Early baseball in Connecticut/Club 3
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- | "The honor of starting the first Base-Ball Club at Yale belongs to a member of Sixty-one | + | Item A. "Base ball clubs were started in College a little over a year ago, and during all last fall the game was played, by the Sophomore and Junior classes, with a perfect vengeance. With the former, every afternoon, week in and week out, from the beginning of the first term, down to Thanksgiving, used to find the ball-ground pretty plentifully sprinkled with players and students, till about five minutes to four, when, suddenly, the field would be vacant." |
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+ | Item B. "The honor of starting the first Base-Ball Club at Yale belongs to a member of Sixty-one – the member from Chittenango [NY]. During the first year (Junior) of the existence of the Club, the game was practiced with zeal and success – almost to the exclusion of boating. The subsequent year brought less favor. Fifty-two of the Class attached themselves to the first Base-Ball Club." | ||
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+ | |Sources= | ||
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+ | Item A. Yale Literary Magazine, August 1861, page 127. | ||
- | Yale Literary Magazine, August 1861, page 370. | + | Item B. Yale Literary Magazine, August 1861, page 370. |
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Revision as of 02:23, 8 May 2012
Spread of baseball: Home -> Connecticut -> Early baseball in Connecticut/Club 3 |
Location | Connecticut |
---|---|
Year | 1860 |
Note on date | Year is conjecture |
City | New Haven |
State | CT |
Country | US |
Nickname | Class of 1861 |
Item A. "Base ball clubs were started in College a little over a year ago, and during all last fall the game was played, by the Sophomore and Junior classes, with a perfect vengeance. With the former, every afternoon, week in and week out, from the beginning of the first term, down to Thanksgiving, used to find the ball-ground pretty plentifully sprinkled with players and students, till about five minutes to four, when, suddenly, the field would be vacant."
Item B. "The honor of starting the first Base-Ball Club at Yale belongs to a member of Sixty-one – the member from Chittenango [NY]. During the first year (Junior) of the existence of the Club, the game was practiced with zeal and success – almost to the exclusion of boating. The subsequent year brought less favor. Fifty-two of the Class attached themselves to the first Base-Ball Club."
Sources
Item A. Yale Literary Magazine, August 1861, page 127.
Item B. Yale Literary Magazine, August 1861, page 370.