When I was growing up in the Wayne , New Jersey 
It was a colorful story and, as we well know today, totally false.  John Thorn’s find of a Pittsfield , Massachusetts 
If for no other reason, this New York Hoboken , New Jersey 
Through 1854, such competition was limited to a few New York  and Brooklyn  clubs, but all of this changed in 1855.  For reasons that are not clearly understood, 1855 marked the beginning of a period of base ball expansion that lasted through the Civil War.  Since Elysian Fields in Hoboken  hosted many of the New York  club’s matches, it is no surprise that young men from nearby Jersey City  and Newark New Jersey  clubs in the same paragraph as an equally brief report about a match between two New York 
All research to date indicates that the Newark Club was New Jersey ’s first base ball club while the Oriental (also from Newark New Jersey East Newark  which was about “a half mile from the railroad bridge.”
Although the game account could hardly have been briefer, it raises some interesting questions especially the rules of a game where 51 runs are scored in one inning and it takes two days to play that inning.  In the next post, I will take what is surely a first look at how the game was initially played in New Jersey 


 
Howdy! Happy to see the new blog!
ReplyDeleteI can take a stab at a couple of the questions you raise. Why did the Knickerbockers have a five year hiatus from match games after 1846? Because there was no one to play against. The mid-1840s saw a small baseball boom, which collapsed following the 1846 season. The Knickerbockers were the sole surviving club. The early 1850s saw a slow revival, not reaching the earlier level until the 1854 season.
As for why things really took off in 1855, notice that December of 1854 saw a uniform set of rules, and in early 1855 they were published in a newspaper, the Spirit of the Times. Both of these were firsts. The 1855 season saw dramatically increased newspaper coverage of baseball, which shows that editors thought that readers wanted this. The increased coverage in turn stimulated the formation of new clubs. This is a classic virtuous cycle.
I have some thoughts about that game between New Jersey clubs, but I will hold off for now, except for pointing to the hint in the article when it specifies that the Empire/Eagle game was played under the rule of "3 hands out".
Thanks for the welcome and the comments - the next post (probably Wednesday) will speculate about the hint you mention.
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