S1
S1
The first wooden baseball bat was made in the 1850's
I'm not a baseball expert, but based on the name, I'm pretty sure a bamboo baseball bat is made of bamboo. =S
a baseball bat use it`s hittig skills when on a game or on a fight.
I think in the 1970's :-D
This really is a question with no answer. The question also leaves out -10's, -8's, and -5's. You want a bat that you can swing fast enough and be comfortable with. A heavier bat will carry itself better when you hit the ball, ecspecially if you can get good bat speed. That's the reason people get heavier bats. Just get a bat that you can swing good but it should not feel like a twig. This really is a question with no answer. The question also leaves out -10's, -8's, and -5's. You want a bat that you can swing fast enough and be comfortable with. A heavier bat will carry itself better when you hit the ball, ecspecially if you can get good bat speed. That's the reason people get heavier bats. Just get a bat that you can swing good but it should not feel like a twig. the lightest -3 is 28 ounces
It was made in the 1800's and it was made in New Jersey.
A baseball bat
Carlos Urbano has written: 'World Series baseball' -- subject(s): Baseball, History, Records, World Series (Baseball)
AnswerJohn HillerichAnswerThe modern baseball bat was experimentally developed over a period of time in the 1850's by Dr Daniel L Adams, president of the Knickerbockers team in New York City, the founders of modern baseball.
Ernest Lawrence Thayer has written: 'Casey at the Bat on' 'Casey at the bat' -- subject(s): Baseball, Poetry, Juvenile poetry, American poetry, Children's poetry, American, Baseball players, Juvenile fiction, Children's poetry 'Casey at the Bat / Ernest Lawrence Thaye'
H&B Craker Jack Baseball BatThe Craker Jack baseball bats are commonly found on eBay selling for about $40.00 in excellent condition. Size and condition are important on putting a value on the bat. The Craker Jack was an inexpensive kids baseball bat carried for years in the Hillerich & Bradsy line of store model retail bats. The Cracker Jack model has nothing to do with the caramel coated popcorn snack as some people believe. If anything the naming of the bat was a marketing ploy to sell bats off of the popularity of the snack. The bats were being sold by H&B from about the 1920's through the 1950's, and maybe into the 1960's. The older bat have a question marlike engraving on each side of the center label.