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"Hawaii TV is Broadcasting Live Right Now"
Posted by Kaleo Farias on April 1, 2010 at 6:59pm
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Comments
One need to get out of the doldrum and understand Mason's in Hawaii: and the Queen. Alexander Cartwright master Mason died just before the overthrow, I strongly believe (assumptions) that had he lived the overthrow would not have happened.
There is an amazing history, that the Mason's call upon til' today especially after 911.
Cartwright was a member of the New York Knickerbockers, a club of young businessmen who regularly played Town Ball to escape the confines of their office lives and get some exercise after work. In 1845, Cartwright and a committee from his club drew up clear rules designed to convert Town Ball into a more elaborate sport. He called it Base Ball.
Cartwright actually wrote down his rules for Base Ball, and many of them are still fundamental parts of the game, including the concepts of: (1) fair and foul territory; (2) three strikes per out; (3) three outs per inning; (4) nine players per side; and (5) ninety feet between bases. He also outlawed the Town Ball practice of “soaking a runner,” which allowed a defender to hit a runner with the ball to get him out. Given the speed of a Roger Clemens fastball, that particular change was very good for today’s players.
The first baseball game played under these new rules took place on June 19, 1846 between Cartwright’s Knickerbockers and another squad known as the New York Nine. The teams reviewed the Cartwright Rules before the game, and then began the competition. One difference between the First Baseball Game and the current game is that the teams played until one squad reached 21 runs. There were innings, but they were not limited to nine. The New York Nine slaughtered Cartwright’s Knickerbockers 21-1.
Cartwright eventually moved to California in 1849 to chase the gold rush. On his journey across the country, he introduced baseball to every town he stayed along the way. He later moved to Hawaii and set up formal baseball leagues, which have been credited as the direct precursors of the Major Leagues.
In 1953, Congress officially recognized Cartwright as the inventor of modern baseball. Some baseball scholars now challenge this assertion, but to date, there is no proof of an earlier baseball game or an earlier delineation of the formal rules of the game. Unless and until such evidence is unearthed, it should be accepted that Alexander Cartwright invented baseball
Read more at Suite101: Who Invented Baseball?: Alexander Cartwright Invented Baseball and Played in the First Game. http://baseball.suite101.com/article.cfm/the_first_baseball_game_a_...