Union General Abner Doubleday graduated from West Point in 1842. Among the graduating 56 cadets that year, Doubleday was ranked 24th. Doubleday saw action at Gettysburg and the Peninsula campaign. He fell into the displeasure of General Meade at Gettysburg.
1707
1869
in the year 1840
Because they wanted to.
June 26, 1819.
Union General Abner Doubleday graduated from West Point in 1842. He ranked 24th in a graduating class of 56. Doubleday served at the Battle of Antietam. Legend has it that he invented baseball. Most historians say the legend is not accurate.
The story that a Abner Doubleday invented baseball in 1839 is easily proven to be complete hokum, and based ENTIRELY on the "recollections" of a person who died in an insane asylum. That person would have been five years old in 1839, when Doubleday was a first-year student at West Point Academy. There is no evidence that Doubleday left West Point that year, and getting leave to do so was almost impossible for a freshman at that time. Doubleday, in all his voluminous writings, never even implied he was involved in the development of any sports.
baseball has man myths to how it started but many people say that it stared in the year of 1839. and was invented by a man by the name of Abner Doubleday. he says that he was the one who invented baseball but not many people believe him.
Baseball was invented by Abner Doubleday in 1839 and played by civil war troops in the 1860's.The story of Abner Doubleday has been completely discredited by historians. It's a myth that Doubleday invented baseball. Historians have largely disproved the story of Abner and baseball. There are published accounts of the game being played in Ontario Canada prior to this date. Sporting Life magazine published an account of a game in Beachville Ontario, Canada in 1838, a full year before Doubleday was supposed to have invented the game.Variations of the game have been played for centuries in other countries.But the man credited with being the "father of baseball" was Alexander Cartwright. He helped create formalized rules of the game and helped promote it.
The only "evidence" that Abner Doubleday invented baseball in 1839 in Cooperstown is the "recollection" of Abner Graves, a person who was born in 1834 and died in an insane asylum. Doubleday's writings are voluminous but he never once mentions baseball in any form. And it would have been difficult for him to have invented the game in Cooperstown in 1839, simply he wasn't living there that year. Doubleday's closest friend does not remember him mentioning the subject of baseball once, even though Doubleday lived to 1893, when the game was already considered the national pastime. Alexander Cartwright's helped write down the "New York Rules" of a game that eventually evolved into baseball; but it is not settled (1) whether he himself invented the rules or simply wrote down what others have chosen nor (2) how much different was the game he described from previous games. Thus, Cartwright had SOMETHING to do with early baseball, but it is not clear WHAT; and there is not one shred of credible evidence that Doubleday had anything to do with any game.
There are many myths surrounding the origins of baseball. Many people believe that a young West Point Cadet named Abner Doubleday invented baseball one day in 1839 while in Cooperstown, New York. That is definitely not true. The Doubleday Myth was first created by a panel of "baseball experts" appointed to determine the origins of the game.The Commission based its conclusions on the testimony of one Abner Graves. History proved that Graves may not have been the most credible witness, however. Just a year later, Mr. Graves shot his wife, was declared criminally insane, and spent the rest of his life in a mental institution.Furthermore, when Doubleday died, he left behind thousands of personal letters. None of them mentioned baseball. It's hard to believe that if the man invented the game, he wouldn't have mentioned it at some point during his lifetime. It is now agreed that Abner Doubleday didn't invent baseball.In reality, baseball evolved out of several different "bat and ball" games such as English Rounders, Cricket, and American Town Ball that had been around for centuries. But there is one man who deserves the credit for establishing the fundamental rules of the sport and for organizing the first baseball game. He is Alexander Cartwright.
Yes, it's "America's Pastime" and was invented by Abner Doubleday in an unremembered late 19th century year.
The first "professional" baseball team, the Cincinnati Red Stockings, were formed in 1878, however, baseball "leagues" were in existence a few years earlier. A "professional" league, the National League was formed in 1876, and baseball records begin that year.
most likely when Babe Ruth got sold to the Yankees and staring hitting Homeruns like no tomorrow, and by no tomorrow, i mean he was hitting more homeruns that whole teams were, and, back then 50 homeruns, was ALOT! considering that players around that time usually got only 10 at most
The story that a Abner Doubleday invented baseball in 1839 is easily proven to be complete hokum, and based ENTIRELY on the "recollections" of a person who died in an insane asylum. That person would have been five years old in 1839, when Doubleday was a first-year student at West Point Academy. There is no evidence that Doubleday left West Point that year, and getting leave to do so was almost impossible for a freshman at that time. In 1791, the game of "baseball" was explicitly forbidden to be played within eighty yards of the city hall of Pittsfield. How that outlawed game compared to our present game is impossible to know. The first WRITTEN rules of a game, in which batters are out by being tagged with a ball (instead of being hit by a thrown ball, a basic rule of town ball), was done in 1845. These were called the "New York Rules." In 1857, a convention of teams playing these rules decided to make the game nine innings long, and a year later they added an umpire to rule that a batter would get three "warnings" about not swinging at a hittable ball. Within a decade or so, most teams were playing a game that could be recognized as the game today.
im 14 years old but a while ago i read about the inventer of baseball it was "Abner Doubleday" or so they say, he was a civil war general in the American civil war. 1863 is the year he invented it. noone for sure knows who did but his name comes up when someone asks the inventor of baseball. there are many other rules and i am going to be an umpire i don't want to type all the rules so ask me questions if u like about more of the game. thank you and i hope this helps you.