Early baseball in Georgia/Club 29
From SABR Encyclopedia
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|Pagetext=The Macon Telegraph, February 11, 1860 reported that the Olympic Base Ball Club played a game “last Saturday." | |Pagetext=The Macon Telegraph, February 11, 1860 reported that the Olympic Base Ball Club played a game “last Saturday." | ||
+ | The two nines of this club were under captains Collins and Rogers. These men are George Tyler Rogers (1838-91), a grocer, and Dr. Appleton P. Collins (1835-86). | ||
+ | Numerous articles in the Macon Telegraph report on the Olympic's games—perhaps because one of the team’s organizers, Dr. Richard H. Nisbet (1832-1870), was a cousin of the newspaper’s editor, James T. Nisbet. A member of the city’s leading family, the Nisbets, Dr. Nisbet had been educated at Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia and perhaps been exposed to the game there. | ||
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+ | As of October 2012, this appears to be the first modern game played in Georgia. | ||
Macon GA (1860 population: about 8,300)is in central Georgia, about 85 miles SE of Atlanta. | Macon GA (1860 population: about 8,300)is in central Georgia, about 85 miles SE of Atlanta. | ||
|Sources=Macon Telegraph, February 11, 1860 | |Sources=Macon Telegraph, February 11, 1860 | ||
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Latest revision as of 18:25, 20 October 2012
Spread of baseball: Home -> Georgia -> Early baseball in Georgia/Club 29 |
Location | Georgia |
---|---|
Year | 1860 |
Month | 2 |
Modern address | Macon GA |
City | Macon |
State | GA |
Nickname | Olympic |
Found by | Bruce Allardice |
The Macon Telegraph, February 11, 1860 reported that the Olympic Base Ball Club played a game “last Saturday." The two nines of this club were under captains Collins and Rogers. These men are George Tyler Rogers (1838-91), a grocer, and Dr. Appleton P. Collins (1835-86). Numerous articles in the Macon Telegraph report on the Olympic's games—perhaps because one of the team’s organizers, Dr. Richard H. Nisbet (1832-1870), was a cousin of the newspaper’s editor, James T. Nisbet. A member of the city’s leading family, the Nisbets, Dr. Nisbet had been educated at Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia and perhaps been exposed to the game there.
As of October 2012, this appears to be the first modern game played in Georgia.
Macon GA (1860 population: about 8,300)is in central Georgia, about 85 miles SE of Atlanta.
Sources
Macon Telegraph, February 11, 1860