American Decades
Fundamentals of Basketball
Handbook
By: James Naismith
Date: c. 1909
Source: Naismith, James. Fundamentals of Basketball. St. Louis, Mo.: Rawlings Manufacturing Co., c. 1909.
About the Author: James Naismith (1861–1939) was born in Almonte, Ontario, Canada. His parents died when he was eight, and he was raised by his uncle. While a student at the Y.M.C.A. training school in Springfield, Massachusetts, while also serving as its director of physical education, Naismith was assigned to invent a game to occupy athletes during the winter. The resulting game, basketball, became widely popular, but its originator was largely unrecognized until just a few years before his death.
Introduction
In the late nineteenth century, sports flourished primarily when they could be played outdoors. Thus, although spring, summer, and fall had baseball, lacrosse, soccer, and football, there was no...
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1900's Sports Primary Sources
- "Boston's Champion Team"
- Bill Reid's Diary
- "General Health of Girls in Relation to Athletics"
- "Inter-School Athletics"
- "Baseball Scores Over Crap Games"
- "Athletes Aroused Over Point Scoring"
- "Travers Defeats Travis in Fine Golf"
- "Dorando Defeats Hayes in Marathon"
- "Why Sir Thomas Lipton Has So Much Trouble Challenging for the Cup"
- "Walter Camp for More Open Football"
- Fundamentals of Basketball
- "How to Play Shortstop"
- The Tumult and the Shouting: My Life in Sport
- My Life in Baseball: The True Record
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
