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- Laying out an amateur field
Laying out an amateur field - Lamar after passing Yale's Twenty-five-yard line
Lamar after passing Yale's Twenty-five-yard line - Lamar dodging the Yale tacklers
Lamar dodging the Yale tacklers - 'Jump in front of the ball'
'Jump in front of the ball' - Fielder catching a fly
Fielder catching a fly - First baseman catching a high ball
First baseman catching a high ball - First baseman taking a low throw by reaching forward
First baseman taking a low throw by reaching forward - First baseman taking a low throw on the long bound
First baseman taking a low throw on the long bound - First baseman throwing to second for a double-play
First baseman throwing to second for a double-play - Diagram of pitcher's curves
Diagram of pitcher's curves - Diagram of the field
Diagram of the field - Catcher throwing down to second
Catcher throwing down to second - An 'Out-curve' - the end
An 'Out-curve' - the end - Articles of a base-ball outfit
Articles of a base-ball outfit - Base-runner keeping on to third
Base-runner keeping on to third - Batting for fielders' practice
Batting for fielders' practice - Catcher running for a 'Foul Fly'
Batting for fielders' practice - Catcher signalling to pitcher
Catcher signalling to pitcher - An 'Out-curve' - the beginning
An 'Out-curve' - the beginning - Strike Zone
Strike Zone - John Harvey Kellogg
John Harvey Kellogg - Dancers dressed as wolves
Transformation Ceremony and Dancers Dressed as Wolves. In some of these dances, the attitudes of the animals whose totems were worn by the clans were imitated, and the spirits of the animals were supposed to have taken possession of the dancers. . - Bathing costume, from The Delineator, July 1884
- Bathing costumes from a supplement to The Tailor’s Review, July 1895
- How she came out
- How she went in
- The Bathe at Newport
- Scene at Cape May
- Scenes and Incidents on Coney Island
- The Santa Maria, the Niña and the Pinta
The Santa Maria, the Niña and the Pinta The most famous ships that ever sailed the seas The Niña, shown in the foreground, was the smallest of the three, but in her Columbus returned to Spain after the Santa Maria was wrecked, and the captain of the Pinta seemed tempted to prove unfaithful. - A Gloucester Fisherman
Such schooners as this are common in the New England fishing fleets. They are seaworthy and fast, and probably the men who sail them are the greatest seamen of our time. - An American Coasting Schooner
Square-rigged ships have largely disappeared because, among other things, their crews were large. These schooners, which sometimes have four or five masts, can be handled by small crews and consequently are able to continue to vie with steam. - The Savannah
The first steamship to cross the Atlantic.