There was hunting trapping fishing cricket and track sports and also rowing (Arnstein). Such games became increasingly common outside schools and universities during the mid-Victorian years, an era of athletic consolidation, bureaucratization, and regulation (Arnstein). They played golf tee ball and all kinds of fun sports. Such games became increasingly common outside schools and universities during the mid-Victorian years, an era of athletic consolidation, bureaucratization, and regulation (Arnstein). Thus began the British Open golf championship (1860), the Marquess of Queensberry rules for boxing (1867), the Football Association Cup (1871), the County Cricket Championship (1873), and the first World Tennis Championship at Wimbledon for men (1877) and women (1884) (Arnstein). Victorian years: cycling, swimming, cricket, golf, mountaineering, fencing, boxing, wrestling, skating, curling, ice-hockey, boating, yachting, carriage-driving, horse-racing, steeple-chasing, archery, falconry, shooting, football, track and field, billiards, tennis, racket-ball, fishing, and hunting (Arnstein). The sports they played we play today like fishing, and hunting we do it today but, we do it differently (Arnstein). We hunt to have fun and get food in the victorian era they only hunted for fun (Arnstein). Usually we play the sports in a club or in a proper way. Analogously, Women might be found …show more content…
In a world that had only limited methods of mechanically reproducing sounds in the home (such as musical boxes), hearing live music performed was a precious thing, to be cherished forever