Editing Early baseball in Alabama/Game 1

From SABR Encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be recorded in this page's edit history.
The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision Your text
Line 6: Line 6:
|State=AL
|State=AL
|Country=US
|Country=US
-
|Site=Spring Hill College
 
|NYBaseball=Unknown
|NYBaseball=Unknown
|Locals=Locals
|Locals=Locals
-
|First=Yes
+
|First=No
|Approved=Yes
|Approved=Yes
|Pagetext=Alabama was reportedly the original source of Cuban baseball.
|Pagetext=Alabama was reportedly the original source of Cuban baseball.
Line 23: Line 22:
Spring Hill College is in western Mobile AL, which is on the Gulf of Mexico  
Spring Hill College is in western Mobile AL, which is on the Gulf of Mexico  
-
and near the Mississippi border.  It is a Jesuit institution and was established in  
+
and near the Mississippi border.  It is a Jesuit institution established in  
1830.
1830.
-
Mobile's population was about 29,000 in 1860, making it the 4th largest CSA city and the 27th largest in the US.  Mobile's cotton exports were second only to New Orleans in the 1840s.
+
OPEN ISSUE1: Does the Diaro article elaborate on the play, and the rules of play,  
-
 
+
-
 
+
-
OPEN ISSUE [1]: Does the Diaro article elaborate on the play, and the rules of play,  
+
used at the Alabama school? Can we ascertain when and how organized ballplaying, either the New York game or other forms, arrived at the school?
used at the Alabama school? Can we ascertain when and how organized ballplaying, either the New York game or other forms, arrived at the school?
-
OPEN ISSUE [2]:  Civil War historian Bruce Allardice points out that ballplaying at Spring Hill may have occurred in 1861 or so, rather than in 1864, as most southern academies lost both their students and faculties to the War and closed for its duration.
+
OPEN ISSUE2:  Civil War historian Bruce Allardice points out that ballplaying at Spring Hill may have occurred in 1861 or so, rather than in 1864, as most southern academies lost both their students and faculties to the War and closed for its duration.
|Sources=Peter C. Bjarkman, Diamonds Around the Globe (Greenwood Press, 2005), page  
|Sources=Peter C. Bjarkman, Diamonds Around the Globe (Greenwood Press, 2005), page  
2.  A key source for this story is an interview with one of the brothers in  
2.  A key source for this story is an interview with one of the brothers in  
Diaro de la Marina, January 6, 1924.
Diaro de la Marina, January 6, 1924.
}}
}}

Encyclopedic content must be verifiable, and should be properly sourced. You irrevocably agree to release your contributions under the CC-BY-SA License. You agree to be credited, at minimum through a hyperlink or URL, when your contributions are reused in any form.


Cancel | Editing help (opens in new window)
Personal tools