Card Games

Table GamesPub GamesGiant GamesBoard GamesOutdoorsTiles and DiceCard Games

 

Willow Rounders bat and ball

Rounders is the original traditional bat, ball and bases game. This is a Kashmir willow rounders bat with a rubber grip together with a leather match ball.

Approx dimensions: Length 460mm x width 50mm / weight 250gms - 300gms

Made in Britain

 

Rounders Bat and Ball

Click on the picture to enlarge.

Change to £
Change to C
US $ Typical
ETA in
wkg days
Add to
basket

Willow Rounders bat with rubber grip and Leather match ball

$21.09 3 + transit time
For an immediate quote & to confirm that an item will arrive before Christmas
simply add to basket & select your location.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Masters Traditional Games


 

Product Index
View Basket
About Us


Game Rules

 

Shortcuts
Go
Bowls
Chess
Skittles
Croquet
Mah Jong
Dominoes
Poker Sets
Fair Games
Party Games
Casino Games

Back to Rounders

Printable version of this page

 

 

 

 

 

The History of Rounders

The game of Rounders is indeed an old sport. Most texts quote that the earliest documentary evidence for the game is from 1744 when the game was referred to as Base-ball. This is a reference from what is probably the first ever book written for children, 'The Little Pretty Pocket Book' by John Newbery published in Massachusetts. But the earliest reference to Rounders found by this author is in in the English Wesleyan-Methodist Magazine of 1787 which mentions rounders as a children's game - so the term was in use by that time. The first known rules for the game of rounders were published in the "Boys Own Book" published in London in 1829.

The game, or something very like it may have been played several centuries prior to all this. There is an engraving in the Bodleian Library dated 1344 which depicts a woman about to throw (apparently underarm) a ball towards a chap wielding a large club which is thinner at the handle end and is not disimilar to a modern rounders bat. The description of the engraving does not mention any posts or bases so whether the game just involved hitting or whether running was also involved isn't known but if the game is the ancestor of any modern game, Rounders seems to be the most likely candidate.

In 1889 the Liverpool and Scottish Rounders Association was formed. The first official rules did away with the practice of putting a running batter out by hitting them with a thrown ball. The National Rounders Association was formed in 1943 and is still active today working particularly with schools promoting and encouragine play. These days, at competition level, Rounders tends to be played more by girls than boys.

To learn more about the history of Rounders, visit the Online Guide to Traditional Games.

 

All material on this site - © Copyright Masters Games Ltd.