributors 153
Book Reviews & Awards
- “One of the more compelling sports-related publications to come along in a great while…unostentatious, solid, and a great read”—Library Journal
- “The journal both embodies recent trends and provides a forum for expanding upon them. Base Ball thus represents an exciting and important contribution to literature on the sport. John Thorn, a respected historian of early baseball history, is the journal’s editor and Base Ball has a first-rate editorial board and, as a result, already appears poised to be among the finest journals dedicated to the history of sports”—Arete
- “Never comes up short in the quality of its content. In addition to the fine research articles there is a valuable section of book reviews, mostly dedicated to books pertaining to 19th century baseball”—Nineteenth Century Notes
- “An exciting and important contribution to literature on the sport…seeks to chronicle, analyze, and expand our understanding of the game during its long, and seemingly getting longer, pre 1920 phase”—Society for American Baseball Research Bibliography Committee Newsletter.