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It is the perceived
notion that handball, exported so
successfully to America, made little
impact in Britain. In truth, the
game did take off in Britain and
very successfully too but little
contact was kept with the sport in
Ireland.
The earliest
reference to Irish handball was made
by the essayist Hazlitt in his book
"Indian Jugglers" in which
he compared the skill of the game to
that of the famous Bengali jugglers.
He wrote an obituary for John
Cavanagh from Cork whom he said was
the top player in England and could
take on any pair of players on his
own and scarcely give them an ace.
In Wales many of the emigrants from
Ireland came to work in the mines
and brought the game of handball
with them. Keith Richards of Swansea
told me that handball was played as
a street game all over the city up
to the 1960s. The small village of
Nelson in mid Glamorgan still has
the original three-walled court
built in the 1860s, the scene of the
Annual Welsh Championships and this
year the venue for the first
European One-Wall Games.
After Catholic
Emancipation in the early 1800s,
religious orders, banned until then,
returned to set up schools and
colleges in England. Ushaw College
in Durham was founded by monks from
the English College in Douai, France
and they brougnt the game of
handball back with them. How the
game got to France is another story
involving Irish soldiers in
Napoleon's army. The buildings at
Ushaw were designed by Pugin but he
is unlikely to have been responsible
for the large stark and functional
three-walled court that still
survives and was played in up to 10
years ago. Of dimensions 45' x 90'
with side walls running halfway down
the court it incorporated a small
hut or penthouse (obviously as a
shelter for the players). The
penthouse forms part of the court
for the purpose of play and a
winning shot can be made to the base
of its wall. Tony Murphy from
Scarborough told me that the court
(and a few smaller versions,
doubling as storehouses, with play
allowed off the curved ceiling) was
in constant use during his
schooldays in the 1950s. The College
Library yielded up a wealth of
information about the early days of
the game including a set of revised
rules dated 1835. These rules have
much in common with our rules as
presently constituted but there are
a number of interesting differences
(many of these differences were part
of the old Irish game).
1. The game involved
four on a side with each player
keeping his own quarter in the
handball 'place' as the court was
called.
2. Short balls could
be played but if missed the ball had
to be served again.
3. Two shorts were
allowed and a tell board a few
inches up the wall prevented 'kill
shots'.
4. Two aces were
awarded for the first winning serve
and there was a loss of two aces or
two hands for any side putting the
ball over the front wall.
5. Player must call
game ball at twenty or he was out.
6. A player may play
a hindered ball but if he misses it
the point is replayed.
The game spread to
many of the nearby mining villages
and was played against gable walls
up to the 1960s. Other schools in
England, especially Catholic schools
and seminaries, played the game
including Ampleforth College and the
King's School in Bruton, Somerset.
There must be many
more areas where handball was played
place but its place of origin
forgotten. If we find traces of this
handball activity in any other land
we should do our best to encourage
it so that the great Irish game can
become truly international. The
Fives associations in britain have
only recently become aware of the
`Irish connection' and many of their
members are enthusiatic to establish
links with our sport. They see the
simple form of handball,
"one-wall", as a game
playable by exponents of all the
handball codes and one that can
unite all in the "wonderful
world of hand played ball
games".
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