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    Your search for "baseball" returned 79 results.

  • Concord Oral History Program—Barbara and Frederic "Lanny" Day.

    …men were running from baseball games to events at school to jobs, flying all around the place, trying to take care of their grounds, and also many of them doing service to the town. I joined the Circle in 1965 and I think I’d never heard of it when somebody…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Charles W. Dee, Sr.

    …include parades, costumes, and baseball games. Everyone who played an instrument was in the band. We all seemed to have a high energy level when the kids were young. Today, the townwide ‘Picnic in the Park,’ for July 4th has reduced the scale of Conantum’s celebration.” Susan Hay, 12 Holden…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Charles W. Dee, Sr.

    …Brown Street. We played baseball and football there. We also played at the Percy Rideout playground on Laws Brook Road. Percy Rideout who was killed in World War I; he was the twin brother of my high school English teacher, Gertrude Rideout. We played hockey on Warner’s Pond primarily, skated…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Sally Sanford and Lowell Sandy Smith.

    …remember playing Little League baseball. And that was about the only sport in town, but that meant that everybody did it. So if you wanted to go see your friends, you’d meet them at the baseball field. So that was lots of fun. The other thing, though, that obviously a…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Dick Loynd.

    …So, I played football, baseball, and basketball. We didn’t have a hockey team because we had no hockey rinks although we had many ponds. We skated a lot during the winter. Fortunately growing up, where I lived, there was a pond right in the back of our house. You could…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—John Finigan.

    …active in the twilight baseball league, and it was a good league, there was a major cut by the recreation department for the simple things, like the bases, the balls, the bats, and a couple of gloves, for the returning veterans to continue to have this league; and it was…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Virginia and Dr. E.W. "Brud" Tucker.

    …spring we would play baseball, in the summer months we played baseball, football, and in the fall of course we played football, boys and girls. Eventually after we tired of that we would go to one of the boy’s houses or the girl’s home for crackers and tea and punch.…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Don Prentiss.

    …like a series of baseball diamonds and soccer field, and . . . . MK: Called? Called? DP: It’s called—. I just t—. I can’t—. Why can’t I remember it? Rideout. MK: Spelled? DP: I’d have to write it down. But anyways, Mrs. Rideout gave the property to the town…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Nat Arena

    …It’s almost like a baseball team or whatever, all the pieces could work for one year and then the next year, one little thing is different and that throws everything off and you have to change things. We could have the best plan in the book April 1. Everything is…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Kristin Emerson, Elizabeth Managhan, Mary Anderson.

    …there wasn’t any girl’s baseball. That really upset me. I played tennis. She plays tennis. You do too, don’t you? No. She plays golf. CK: She, being Kristen. KE: But that was your introduction was coming to Concord for high school, and that—it seemed— MA: It was wonderful. CK: Can…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Nick Boynton

    …my nephew and niece’s baseball games. We just—. It has enabled me to have a great lifestyle outside of work, which I think is most important. [30:25] MK: Very interesting. NB: Yeah. So. MK: So as you look at West Concord fifteen, twenty years down the road, and maybe you’ve…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Arthur Stevenson.

    …understand the rules of baseball can run a town meeting.” But that makes the point I think which is that the procedure, the technical side of running the town meeting, is relatively simple. You don’t need to know an awful lot. The method, the approach, the manner is far and…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Peter Alden

    …the—. You had one baseball team. You had one basketball team. And you had one football team. And you had one field hockey team. And if you were athletic enough or whatever, you made the team. And if you didn’t make the team, go do something else. Well now with…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Marion Thornton

    …river, tennis courts, and baseball field. And, it was a wonderful idea of two-acre zoning, where you owned one acre and then the other hundred acres of the hundred houses was open land. And it was beautifully laid out. So, it was a safe place for children to grow up,…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Walden Pond Remembered.

    …games, athletic contests, racing, baseball, football, motion pictures, dancing, camping, hunting, trapping, shooting, making fires in the open, shows and other amusements, such as are often maintained at or near Revere Beach and other similar resorts, it being the sole and exclusive purpose of this conveyance to aid the Commonwealth…

  • Concord Oral History Program—John Bordman.

    …proposal for a four-acre baseball/football/soccer field. I knew how to use a transit and do surveys and take a grid and mark it and I had a MIT guy help me and I bid and won it against the J.F. White Company. That was about 10,000 cubic yards of stone…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Debra Stark

    …to support the—the local baseball team and the local hospital—they're not getting money from Starbucks, they're getting money from every one of us, and what I say—I get about thirteen requests for donations every single day—every single day—and my standard response now is we never say no to our customers…

  • Renee Garrelick Oral History Program—Concord Independent Battery.

    …A and gun B baseball game, but that had certain difficulties, so that didn’t usually last more than an inning or two. Then we got ready for the parade, and then after the parade there usually was an informal meeting for those who could make it. Doug - On April…

  • Concord Oral History Program—Terry W. Rothermel.

    …treatment plant instead of baseball fields from airplanes, and it’s my favorite part of the Roman ruins is the sewers. My family is well aware of my interest in that, which comes from my profession when I was a practicing consultant in the environmental field. MK: Anything you want to…

  • Banshee to Bears

    …be forever. base-ball, adj. [baseball,] (2) Cour 7.261 6 Tender, amiable boys, who had never encountered any rougher play than a base-ball match…were suddenly drawn up to face a bayonet charge or capture a battery. Plu 10.309 9 The part of each of the class [of the Greek philosophers] is…

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