Editing Early baseball in Michigan/Club 11
From SABR Encyclopedia
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"A favorite ball ground was the one near the old Congregational Church on East Main Street. . . . When playing practice games on this ground a few of the players would occasionally bat the ball to the top of the hill. Luck Hackley (light negro) had more home runs of this kind to his credit than any other player. . . . Luck Hackley was the most popular base ball man in the village." | "A favorite ball ground was the one near the old Congregational Church on East Main Street. . . . When playing practice games on this ground a few of the players would occasionally bat the ball to the top of the hill. Luck Hackley (light negro) had more home runs of this kind to his credit than any other player. . . . Luck Hackley was the most popular base ball man in the village." | ||
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- | + | Benton Harbor is near Lake Michigan in the southwestern corner of the state; it is about 35 miles N of South Bend IN and about 45 miles W of Kalamazoo MI. | |
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- | Benton Harbor is near Lake Michigan in the southwestern corner of the state; it is about 35 miles N of South Bend IN and about 45 miles W of Kalamazoo MI. | + | |
|Sources=James Pender, History of Benton Harbor and Tales of Village Days (Braun Printing, Chicago, 1915), pages 72ff. Accessed 2/28/2010 via Google Books search ("history of benton harbor"). | |Sources=James Pender, History of Benton Harbor and Tales of Village Days (Braun Printing, Chicago, 1915), pages 72ff. Accessed 2/28/2010 via Google Books search ("history of benton harbor"). | ||
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