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    Your search for "baseball" returned 79 results.

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Ralph Hemenway.

    …to play ball, either baseball or football. When I was in high school, we played football but not as well directed as it is now. We had our own student-run athletic association, and we put on plays and dances to raise money to help pay the expenses of the football…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Jim Condon

    …eagles, etc., again for baseball and football games. Crest Street was the Sheehans area. They owned the Comeau property which is now Concord Greene. Up here on Central Street, Main Street was another area. Then you had the Cousins Field area. Bob Cousins owned that. They had greenhouses and grew…

  • Concord Oral History Program—J.T. Hsu.

    …Like what? JH: Like baseball when they were young, before that they probably you know they did some kids’ soccers, first thing they can learn, chase a ball around, that’s about it, and then oh, the other stages they did—. I can recall them like in high school they were…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Kevin Paul Dupont, Sports Journalism.

    …a beat be it baseball with the Red Sox, or hockey with the Bruins, or wherever they put me day-to-day, just to go cover the story, and either find some nuance that somebody didn’t have, or true news that somebody didn’t have. That’s really what I liked. MK: But it…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Charles Byron.

    …Scotia. We had a baseball team as did the other sections of town, Hubbardville, East Quarter, and others. As a young girl, my grandmother worked for the Ralph Waldo Emersons. After she got married, the Emersons asked her if she wanted a baby carriage. They had a carriage that had…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Faustin Feehan.

    …broke his fingers playing baseball, and so he had a man make him a stand up telegraph machine and he could do it then. I’ve been trying to find that telegraph machine for the last 25 years. I knew where it went at one time. It went to Enfield, New…

  • Anne and Edgert Newbury

    …have pickup games of baseball anywhere in town. There were mostly horses and buggies in those days but there was a streetcar that came from Arlington Heights, through Lexington and Bedford to Concord Center, up Sudbury Road, down Thoreau Street to Main Street, and on to Maynard. They came quite…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Concord High School Class of 1954 50th Reunion.

    …summer because that was baseball season and then came football season and we could not disturb him during that. After the game was over, then he would say, “Now, you can watch your programs.” Bob - We were one of the very last to get a TV and that was…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Life at the Concord Depot.

    …young people always played baseball and other games there. The Depot was the destination of shows coming to the grounds. I remember attending the circuses there each year and never forgot the time I went into a side show to see the snake charmer. I had nightmares for a long…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Kathleen Dee Horgan, Carolyn Peterson Holden and Dick Hayes.

    …the coach of the baseball team. We were very good because we had an excellent pitcher. Every neighborhood had its own playground so the children were all cared for. They weren’t just rambling around looking for things to do. It was run by the recreation committee, and Bernie Megan was…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Elmer Joslin.

    …did play football and baseball and hockey. We used to play hockey on the various ponds with two rocks as goals. Of course, we had neighborhood gatherings or parties. Fourth of July was a big day particularly on the river at the Concord Canoe Club at the Monument Street bridge.…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Jiro and Tama Ishihara. Japanese-American Experience.

    …going to build a baseball field. We actually dismantled a good part of a barbed wire fence on our side of the camp. Instead of 40 acres and a mule, we were given $25 and a one-way coach ticket to wherever you wanted to go as long it was where…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Elliott Lilien, Thirty-Five Year Teaching Career at Concord-Carlisle

    …making the Cincinatti Reds baseball team change their name, even though Gabe Paul, their owner said “I don’t know why we have to change. We had the name first. Let them change.” Also good is making Russian dressing into United Nations dressing. President Lincoln would be my nominee for greatest…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Richard Loughlin, Jr.

    …to the playground for baseball, etc. Rideout Playground was very close, within walking distance. Most of the kids would walk down there and certainly get involved in recreation department programs and play baseball and whatever other activities they had. Pleasant Street in West Concord was a nice, quiet, central neighborhood…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Richard and Diane Marshall.

    …Then there would be baseball or softball games and everyone would be involved. It was wonderful. We were actually in high school together, but I wouldn’t go out with Richie in high school because he was from West Concord. After I graduated, I met him at a party right down…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Thomas Ryan.

    …had always had fine baseball and track teams but had dropped football in 1908. Our total squad was 13 boys, I was selected to play center. Our uniforms were black jerseys with a small bit of padding on the shoulders and elbows, and the usual football pants. There were no…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Laurence Eaton Richardson.

    …pigeon shoot and a baseball game between the bachelors and the benedicts. Labor Day the Knights of Columbus took over with their big field day at the Cattle Show grounds at the end of Belknap Street. The building of the Middlesex Agricultural Society still stood for dining and dancing in…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Farnham W. Smith.

    …clubs had football and baseball teams, and they used to play each other and the neighboring small private schools. Mostly, however, the games were between the two clubs. Brother Ben and our double cousin Whitney Smith belonged to the BTC. I belonged to the YBC. I can remember being asked…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—George Kidder.

    …range. We had neighborhood baseball teams that used to play behind where the Springs live now which was the Newell Garfield house back in those days before Mrs. Garfield started The Tweed Shop. We played another team from down on Sudbury Road, and we would get together and have those…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Rebecca Purcell.

    …has at least three baseball diamonds for youth baseball. And then it has this wonderful alley of trees that come in. You approach it from Everett Street, and it’s a pathway, an alley, and it has all these wonderful trees on either side. And at the far end of it…

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