[Ads-l] Antedating "hat trick" (three wickets in cricket)

dave@wilton.net dave at WILTON.NET
Fri Aug 23 11:11:21 UTC 2024


Yes, it sounds like it could be one of the CD-ROM (or similar) products. At first, I thought it might be a misnaming of one of the Additions Series, but on further thought I don't think that's it. (If I didn't sell them prior to my moving to Canada in 2010, my copies would be boxed up in the basement, and I'm too lazy to look for them.)
 
If you Google "Extended Oxford English Dictionary" (in quotes) you get a number of media citations to it. Most are in reference to "hat trick," but there are ones for other terms as well. So it doesn't look like a misnaming by one reporter/editorial team and seems to have been an actual product. Many of the citations make particular care in specifying the "1999 edition," which makes me think it was some kind of software.
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: "Stanton McCandlish" <smccandlish at GMAIL.COM>
Sent: Friday, August 23, 2024 4:51am
To: ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
Subject: Re: [ADS-L] Antedating "hat trick" (three wickets in cricket)



"Extended Oxford English Dictionary 1999 Edition" sounds to me like one of
the various CD-ROM products of that era. I used to have one or another of
those (for MS Windows, I think) back in the days of lots of optical media.
That might explain it being missing from WorldCat. The alleged title may
also simply be wrong. In particular, "extended" might be a descriptive
label tacked on by an imprecise WP editor. I spend a fair amount of time
doing citation cleanup there, and people fudge the titles of things all the
time, in attempts to be "helpfully" descriptive instead of
accurate, without understanding that such antics actually make it harder to
find and examine the source.


On Sun, Aug 18, 2024 at 7:50 PM ADSGarson O'Toole <adsgarsonotoole at gmail.com>
wrote:

> Thanks for sharing your excellent article and the valuable September
> 12, 1858 citation naming cricketer Stephenson. Apologies for
> overlooking your article.
>
> Further below I will present a July 7, 1858 citation which further
> illuminates / complicates the origin tale for "hat trick".
>
> The Wikipedia article for hat-trick has a footnote which points to the
> same September 1858 match with Hallam as the citation in your article.
> (Oddly, I cannot find "Extended Oxford English Dictionary" in
> Worldcat or Google Books.)
>
> [Begin excerpt from Wikipedia Hat-trick article]
> Extended Oxford English Dictionary 1999 Edition : "It came into use
> after HH Stephenson took three wickets in three balls for the
> all-England eleven against the twenty-two of Hallam at the Hyde Park
> ground, Sheffield in 1858. A collection was held for Stephenson (as
> was customary for outstanding feats by professionals) and he was
> presented with a cap or hat bought with the proceeds."
> [Begin excerpt from Wikipedia Hat-trick article]
>
> While exploring this topic I searched the British Newspaper Archive
> for citations in the pertinent time period in which a cricketer who
> accomplished a feat of excellence was awarded either a bat or a hat.
>
> Here is an instance from a cricket match that occurred earlier in
> 1858. The number three was used to describe the feat:
>
> Date: July 7, 1858
> Newspaper: Evening Mail
> Newspaper Location: London, England
> Article: Cricket: The County of Kent (With Caffyn, Jackson, and G.
> Parr) Against England
> Quote Page 3, Column 3
> Database: British Newspaper Archive
>
> [Begin excerpt]
> No great score was made on either side, but in the second innings of
> Kent the wickets fell so rapidly that, in one over, Stephenson, by
> three successive balls, disposed of three of them, thereby, according
> to custom, claiming a new "hat," which was awarded.
> [End excerpt]
>
> The phrase "according to custom" used in the excerpt above suggested
> that this type of award had occurred in the past.
>
> I was able to find examples starting in 1857 in which the award was a
> bat. Perhaps in a nearby parallel universe people are talking about
> "bat tricks":
>
> Date: May 16, 1857
> Newspaper: Jackson's Oxford Journal
> Newspaper Location: Oxfordshire, England
> Article: Cricket
> Quote Page 5, Column 5
> Database: British Newspaper Archive
>
> [Begin excerpt]
> The former, on the first day, bowled Lockyer, Martin, and Gibson, in
> three successive balls, for which he was presented with a new bat, by
> the players on the ground.
> [End excerpt]
>
> Here is another citation in 1857 in which the award was a bat:
>
> Date: October 8, 1857
> Newspaper: Morning Advertiser
> Newspaper Location: London, England
> Article: Cricket
> Quote Page 7, Column 4
> Database: British Newspaper Archive
>
> [Begin excerpt]
> The event of the evening was the presentation, by the President, of
> two handsome silver-mounted bats, with appropriate inscriptions, to
> Mr. J. Wallace and Mr. Lovell; to the first-named gentleman for having
> bowled three wickets with three consecutive balls, and to the latter
> for his general good and steady play.
> [End excerpt]
>
> The July 7, 1858 article in the "Evening Mail" was reprinted in "The
> Canterbury Journal" on July 10:
>
> Date: July 10, 1858
> Newspaper: The Canterbury Journal
> Newspaper Location: Kent, England
> Article: The County of Kent (With Caffyn, Jackson, and G. Parr) Against
> England
> Quote Page 2, Column 6
> Database: British Newspaper Archive
>
> [Begin excerpt]
> No great score was made on either side, but in the second innings of
> Kent the wickets fell so rapidly that, in one over, Stephenson, by
> three successive balls, disposed of three of them, thereby, according
> to custom, claiming a new "hat," which was awarded.
> [End excerpt]
>
> On July 11, 1858 the article was reprinted again with a crucial
> modification. The word "hat" was changed to "bat" without quotation
> marks:
>
> Date: July 11, 1858
> Newspaper: The Era
> Newspaper Location: London, England
> Article: The County of Kent (With Caffyn, Jackson, and G. Parr) v. England
> Quote Page 13, Column 3
> Database: British Newspaper Archive
>
> [Begin excerpt]
> No great score was made on either side; but in the second innings of
> Kent, the wickets fell so rapidly, that, in one over Stephenson, by
> three successive balls, disposed of three of them, thereby, according
> to custom, claiming a new bat, which was awarded.
> [End excerpt]
>
> In October 1958 a newspaper in Sheffield, England mentioned the award of a
> bat:
>
> Date: October 11, 1858
> Newspaper: The Sheffield Daily Telegraph
> Newspaper Location: Yorkshire, England
> Article: LOCAL & GENERAL INTELLIGENCE
> Quote Page 2, Column 5
> Database: British Newspaper Archive
>
> [Begin excerpt]
> We hear that the Chatsworth club will present Strutt with a bat,
> having bowled three wickets in three consecutive balls.
> [End excerpt]
>
> In 1959 in London the award was a hat:
>
> Date: July 15, 1859
> Newspaper: The Morning Advertiser
> Newspaper Location: London, England
> Article: Cricket: United Master Butchers' Club
> Quote Page 6, Column 6
> Database: British Newspaper Archive
>
> [Begin excerpt]
> One peculiar feature in the play was Mr. Absolon obtaining three
> wickets in three successive balls, for which feat he was presented
> with a guinea hat.
> [End excerpt]
>
> Garson
>
> On Sun, Aug 18, 2024 at 7:57 PM dave at wilton.net <dave at wilton.net> wrote:
> >
> >
> > Not quite "hat trick," but there is this precursor from a few years
> earlier:
> >
> > “Cricketer’s Register.” Bell’s Life in London and Sporting Chronicle
> (London), 12 September 1858, 3. Gale News Vault.
> >
> > "The next four wickets fell to H. Stephenson without troubling the
> scorers; he took three wickets in three successive balls, entitling himself
> to a new hat, which was presented to him by the Eleven."
> >
> > [ https://www.wordorigins.org/big-list-entries/hat-trick ](
> https://www.wordorigins.org/big-list-entries/hat-trick )
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: "ADSGarson O'Toole" <adsgarsonotoole at GMAIL.COM>
> > Sent: Sunday, August 18, 2024 5:30pm
> > To: ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
> > Subject: [ADS-L] Antedating "hat trick" (three wickets in cricket)
> >
> >
> >
> > A friend asked me to explore the origin of "hat trick" in the sports
> > domain. The Oxford English Dictionary lists the magic trick sense of
> > "hat trick" and presents an excellent 1840 citation. Next, the OED
> > describes the cricket sense of "hat trick":
> >
> > [Begin OED excerpt]
> > 2.a. Cricket. A feat accomplished by a bowler in taking three wickets
> > with three successive balls.
> > Originally with reference to the reward of a new hat, or an equivalent
> > prize, given to the bowler by his club for the achievement.
> > [End OED excerpt]
> >
> > The OED presents an 1868 citation for "hat trick" in the cricket
> > domain. Below is an 1865 citation. This citation is already mentioned
> > in the pertinent Wikipedia article.
> >
> > Date: June 23, 1865
> > Newspaper: The Chelmsford Chronicle
> > Newspaper Location: Essex, England
> > Section: Supplement to the Chelmsford Chronicle
> > Article: Cricket: Grays v Romford
> > Quote Page 9, Column 6
> > Database: Newspapers.com
> >
> > https://www.newspapers.com/article/essex-chronicle-hat-trick/153552692/
> >
> > [Begin excerpt]
> > When the fourth wicket went down for 60 the excitement was intense.
> > Grays, however, had yet a man equal for the occasion, and Mr. Biddel
> > going on at W. Sackett's end, with his second ball bowled the Romford
> > leviathan, Mr. Beauchamp, and afterwards performed the hat trick by
> > getting three wickets in the over.
> > [End excerpt]
> >
> > Garson
> >
> > ------------------------------------------------------------
> > The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
> >
> > ------------------------------------------------------------
> > The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
>

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