Tips & Tricks On How To Play Baseball Like A Pro - These Little-Known Secrets Will Have You Hitting The Longest Yard Over The Boundary Fence! Click here for FREE online ebook! http://www.baseballhittingdrills.net/
Henry Chadwick, called the father of baseball, its first writer and the inventor of the box score, claimed that American baseball was positively descended from the British game of rounders, which became "town ball" in this country, then baseball. He was an eyewitness to the evolution, having seen rounders played as a boy in England, and rounders, town ball and baseball in this country.
A. G. Spalding, founder of the famous sporting goods house, a fine pitcher himself, and publisher of the "Baseball Guide," claimed that such a theory was nonsense and that baseball was purely an American invention. A committee was appointed to investigate the matter. The findings of the committee - that baseball had been invented in 1839 by Abner Doubleday, a distinguished Civil War General, in Cooperstown, New York - were based wholly upon evidence submitted in a letter written by a man who stated that he had observed the actual invention when he was a schoolboy in Cooperstown.
Many accepted the findings of the committee even though there seemed to be much more evidence to support Chadwick's claim than that of Spalding. To this day, even though numerous baseball authorities have repeatedly poked holes in the Doubleday theory, there are many who still believe this old story. It should be noted that Abner Doubleday himself never made any claims whatever to having had any influence on baseball. He had died years before the findings were published.
By the early 1840s, the baseball games played in this country had been pretty well standardized into "Town Ball," played East of New York, and "the New York Game," played, naturally, in New York. They were alike in many respects but Town Ball was patterned more after the ancient rounders, while the New York Game seems to have been largely taken from cricket. In 1842, the New Yorkers drew up the first diagram of a baseball field and grown men began to take this boys' game seriously and to see in it possibilities for a great sport.
In 1845, the Knickerbocker Baseball Club of New York was formed, the first such organization in history. It was an amateur group with duly elected officers. No professional organization was to appear for twenty-five more years. The Club immediately began drawing up a set of standard rules and making plans for a more satisfactory playing field. Draftsman and surveyor Alexander Cart-wright was given the task of preparing a diagram for a new type of field.
By the following year, Cartwright had prepared the diamond diagram which, except for minor changes, is the baseball field used to this day wherever baseball is played. The Knickerbockers also established uniform rules which set the pattern for present-day ball.
The First Game. - The Knickerbockers then issued challenges to take on all comers and the first baseball game ever played under organized rules took place on June 19, 1846, at Elysian Fields (near Hoboken), New Jersey. "The New York Nine" was the opposing team and they beat the Knicks 23-1 in four innings.
So depressed were the Knickerbockers that they played no more inter-city games until 1851, but limited their play to practice games. After five years of practice, they evidently believed they were ready for another go at the game and took on the "Washington Baseball Club of New York" on June 3, 1851 on the same Elysian Fields.
Both teams were tied at the end of the ninth, but the Knicks got two runs in the tenth to win the game 22-20.
From this small beginning, the great game of baseball has developed into the huge game it is today.
- Related Videos
- Related Articles
- Ask / Related Q&A




Cheap Orioles Tickets Where To Find Them
By: Doug Muraski | 29/11/2009Searching for Cheap Orioles Tickets? You can Buy Cheap Orioles Tickets For All Games. Buy Cheap Baltimmore Orioles Tickets Here.
Softball Coaching Tips – Your Quick-Reference Coaching Guide
By: Marc Dagenais | 26/11/2009If there’s one member of a softball team who’s always busy 7 days a week, it would be the softball coach. Great softball coaches eat and breathe the game. They’re the types who are always looking for ways to make their team perform better.
With Only One Hand
By: Suess Karlsson | 25/11/2009You know, I'm not a betting woman but I'd be willing to bet you can't play professional baseball with only one hand? Or can you? What do you bet? Read on and meet a man who started at age 4 learning to pursue his dreams. To Jim, only having one hand meant nothing more than doing things differently from everyone else.
How to Hit a Curveball
By: C Randolph | 25/11/2009The curveball has been a universally feared pitch in baseball for more than a century, and with good reason. If you’ve never seen a good curveball from the batter’s box, it can be difficult to appreciate its effects on the hitter, but be assured that it brings a whole new challenge to striking that small round ball approaching between 70 and 100 MPH, with a round bat ---- you literally have less than a second to decide to swing the bat.
Softball Tips – The Essential Qualities of Softball Catchers
By: Marc Dagenais | 24/11/2009It may look like they’re not doing much on the field, but catchers have an important role in softball. Along with the pitcher, the catcher is one of the main operators of the defensive aspect of the game.
Maple Bats….Passing the test of time & still going strong
By: mozerbats | 23/11/2009t’s been about nearly 9 years since Barry Bonds broke the single season home run record while using a Maple Baseball Bat throughout the season. That magical season in baseball was the showcase year for Maple Bats.
Craigslist Tickets Buy Craigslist Tickets Save Money On Tickets
By: Doug Muraski | 22/11/2009Buy Craigslist Tickets for all events, the new way in saving money on tickets. Cheap concert tickets here.
Moms: You Can Have Clean Baseball Uniforms For Your Child
By: Steve Dean | 20/11/2009Cleaning tips on how to get out the tough stains associated with rugged athletic competition (baseball, football, soccer, etc.).
An Easy Way to Remember the US Presidents
By: Jimmy Cox | 06/05/2008 | Self ImprovementEvery American should know the names of the Presidents. First we list the Presidents and find substitute words for their names. Beside each president write words of similar sound. The degree of similarity in sound is an individual matter. For the person who relies greatly on the aid of sound, the substituted word must be very like that of the word to be memorized.
Two Ways to Make Money from Your Greenhouse
By: Jimmy Cox | 25/04/2008 | GardeningPerhaps you are not particularly interested in making money from selling potted plants, bulbs, or seeds. Still, you want a self-supporting or profit-making greenhouse. Although a number of hybridizers use their greenhouses to hasten the growth of many plants, including iris and roses, there are many things you can do with your greenhouse.
Basketball Basics: Faking and Moving Without the Ball
By: Jimmy Cox | 25/04/2008 | BasketballTwo important skills in basketball are faking and moving without the ball. Both should be practiced well.
How to Keep Your Car Battery Like New
By: Jimmy Cox | 24/04/2008 | CarsYou'll not get caught with your charge down if you give your car battery reasonable care.
Diets for Your Inner Self
By: Jimmy Cox | 24/04/2008 | NutritionDiets can achieve amazing results if followed faithfully, and here are three excellent ones: a cleansing diet, a health diet and a reducing diet.
Defend Yourself Using Aikido
By: Jimmy Cox | 10/04/2008 | Martial ArtsThe origin of Aikido can be traced back to the Jiu Jitsu School of Daito. According to the records concerning the secrets of marshal arts, the Aiki Jiu Jitsu, as it was called during the Kamakura period in about the 12th century, was founded by Yoshimitsu Minamoto.
Coaching and Strategy in Baseball
By: Jimmy Cox | 10/04/2008 | BaseballSchool teams have one coach who directs all play, offensively and defensively. He usually sits on the bench and gives signals to the first-base and third-base coaches, who in turn pass them on to the batter or base-runner.
How to Research a Term Paper
By: Jimmy Cox | 10/04/2008 | WritingIn some courses, especially in your senior year, you may be asked to submit long pieces of writing that may be loosely classified as term papers or research reports. Typical among these are studies of an author's characteristics or surveys of literary movements in honor English classes or analyses in depth of various topics in your science or social studies courses.