Base Ball Founders

Base Ball Founders

Author: Peter Morris

Publisher: McFarland

Published: 2013-07-15

Total Pages: 341

ISBN-13: 0786474300

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This book completes the series of histories of the clubs and players responsible for making baseball the national pastime that began with Base Ball Pioneers, 1850-1870 (McFarland 2011). Forty clubs and hundreds of pioneer players from the first hotbeds of New York City, Philadelphia, New Jersey, and Massachusetts are profiled by leading experts on baseball's early years. The subjects include legendary clubs such as the Knickerbockers of New York, the Eckfords and Atlantics of Brooklyn, the Athletics of Philadelphia, and Harvard's first baseball clubs, and fabled players like Jim Creighton, Dickey Pearce, and Daniel Adams, but space is also given to less well remembered clubs such as the Champion Club of Jersey City and the Cummaquids of Barnstable, Massachusetts. What united all of these founders of the game was that their love of baseball during its earliest years helped to make it the national pastime.


Paschal Beverly Randolph

Paschal Beverly Randolph

Author: John Patrick Deveney

Publisher: SUNY Press

Published: 1997-01-01

Total Pages: 642

ISBN-13: 9780791431191

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His most enduring claim to fame is the crucial role he played in the transformation of spiritualism, a medium's passive reception of messages from the spirits of the dead, into occultism, the active search for personal spiritual realization and inner vision.


The Rise and Fall of the White Republic

The Rise and Fall of the White Republic

Author: Alexander Saxton

Publisher: Verso

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 424

ISBN-13: 9781859844670

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Saxton asks why white racism remained an ideological force in America long after the need to justify slavery and Western conquest had disappeared.


The Tented Field

The Tented Field

Author: Tom Melville

Publisher: Popular Press

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 292

ISBN-13: 9780879727703

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Presents an analytical explanation of why cricket failed as an American sporting institution. Devotes much attention to the rise of organized American sports immediately before and after the Civil War and interprets this phenomenon in the context of both its premodern American history as well as its development up to the First World War. The geographical focus is on the larger urban areas of the Atlantic seaboard, but other urban and rural areas are also discussed. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR