Knickerbocker 1857 Leaders Batting Average
Knickerbocker 1857 Leaders Hits
Knickerbocker 1857 Leaders Home Runs
Knickerbocker 1857 Leaders RBI
Knickerbocker 1857 Leaders Stolen Bases
Knickerbocker 1857 Leaders OPS
Knickerbocker 1857 Leaders Wins
Knickerbocker 1857 Leaders Saves
Knickerbocker 1857 Leaders ERA
Knickerbocker 1857 Leaders WHIP
Knickerbocker 1857 Leaders Strikeouts
Knickerbocker 1857 Leaders Strikeouts per 9IP
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2 hours
1845–1865
Historian Jonathan Popovich will bring the circa 1865 photograph depicting a “Game of Base Ball...
Baseball at Hoboken's Elysian Fields, 1845–1865: A Visual History. / Historian Jonathan Popovich will bring the circa 1865 photograph depicting a “Game of Base Ball at Hoboken” which launched him into an exploration - with greater depth than any other to date - into the geography, layout, and utilization of the Elysian Fields during the height of its popularity. His recent work on the Elysian Fields was selected as the “Special Presentation for 2022” by the Society for American Baseball Research in Cooperstown, N.Y. Jonathan will be joined by guest host Irwin Chusid. In-person attendees at our Museum at 1301 Hudson Street will receive a souvenir postcard of the historic photograph. For more information, https://www.hobokenmuseum.org/event/ev-220618-baseball/
25 pages
1857
Baseball’s “Magna Carta” The handwritten “Laws of Baseball” are the founding documents for the modern game. In December 1856, Daniel...
/ Baseball’s “Magna Carta” The handwritten “Laws of Baseball” are the founding documents for the modern game. In December 1856, Daniel “Doc” Adams, a medical doctor and president of the New York Knickerbockers baseball club, drafted a set of game rules. His teammate, William Grenelle, prepared another document describing a different set of rules that also addressed playing fields. The rules put forth by Adams, with some material from Grenelle’s document, were then compiled as the “Laws of Base Ball.” This last document, in Grenelle’s hand, was used at the Base Ball Convention held in New York City in January 1857, in which delegates representing local teams convened to establish a uniform set of rules. By agreeing to them, the players hoped to schedule more games and promote the sport. Adams served as president of the convention, which approved essential rules still in use today.