Early baseball in New York (state)/Club 48

From SABR Encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with '{{Origins-club |Location=New York (state) |Year=1860 |Month=8 |Date=1 |City=Fayetteville |State=NY |Nickname=Fayetteville Base Ball Club |First=false |Approved=false |Pagetext= A…')
Line 4: Line 4:
|Month=8
|Month=8
|Date=1
|Date=1
 +
|Date-note=No later than August 1860
|City=Fayetteville
|City=Fayetteville
|State=NY
|State=NY
Line 9: Line 10:
|First=false
|First=false
|Approved=false
|Approved=false
-
|Pagetext=
+
|Pagetext=A Syracuse newspaper, in reporting on a two games between Fayetteville and Chittenango, fixed the foundation of the Fayetteville at August 1.  The two clubs split the two games.
-
A Syracuse newspaper, in reporting on a two games between Fayetteville and Chittenango, fixed the foundation of the Fayetteville at August 1.  The two clubs split the two games.
+
These are the only 1860 games carried in the baseball clippings of the Onondaga Hist Assn; a Fayetteville club played Chittenango in 1865.
These are the only 1860 games carried in the baseball clippings of the Onondaga Hist Assn; a Fayetteville club played Chittenango in 1865.
-
Fayetteville, now in the town of Manlius, is about 8 miles east of central Syracuse. Its population is now about 4300.  
+
Fayetteville, now in the town of Manlius, is about 8 miles east of central Syracuse. Its population is now about 4300.
-
|Sources=
+
|Sources=Syracuse Journal, September  22, 1860.
-
Syracuse Journal, September  22, 1860.
+
}}
}}

Revision as of 16:03, 7 August 2012

Spread of baseball: Home -> New York (state) -> Early baseball in New York (state)/Club 48
This record has been submitted recently, and has not yet been reviewed. This does not imply that the information is incorrect, but that it is not yet included in official datasets. This notice will no longer appear once the record has been reviewed.
Location New York (state)
Year 1860
Month 8
Date 1
Note on date No later than August 1860
City Fayetteville
State NY
Nickname Fayetteville Base Ball Club

A Syracuse newspaper, in reporting on a two games between Fayetteville and Chittenango, fixed the foundation of the Fayetteville at August 1. The two clubs split the two games.

These are the only 1860 games carried in the baseball clippings of the Onondaga Hist Assn; a Fayetteville club played Chittenango in 1865.

Fayetteville, now in the town of Manlius, is about 8 miles east of central Syracuse. Its population is now about 4300.

Sources

Syracuse Journal, September 22, 1860.

Personal tools