Early baseball in Poland/Game 1
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< Early baseball in Poland(Difference between revisions)
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|Date=30 | |Date=30 | ||
|City=Modlin | |City=Modlin | ||
- | |Country= | + | |Country=Poland |
|NYBaseball=Yes | |NYBaseball=Yes | ||
|Locals=Non-locals | |Locals=Non-locals | ||
|First=No | |First=No | ||
|Approved=Yes | |Approved=Yes | ||
- | + | |Pagetext=Baseball made its Polish debut on 30 May 1919 in a town near Warsaw called Modlin, according to a 2002 article in the Warsaw Voice. This matchup probably featured American or Canadian military personnel competing in a post-World War I contest. The occurrence raised little attention. . . . Poland played its own traditional bat-and-ball game . . . dating back centuries, and, by the 1920s the game of palant had a popular following." | |
- | |Pagetext= | + | |Sources=Josh Chetwynd, Baseball in Europe (McFarland, 2008), page 219. |
- | Baseball made its Polish debut on 30 May 1919 in a town near Warsaw called Modlin, according to a 2002 article in the Warsaw Voice. This matchup probably featured American or Canadian military personnel competing in a post-World War I contest. The occurrence raised little attention. . . . Poland played its own traditional bat-and-ball game . . . dating back centuries, and, by the 1920s the game of palant had a popular following." | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Josh Chetwynd, Baseball in Europe (McFarland, 2008), page 219. | + | |
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 15:10, 22 July 2010
Spread of baseball: Home -> Poland -> Early baseball in Poland/Game 1 |
Location | Poland |
---|---|
Year | 1919 |
Month | 5 |
Date | 30 |
City | Modlin |
Country | Poland |
Was NY rules baseball | Yes |
Played by | Non-locals |
Baseball made its Polish debut on 30 May 1919 in a town near Warsaw called Modlin, according to a 2002 article in the Warsaw Voice. This matchup probably featured American or Canadian military personnel competing in a post-World War I contest. The occurrence raised little attention. . . . Poland played its own traditional bat-and-ball game . . . dating back centuries, and, by the 1920s the game of palant had a popular following."
Sources
Josh Chetwynd, Baseball in Europe (McFarland, 2008), page 219.