Early baseball in Massachusetts/Predecessor Game 40
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|Game name=Round Ball | |Game name=Round Ball | ||
|Approved=No | |Approved=No | ||
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- | Noah Brookes, Lem: A New England Village Boy: His Adventures and his Mishaps ( | + | |Pagetext=Noah Brookes, Lem: A New England Village Boy: His Adventures and his Mishaps (Scribner's Sons, New York, 1901). Accessed 11/15/2008 via Google Books search "Lem boy." Lem may be fiction's only round-ball hero. |
- | On pages 93-97, the novel lays out the game that was played by Lem [born 1830] and his playmates, which seems to follow the customs of the Massachusetts game, but without stakes as bases. The passage includes a field diagram, some terminology [ | + | On pages 93-97, the novel lays out the game that was played by Lem [born 1830] and his playmates, which seems to follow the customs of the Massachusetts game, but without stakes as bases. The passage includes a field diagram, some terminology ["the bases . . . were four in number, and were called �gools,' a word which probably came from �goals.'"], and ballmaking technique. Lem is, alas, sidelined for the season when he is plugged "in the hollow of the leg" while gool-running [Page 97] Other references: |
- | On spring, pp 92-93: | + | On spring, pp 92-93: "Ball-playing began early in the spring; [p92/93] it was the first of the summer games to come out. |
- | On Fast Day, p. 93: | + | On Fast Day, p. 93: "I am afraid that Lem's only notion of Fast Day was that that was the long-expected day when, for the first time that year, a game of ball was played on the Common." |
- | On the pleasant effects of a change in the path of the Gulf Stream, pp. 228-229: | + | On the pleasant effects of a change in the path of the Gulf Stream, pp. 228-229: "no slushy streets, and above all, no cold barns to go into to feed turnips to the cold cows! A land where top-time, kite-[p228/229] time, and round-ball-time would always be in season. Think of it!" |
- | On making teams for simulating Revolutionary War tussles, p. 107: | + | On making teams for simulating Revolutionary War tussles, p. 107: "We can't all be Americans; and we have agreed to choose sides, as we do in round ball." |
- | Note: we welcome comment on the authenticity of | + | Note: we welcome comment on the authenticity of Brooks' depiction of ballplaying in the 1840s, |
- | 1840s.32 | + | 1840s.32 – Ballplaying by Slaves is Part of a Normal Plantation Sunday in GA |
+ | }} |
Latest revision as of 17:20, 14 April 2010
Spread of baseball: Home -> Massachusetts -> Early baseball in Massachusetts/Predecessor Game 40 |
Location | Massachusetts |
---|---|
Year | 1840 |
State | MA |
Country | US |
Name of game | Round Ball |
Noah Brookes, Lem: A New England Village Boy: His Adventures and his Mishaps (Scribner's Sons, New York, 1901). Accessed 11/15/2008 via Google Books search "Lem boy." Lem may be fiction's only round-ball hero.
On pages 93-97, the novel lays out the game that was played by Lem [born 1830] and his playmates, which seems to follow the customs of the Massachusetts game, but without stakes as bases. The passage includes a field diagram, some terminology ["the bases . . . were four in number, and were called �gools,' a word which probably came from �goals.'"], and ballmaking technique. Lem is, alas, sidelined for the season when he is plugged "in the hollow of the leg" while gool-running [Page 97] Other references:
On spring, pp 92-93: "Ball-playing began early in the spring; [p92/93] it was the first of the summer games to come out.
On Fast Day, p. 93: "I am afraid that Lem's only notion of Fast Day was that that was the long-expected day when, for the first time that year, a game of ball was played on the Common."
On the pleasant effects of a change in the path of the Gulf Stream, pp. 228-229: "no slushy streets, and above all, no cold barns to go into to feed turnips to the cold cows! A land where top-time, kite-[p228/229] time, and round-ball-time would always be in season. Think of it!"
On making teams for simulating Revolutionary War tussles, p. 107: "We can't all be Americans; and we have agreed to choose sides, as we do in round ball."
Note: we welcome comment on the authenticity of Brooks' depiction of ballplaying in the 1840s,
1840s.32 – Ballplaying by Slaves is Part of a Normal Plantation Sunday in GA