Base-Ball, by John M. Ward 
 
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Title: Base-Ball How to Become a Player 
Author: John M. Ward 
Release Date: November 30, 2006 [EBook #19975] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 
BASE-BALL *** 
 
Produced by Jerry Kuntz as part of the Lawson's Progress project, 
http://www.lawsonsprogress.com 
 
Base-Ball: How to Become a Player 
With the Origin, History and Explanation of the Game 
By John Montgomery Ward of the New York Base-Ball Club
PREFACE. 
The author ventures to present this book to the public, because he 
believes there are many points in the game of base-ball which can be 
told only by a player. He has given some space to a consideration of the 
origin and early history of the game, because they are subjects 
deserving of more attention than is generally accorded them. 
His principal aim, however, has been to produce a hand-book of the 
game, a picture of the play as seen by a player. In many of its branches, 
base-ball is still in its infancy; even in the actual play there are yet 
many unsettled points, and the opinions of experts differ upon 
important questions. The author has been as accurate as the nature of 
the subject would permit, and, though claiming no especial 
consideration for his own opinions, he thinks they will coincide in 
substance with those of the more experienced and intelligent players. 
To Messrs. A. H. Wright, Henry Chadwick, Harry Wright, and James 
Whyte Davis, for materials of reference, and to Goodwin & Co., the 
Scientific American, and A. J. Reach, for engravings and cuts, 
acknowledgments are gratefully made. 
JOHN M. WARD. 
CONTENTS. 
INTRODUCTION. AN INQUIRY INTO THE ORIGIN OF 
BASE-BALL, WITH A BRIEF SKETCH OF ITS HISTORY 
CHAPTER I. 
THEORY OF THE GAME--A CHAPTER FOR THE LADIES. 
CHAPTER II. 
TRAINING 
CHAPTER III.
THE PITCHER 
CHAPTER IV. 
THE CATCHER 
CHAPTER V. 
THE FIRST BASEMAN 
CHAPTER VI. 
THE SECOND BASEMAN 
CHAPTER VII. 
THE THIRD BASEMAN 
CHAPTER VIII. 
THE SHORT-STOP 
CHAPTER IX. 
THE LEFT-FIELDER 
CHAPTER X. 
THE CENTRE-FIELDER 
CHAPTER XI. 
THE RIGHT-FIELDER 
CHAPTER XII. 
THE BATTER
CHAPTER XIII. 
THE BASE-RUNNER 
CHAPTER XIV. 
CURVE PITCHING 
INTRODUCTION. AN INQUIRY INTO THE ORIGIN OF 
BASE-BALL, WITH A BRIEF SKETCH OF ITS HISTORY. 
It may or it may not be a serious reflection upon the accuracy of history 
that the circumstances of the invention of the first ball are enveloped in 
some doubt. Herodotus attributes it to the Lydians, but several other 
writers unite in conceding to a certain beautiful lady of Corcyra, 
Anagalla by name, the credit of first having made a ball for the purpose 
of pastime. Several passages in Homer rather sustain this latter view, 
and, therefore, with the weight of evidence, and to the glory of woman, 
we, too, shall adopt this theory. Anagalla did not apply for letters patent, 
but, whether from goodness of heart or inability to keep a secret, she 
lost no time in making known her invention and explaining its uses. 
Homer, then, relates how: 
"O'er the green mead the sporting virgins play, Their shining veils 
unbound; along the skies, Tost and retost, the ball incessant flies." 
And this is the first ball game on record, though it is perhaps 
unnecessary to say that it was not yet base-ball. 
No other single accident has ever been so productive of games as that 
invention. From the day when the Phaeacian maidens started the ball 
rolling down to the present time, it has been continuously in motion, 
and as long as children love play and adults feel the need of exercise 
and recreation, it will continue to roll. It has been known in all lands, 
and at one time or another been popular with all peoples. The Greeks 
and the Romans were great devotees of ball-play; China was noted for 
her players; in the courts of Italy and France, we are told, it was in 
especial favor, and Fitz-Stephen, writing in the 13th century, speaks of
the London schoolboys playing at "the celebrated game of ball." 
For many centuries no bat was known, but in those games requiring the 
ball to be struck, the hand alone was used. In France there was early 
played a species of hand-ball. To protect the hands thongs were 
sometimes bound about them, and this eventually furnished the idea of 
the racquet. Strutt thinks a bat was first used in golf, cambuc, or bandy 
ball. This was similar to the boys' game of "shinny," or, as it is now 
more elegantly known, "polo," and    
    
		
	
	
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