“His line drive came right at me. When I reached for it the tip of my glove deflected it enough to
rise and sail over the fence. Good thing I didn’t lay a hand on that ball or it would’ve torn my
hand off.” So said an acquaintance of mine who was playing first base for the Blue Ribbon
Allstars when Enderlin Indies player John Foss came to bat. I’d seen how hard Foss could hit and
knew my friend was not exaggerating.
Baseball memories! For some people they’re the best. One can dive into the game’s rich history
or attend games for enjoyable entertainment. Now it’s spring and my thoughts have naturally
turned to baseball. Like many others I search for diversion from the sad state of political and
social affairs encountered in our daily news feed.
I claim a flimsy relationship to Hendrickson Field in Enderlin because, after all, Dr. Hendrickson
delivered me at the Opheim house one cold February morning in 1942. What better reason to talk
about the Indies and other teams in the area?
Organized baseball experienced difficulties early in statehood. For the most part farmers worked
long hours six days each week. Sundays offered their only day for recreational activities, but the
farm boys found a roadblock. North Dakota’s constitution banned sports that day, terming it
“sabbath breaking.” Even earlier, the move to ban it gained traction. Here is what the editor of
the Sheldon Progress wrote in 1885: “Some of our young gents, not having the fear of their
creator before their eyes. indulged in a match game of baseball last Sunday. Don’t do so any
more, boys.”
Sixteen years later, a later editor of the same paper, wrote this admonition: “Some of the Sheldon
young gentlemen who think more of worldly affairs than they do of spiritual things so far forgot
themselves as to mix-up with the hobo crowd Sunday in a ball game. Playing ball on Sunday is
shameful, sinful, and unnecessary and should not be allowed.”
He went on to say he was “reading his Bible but afterwards learned the score stood 5 for Wiper
and 4 for Bill Sorenson.” He must have felt obliged to criticize this Sunday game, (but wink,
wink) reported the score for interested readers. Finally, in 1917, the yoke was eased when
legislation removed the Sunday ban.
A player from this area named Cy Pieh, “Cy” because his pitch seemed to come out of a cyclone,
earned some national prominence. One noteworthy event came in his career while playing for the
Yankees in 1915. Babe Ruth, the starting pitcher for the Red Sox, hadn’t established himself as a
hitter yet, but this day he hit the first of his career 714 homeruns on a pitch Jack Warhop threw in
the third inning. Cy Pieh, a spitballer, came in as a reliever in the ninth inning, pitched five
scoreless innings, and received credit for the victory. Pitching spitballs wasn’t outlawed until1920.
For reasons unknown here, seventeen pitchers were grandfathered in and permitted to
continue using “the wet one” throughout the rest of their pitching days.
Lynn Nelson was born at Sheldon in 1905 and played major league baseball for all or part of
seven seasons with the Chicago Cubs, the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Detroit Tigers, from
1930 to 1940. A pitcher, his win-loss record was 33-42 with 255 strikeouts and an earned run
average of 5.25. Nelson’s nickname, “Line Drive,” seems to have come from either of two
reasons: he batted well, but he gave up lots of homeruns. Before concentrating on baseball, he
exhibited some prowess as a middleweight boxer and took pointers from his friend Charley
Retzlaff, the Leonard, ND, heavyweight who had fought Joe Louis.
The Society for American Baseball Research wrote about the time Nelson was asked about the
origin of his nickname. He said, “I would like to say it is because I hit so many line drives, but
the fact of it is that they tacked that name on me several years ago when I was a member of the
Chicago Cubs. The opposing batters had a habit, most annoying to me, of hitting liners past my
ears, and one of the baseball writers decided I should have a nickname along those lines.” As a
pitcher he was a good hitter with an overall batting average of .281.
Terry Bohn’s work of collecting and publishing facts and anecdotes about amateur baseball in the
state gives as good a picture of the sport that I know of. In one book, “Lots More Fun That Way,”
he alluded to a feature article in the Jamestown Sun that tried to explain the continued success of
the Indies. The number one reason given, “A core group of very good players stayed together for
many years.” Several of those team members have been named to the North Dakota Amateur
Baseball of Fame. A second reason given was the installation of lights in 1948.
Several pages of baseball history written by Carole Tosseth were included in the Enderlin
centennial book. The story includes a picture showing the installation of those lights which
brings back a memory. My dad liked watching games and took me along. The caption lists the
year of 1948 when the towers were raised. Then in August, 1949, a big dedication ceremony was
held, and if memory serves, I was there.
It’s necessary to draw heavily from other people’s experiences and collections of memories for
baseball writing. Various centennial books, Terry Bohn’s books, the Sheldon Progress, internet
sources, and first hand accounts like the one in the first paragraph all add to this writer’s meager
store of information. Do you have any to share? I would be willing to collect them and share
them with the audience that reads this paper. Email me at lynn.bueling@gmail.com. Anecdotes
make for interesting reading. Stories from any or all teams and communities are welcome and
contributors’ names won’t be used without permission.
We know other towns in the surrounding area fielded teams, too. Through the years, Sheldon
made a strong showing with some great players. McLeod wrote with pride of their baseball
history in their centennial book in 1986. Alice included pictures of teams in their 1975 jubileebook.
In fact, the makeup of the area Blue Ribbon League from 1950-1968 includes the nearby
towns of Alice, Sheldon, Buffalo, Chaffee, Fingal, Nome, Oriska, Tower City, and more.
No comments:
Post a Comment