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Americans played a version of the English game rounders in the early 19th century which they called "Town Ball." In fact, early forms of baseball had a number of names, including "Base Ball," "Goal Ball " "Round Ball," "Fletch-catch," "stool ball," and, simply, "Base." In at least one version of the game, teams pitched to themselves, runners went around the bases in the opposite direction of today's game, and players could be put out by being hit with the ball. Like today, a batter was called out after three strikes. =Origins of baseball= From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (Redirected from [|History of baseball]) Jump to: [|navigation], [|search] **[|History of baseball]** || • [|Early years]• [|First league]• [|Knickerbocker Rules]• [|Massachusetts rules]• [|Alexander Cartwright]• [|Abner Doubleday myth]• [|First pro team]• [|First pro league]• Close relations: • [|Stoolball]• [|Rounders]• [|Old Cat]• [|Town ball]• [|Softball]• History of baseball in: • [|Worldwide]• [|Australia]• [|Canada]• [|Cuba]• [|Greece]• [|Ireland]• [|Japan]• [|Netherlands]• [|Nicaragua]• [|Palau]• [|South Korea]• [|Spain]• [|United States]• [|United Kingdom]• [|Venezuela]• [|Negro league baseball]• [|Women in baseball]• [|Minor league baseball]• [|Cricket comparison]• [|//Baseball// (Ken Burns documentary)]• [|Baseball Hall of Fame]• [|Society for American Baseball Research (SABR)]• [|Baseball year-by-year] • [|MLB season-by-season] || The question of the **origins of baseball** has been the subject of debate and controversy for more than a century. [|Baseball] and the other modern bat, ball and running [|games], [|cricket] and [|rounders], were developed from earlier folk games. Americans played a version of the English game rounders in the early 19th century which they called "Town Ball." In fact, early forms of baseball had a number of names, including "Base Ball," "Goal Ball " "Round Ball," "Fletch-catch," "stool ball," and, simply, "Base." In at least one version of the game, teams pitched to themselves, runners went around the bases in the opposite direction of today's game, and players could be put out by being hit with the ball. Like today, a batter was called out after three strikes. Few details of how the modern games developed from earlier folk games are known. Some think that various folk games resulted in a game called [|town ball] from which baseball was eventually born. Others believe that town ball was independent from baseball.
 * = Part of the [|Baseball] series on
 * < • **Origins of baseball**
 * = **[|Baseball Portal]** [|v] **·** [|d] **·** [|e] ||
 * ==Contents==
 * [|1] [|Folk games in England]
 * [|1.1] [|Stoolball]
 * [|1.2] [|Dog and cat]
 * [|1.3] [|Cricket]
 * [|1.4] [|Cat, One Old Cat]
 * [|1.5] [|Trap ball]
 * [|2] [|Abner Doubleday myth]
 * [|3] [|Alexander Cartwright]
 * [|4] [|Before 1845]
 * [|4.1] [|Cricket and rounders]
 * [|5] [|Elysian Fields]
 * [|6] [|After 1845]
 * [|7] [|See also]
 * [|8] [|References]
 * [|8.1] [|Notes]
 * [|8.2] [|Bibliography]
 * [|9] [|External links] ||

[[|edit]] Folk games in England
A number of early folk games in [|England] had characteristics that can be seen in modern [|baseball] (as well as in [|cricket] and [|rounders]). Many of these early games involved a ball that was thrown at a [|target] while an opposing player defended the target by attempting to hit the ball away. If the batter successfully hit the ball, he could attempt to score points by running between bases while fielders would attempt to catch or retrieve the ball and put the runner out in some way. Since they were folk games, the early games had no official, documented rules, and they tended to change over time. To the extent that there were rules, they were generally simple and were not written down. There were many local variations, and varied names. Many of the early games were not well documented, first, [|because] they were generally peasant games (and perhaps children's games, as well); and second, because they were often discouraged, and sometimes even prohibited, either by the church or by the state, or both. Aside from obvious differences in terminology, the games differed in the equipment [|used] (ball, bat, club, target, etc., which were usually just whatever was available), the way in which the ball is thrown, the method of scoring, the method of making outs, the layout of the field and the number of players involved. An old English game called "//base,//" described by [|George Ewing] at [|Valley Forge], was apparently not much like baseball. There was no bat and no ball involved. The game was more like a fancy game of "tag," although it did share the concept of places of safety (for example, bases) with modern baseball. In an 1801 book entitled //The Sports and Pastimes of the People of England//, [|Joseph Strutt] claimed to have shown that baseball-like games can be traced back to the 14th century, and that baseball is a descendant of a [|United Kingdom] game called [|stoolball]. The earliest known reference to stoolball is in a 1330 poem by [|William Pagula], who recommended to priests that the game be forbidden within churchyards. In [|stoolball], a batter stood before a target, perhaps an upturned stool, while another player pitched a ball to the batter. If the batter hit the ball (with a bat or his/her hand) and it was caught by a fielder, the batter was out. If the pitched ball hit a stool leg, the batter was out. Traditionally it was played by [|milkmaids] who used their milking stools as a "wicket," according to one belief while waiting for their husbands to return from working in the fields. According to many sources, in 1700, a [|Puritan] leader of southern [|England], [|Thomas Wilson], expressed his disapproval of "[|Morris-dancing], cudgel-playing, baseball and [|cricket]" occurring on Sundays. However, David Block, in //[|Baseball Before We Knew It]// (2005), reports that the original source has "stoolball" for "baseball." Block also reports the reference appears to date to 1672, rather than 1700, and that it was the English game of baseball that had arrived in the U.S. as part of "a sweeping tide of cultural migration" during the colonial period.[|[][|1][|]] Woodcut from "[|A Little Pretty Pocket-Book]" (1744) [|England], showing first reference to [|baseball] A 1744 publication in England by children's publisher John Newbery called [|A Little Pretty Pocket-Book] includes a woodcut of stoolball and a rhyme entitled "Base-ball." This is the first known instance of the word baseball in print.[|[][|2][|]] Today the game is popular in United Kingdom among schoolgirls in the form of rounders, whilst football, known as soccer, in America, is the most popular boys sport. Soccer was regarded as un ladylike, so the more genteel game of rounders, was played by girls. Even today, many British males, will not play Rounders or Baseball, as it is regarded as a game for girls. [|[][|3][|]] In 1748, the family of [|Frederick, Prince of Wales] partook in the playing of a baseball-like game. The English lawyer William Bray recorded a game of baseball on Easter Monday 1755 in [|Guildford], [|Surrey]; Bray's diary was verified authentic in September 2008.[|[][|4][|]][|[][|5][|]] A 1791 bylaw in [|Pittsfield, Massachusetts] bans the playing of baseball within 80 yards of the town meeting house. By 1796 the rules of this English game were well enough established to earn a mention in the German [|Johann Gutsmuths]' book on popular pastimes. In it he described "//Englische Base-ball//" as a contest between two teams in which "the batter has three attempts to hit the ball while at the home plate"; only one out was required to retire a side.[|[][|6][|]] The book also predates the rules laid out by the New York Knickerbockers by nearly fifty years. Another early print reference is [|Jane Austen]'s novel //[|Northanger Abbey]//, originally written 1798-1799. In the first chapter the young English heroine Catherine Morland is described as preferring "cricket, base ball, riding on horseback and running about the country to books."[|[][|7][|]] In 1828, William Clarke in [|London], published the second edition of //The Boy’s Own Book// which included rules of rounders, and contains the first printed description in English of a bat and ball base-running game played on a diamond.[|[][|8][|]] The following year, the book was published in [|Boston, Massachusetts].[|[][|9][|]] Similar rules were published in Boston in "The Book of Sports," written by Robin Carver in 1834,[|[][|7][|]] except the Boston version called the game "Base" or "Goal ball." The rules were identical to those of poison ball, but also added fair and foul balls and strike outs. Also, in 1828, an article published in a Hagerstown, Maryland, newspaper briefly describes a young girl who is drawn away from her daily chores to play a familiar game with her friends. In "A Village Sketch," author Miss Mitford wrote: "Then comes a sun-burnt gipsy of six, beginning to grow tall and thin and to find the cares of the world gathering about her; with a pitcher in one hand, a mop in the other, an old straw bonnet of ambiguous shape, half hiding her tangled hair; a tattered stuff petticoat once green, hanging below an equally tattered cotton frock, once purple; her longing eyes fixed on a game of baseball at the corner of the green till she reaches the cottage door, flings down the mop and pitcher and darts off to her companions quite regardless of the storm of scolding with which the mother follows her runaway steps."[|[][|10][|]] The account by [|Fred Lillywhite] (1829–66) of the first English [|cricket] tour to Canada and the United States in 1859 refers to the "base-ball game [being] somewhat similar to the English and Irish game of 'rounders.'" A day's play was lost during a cricket match in New York due to snow, but a game of baseball was arranged about a mile away between "the players of that game and a portion of the English party" (//The English Cricketers' Trip to Canada and the United States//, 1860). A unique British sport, known as [|British Baseball], is still played in parts of [|Wales] and [|England]. Although confined mainly to the cities of [|Cardiff], [|Newport] and [|Liverpool], the sport boasts an annual international game between representative teams from the two countries.

[[|edit]] Stoolball
Origins of [|Stoolball]: Originally, the stool was defended with a bare hand. Later, a bat of some kind was used (in modern stoolball, a bat like a very heavy ping-pong paddle is used). Clear regional variation: There were several versions of stoolball. In the earliest versions, the object was primarily to defend the stool. Successfully defending the stool counted for one point, and the batter was out if the ball hit the stool. There was no running involved. Another version of stoolball involved running between two stools, and scoring was similar to the scoring in cricket. In perhaps yet another version there were several stools, and points were scored by running around them as in baseball. Because of the different versions of stoolball, and because it was played not only in England, but also in colonial America, stoolball is considered by many to have been the basis of not only cricket, but both baseball and rounders as well.
 * 1) In stoolball, which developed by the 11th century, one player throws the ball at a target while another player defends the target. "Stob-ball" and "stow-ball" were regional games similar to stoolball. In stob ball and stow ball the target was probably a tree stump, since both "//stob//" and "//stow//" mean //stump// in some dialects. ( "//Stow//" could also refer to a type of frame used in mining). What the target originally was in stoolball is not certain. It could have been a stump, since “//stool//” in old [|Sussex dialect] means //stump//.
 * 2) According to one legend, milkmaids played stoolball while waiting for their husbands to return from the fields. Another theory is that stoolball developed as a game played after attending church services, in which case the target was probably a church stool.

[[|edit]] Dog and cat
Another early folk game was "dog and cat" (or "cat and dog"), which probably originated in [|Scotland]. In cat and dog a piece of wood called a //cat// is thrown at a hole in the ground while another player defends the hole with a stick (a //dog//). In some cases there were two holes and, after hitting the cat, the batter would run between them while fielders would try to put the runner out by putting the ball in the hole before the runner got to it. Dog and cat thus resembled cricket.

[[|edit]] Cricket
The [|history of cricket] prior to 1650 is something of a mystery. Games believed to have been similar to cricket had developed by the 13th century. There was a game called "creag," and another game, "Handyn and Handoute" (Hands In and Hands Out), which was made illegal in 1477 by [|King Edward IV], who considered the game childish, and a distraction from compulsory archery practice. References to a game actually called "//cricket//" appeared around 1550. It is believed that the word //cricket// is based either on the word //cric//, meaning a crooked stick possibly a shepherd's crook (early forms of cricket used a curved bat somewhat like a hockey stick), or on the Flemish word "//krickstoel//," which refers to a stool upon which one kneels in church. The [|Toronto Cricket Club] was established in that city by 1827 and the [|St George's Cricket Club] was formed in 1838 in New York City. Teams from the two clubs faced off in the [|first international cricket game in 1844] which Toronto won by 144 runs to 122.[|[][|11][|]]

[[|edit]] Cat, One Old Cat
See also: [|Old Cat] A game popular in colonial America was "one hole catapult," which used a catapult like the one used in trap-ball. The game of "cat" (or "//cat-ball//") had many variations but usually there was a pitcher, a catcher, a batter and fielders, but there were no sides (and often no bases to run). A feature of some versions of cat that would later become a feature of baseball was that a batter would be out if he swung and missed three times. Another game that was popular in early America was "one ol' cat," the name of which was possibly originally a contraction of //one hole catapult//. In one ol' cat, when a batter is put out, the catcher goes to bat, the pitcher catches, a fielder becomes the pitcher, and other fielders move up in rotation. One ol' cat was often played when there weren't enough players to choose up sides and play townball. Sometimes running to a base and back was involved. "Two ol' cat" was the same game as one ol' cat, except that there were two batters.

[[|edit]] Trap ball
In [|Trap ball] played in England since the C14, a ball was thrown in the air, to be hit by a batsman and fielded. In some variants a member of the fielding team threw the ball in the air, in others, the batsman caused the ball to be tossed in the air by a simple lever mechanism.

[[|edit]] Abner Doubleday myth
Abner Doubleday The myth that [|Abner Doubleday] invented baseball in 1839 was once widely promoted and widely believed. There is no evidence for this claim except for the testimony of one man decades later, and there is persuasive counter-evidence. Doubleday himself never made such a claim; he left many letters and papers, but they contain no description of baseball nor any suggestion that he considered himself prominent in the game's history. His //[|New York Times]// obituary makes no mention of baseball, nor does a 1911 encyclopedia article about Doubleday. Contrary to popular belief, Doubleday was never inducted into the [|Baseball Hall of Fame], although a large oil portrait of him was on display at the Hall of Fame building for many years. Doubleday's invention of baseball was the finding of a panel appointed by [|Albert Spalding], a former star pitcher and club executive, who had become the leading [|American] sporting goods entrepreneur and sports publisher. Debate on baseball's origins had raged for decades, heating up in the first years of the 20th century. To end argument, speculation, and innuendo, Spalding organized the [|Mills Commission] in 1905. The members were baseball figures, not historians: Spalding's friend [|Abraham G. Mills], a former [|National League] president; two [|United States Senators], former NL president Morgan Bulkeley and former Washington club president Arthur Gorman; former NL president and lifelong secretary-treasurer Nick Young; two other star players turned sporting goods entrepreneurs ([|George Wright] and [|Alfred Reach]); and AAU president James E. Sullivan.[|[][|12][|]] The final report, published in 1908, included three sections: a summary of the panel’s findings written by Mills, a letter by [|John Montgomery Ward] supporting the panel, and a dissenting opinion by [|Henry Chadwick]. The research methods were, at best, dubious. The Commission found an appealing story: baseball was invented in a quaint rural town without foreigners or industry, by a young man who later graduated from [|West Point] and served heroically in the [|Mexican-American War], [|Civil War], and U.S. wars against Indians. The Mills Commission concluded that baseball had been invented by Doubleday in [|Cooperstown, New York] in 1839; that Doubleday had invented the word "baseball," designed the diamond, indicated fielders' positions, and written the rules. No written records from 1839 or the 1840s have ever been found to corroborate these claims, nor could Doubleday be interviewed (he had died in 1893). The principal source for the story was a letter from elderly [|Abner Graves], a five-year-old resident of Cooperstown in 1839. Graves never mentioned a diamond, positions or the writing of rules. Graves' reliability as a witness has been questioned because he was later convicted of murdering his wife and spent his final days in an asylum for the criminally insane. Doubleday was not in Cooperstown in 1839 and may never have visited the town.[|[][|7][|]] He was enrolled at [|West Point] and there is no record of any leave time. Mills, a lifelong friend of Doubleday, had never heard him mention baseball. Versions of baseball rules and descriptions of similar games have been found in publications that significantly predate the alleged invention in 1839. Despite this myth having been debunked, [|MLB] Commissioner [|Bud Selig] believes Doubleday to be the inventor of the sport. [|[][|13][|]]

[[|edit]] Alexander Cartwright
Alexander Cartwright The first published rules of baseball were written in 1845 for a New York (Manhattan) "base ball" club called the [|Knickerbockers]. The author, [|Shane Ryley Foster], is one person commonly known as "the father of baseball". One important rule, the 13th, stipulated that the player need not be physically hit by the ball to be put out; this permitted the subsequent use of a farther-travelling hard ball. Evolution from the so-called "[|Knickerbocker Rules]" to the current rules is fairly well documented. On June 3, 1953, Congress officially credited [|Alexander Cartwright] with inventing the modern game of baseball, and he is a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame. However, the role of Cartwright himself has been disputed. His authorship may have been exaggerated in a modern attempt to identify a single inventor of the game, although Cartwright may have a better claim to the title than any other single American. Cartwright, a New York bookseller who later caught "gold fever", //umpired// the first-ever recorded U.S. baseball game with codified rules in Hoboken, New Jersey on June 19, 1846. He also founded the older of the two teams that played that day, the New York Knickerbockers. Cartwright also introduced the game in most of the cities where he stopped on his trek west to California to find gold. One point undisputed by historians is that the modern professional major leagues that began in the 1870s developed directly from amateur //urban// clubs of the 1840s and 1850s, not from the pastures of small towns such as Cooperstown.

[[|edit]] Before 1845
Evolution of the game that became modern baseball is unknown before 1845. The Knickerbocker Rules describe a game that they had been playing for some time. But how long is uncertain and so is how that game had developed. Shane Foster was the first to come up with suspicions of how the origin came into effect. There were once two camps. One, mostly English, asserted that baseball evolved from a game of English origin (probably rounders); the other, almost entirely American, said that baseball was an American invention (perhaps derived from the game of one-ol'-cat). Apparently they saw their positions as mutually exclusive. Some of their points seem more national loyalty than evidence: Americans tended to reject any suggestion that baseball evolved from an English game, while some English observers concluded that baseball was little more than their rounders without the round.

[[|edit]] Cricket and rounders
That baseball is based on English and Gaelic games such as cat, [|cricket], and [|rounders] is difficult to dispute. On the other hand, baseball has many elements that are uniquely American. The earliest published author to muse on the origin of baseball, [|John Montgomery Ward], was suspicious of the often-parroted claim that rounders is the direct ancestor of baseball, as both were formalized in the same time period. He concluded, with some amount of patriotism, that baseball evolved separately from town-ball (i.e. rounders), out of children's "safe haven" ball games.[|[][|14][|]] Certainly baseball is //related// to cricket and rounders, but exactly how, or how closely, has not been established. The only certain thing is that modern cricket is much older than modern baseball. Games played with [|bat-and-ball] together may all be distant cousins; the same goes for base-and-ball games. Bat, base, and ball games for two teams that alternate in and out, such as baseball, cricket, and rounders, are likely to be close cousins. They all involve throwing a ball to a batsman who attempts to "bat" it away and run safely to a base, while the opponent tries to put the batter-runner out when liable ("liable to be put out" is the baseball term for unsafe).

[[|edit]] Elysian Fields
Early baseball game played at Elysian Fields, Hoboken (Currier & Ives lithograph). In 1845, the [|Knickerbocker Club] of [|New York City] began using [|Elysian Fields] in [|Hoboken] to play [|baseball] due to the lack of soft grounds on [|Manhattan]. In 1846, the Knickerbockers played the [|New York Nine] on these grounds in the first organized game between two clubs. A plaque, and baseball diamond street pavings at 11th and Washington Streets commemorate the event. By the 1850s, several Manhattan-based members of the [|National Association of Base Ball Players] were using the grounds as their home field. In 1865 the grounds hosted a championship match between the [|Mutual Club] of [|New York] and the [|Atlantic Club] of [|Brooklyn] that was attended by an estimated 20,000 fans and captured in the [|Currier & Ives] [|lithograph] "The American National Game of Base Ball." With the construction of two significant baseball parks enclosed by fences in [|Brooklyn], enabling promoters there to charge admission to games, the prominence of [|Elysian Fields] began to diminish. In 1868 the leading [|Manhattan] club, [|Mutual], shifted its home games to the [|Union Grounds] in [|Brooklyn]. In 1880, the founders of the [|New York Metropolitans] and [|New York Giants] finally succeeded in siting a ballpark in Manhattan that became known as the [|Polo Grounds].

[[|edit]] After 1845
In 1857, sixteen clubs from modern [|New York City] sent delegates to a convention that standardized the rules, essentially by agreeing to revise the Knickerbocker rules. In 1858, twenty-five including one from New Jersey founded a going concern but the [|National Association of Base Ball Players] is conventionally dated from 1857. It governed through 1870 but it scheduled and sanctioned no games. By 1862 some NABBP member clubs offered games to the general public in enclosed ballparks with admission fees. During and after the [|American Civil War], the movements of soldiers and exchanges of prisoners helped spread the game. As of the December 1865 meeting, the year the war ended, there were isolated Association members in [|Fort Leavenworth], [|St. Louis], [|Louisville], and [|Chattanooga, Tennessee], along with about 90 members north and east of [|Washington]. In 1869 the first openly professional baseball team formed. Earlier players were nominally amateurs. The [|Cincinnati Red Stockings] recruited nationally and effectively, toured nationally, and no one beat them until June [|1870]. Already in the 19th century, the "old game" was invoked for special exhibitions such as reunions and anniversaries — and for making moral points. Today hundreds of clubs in the U.S. play "[|vintage base ball]" according to the 1845, 1858, or later rules (up to about [|1887]), usually in vintage uniforms. Some of them have supporting casts that recreate period dress and manner, especially those associated with [|living history museums]. The origins of baseball was summarized in a documentary produced by Major League Baseball in 2009 entitiled //Base Ball Discovered//.[|[] Few details of how the modern games developed from earlier folk games are known. Some think that various folk games resulted in a game called [|town ball] from which baseball was eventually born. Others believe that town ball was independent from baseball.