There are so many tales as to who is the real inventor of baseball but for some reason, despite not being accurate, the most told about is that of Abner Doubleday.
After all the back and forth talk it was finally seen that there really is no physical proof attaching the myth of Abner Doubleday with baseball. So as a result, those who were interested in finding out the story that holds water went out on their research and came up with a different fellow.
In the end all the due kudos have to go to a man named Alexander Joy Cartwright for the realization of the sport of baseball.
The biggest noticable piece to the puzzle comes from the fact that at the time when the sport came about, the most commonly spread games in those years were those brought by boat by the pioneers and pilgrims. These were accounted to be cricket and rounders.
Cartwright took the rules from rounders and refined them to make his all newly named game baseball. There are a lot of changes that were implemented long after he had created his version but a lot of the fundamentals were not discarded of.
Now that we have given the credits to the pioneers of baseball we have to turn our attention to the food that goes with it while we enjoy it.
At the top of this list of course has to be the world famous hotdogs. It never seems normal to be at the ball park without this snack in your hand but where did it all begin?
One of the emperial cooks was asked to come up with a dish that would not have any other competition and the hotdog is what he came up with. Snacks like peanuts and crackers eventually found their ways to the spectators as they were pretty convenient to have while on the stands.
See various other educational articles created by this same writer regarding subject matters including baseball footwear and baseball turf.
