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A player from the St. Croix team whacks a base hit during Sunday’s vintage baseball game in St. Peter.
Robb Murray / The Free Press


If you’re going to play baseball 1860s style, you’ve got to have a coin toss to see who will “strike” or bat first. On Sunday, St. Peter won the coin toss, but St. Croix won the war. Shown here are (from left) Ben Leonard, captain of the St. Peter team, umpire Bob Tholkes and Brent “Skinny” Peterson, captain of the St. Croix team.
Robb Murray / The Free Press


Published August 24, 2008 10:59 pm - St. Croix and St. Peter faced off in a different version of America's favorite pasttime - the 1860s, vintage version.

Vintage baseball hits home run
1860s version involves no gloves and a ball with hand-woven center

By Robb Murray
Free Press Staff Writer

ST PETER

It’s two outs, top of the first, when a slugger from St. Peter sees that meat ball coming right over home plate and he swings with all his might and he connects.

Thwack!

The lined shot whistles down the third base line where a man from the St. Croix team, dressed like the guys in the baseball episode of “Little House on the Prairie,” reacts with cat-like quickness and snags the ball right out of the air.

As the St. Croix team members trot to their dugout, a voice from the St. Peter team says it all: “Uh-oh. We’re in trouble.”

Yep, they were in trouble. But not “real” trouble. Just the kind of trouble a team finds itself in while being outmatched in the gentlemanly game of vintage baseball.

St. Croix’s team came down for a game Sunday, the second straight year they’ve done so. For those who played it was a good day to enjoy the amazing weather and a version of the American pastime that’s a little different from the baseball we’re used to.

Vintage, 1860s-era baseball is played without gloves. When players catch a pop-fly — or a line drive, obviously — they do so with their bare hands. The ball is different, too. It’s softer and the core is hand-woven.

When a fielder catches a ball after one hop, that player is out. And as a runner bolts to first base on a grounder, he better stop and stand on that base if he makes it. There was no overrunning first base in the 1860s.

Pitching is underhand, and there are not called strikes, balls or walks. A batter, which is actually called a “striker” in this game, gets three cuts, and pitchers try to accommodate a batter’s pitch-location preference, a far cry from the modern game.

Politeness is everything. Calls of “Well done,” and “Well struck!” are heard often.

Rule quirks aside, the participants play because it’s fun and it gives them a chance to get outside and have a good time.

It also lets people get a taste of what baseball was like long ago.

“Being director of the (Nicollet County) Historical Society, I see how a lot of people feel that history isn’t relative to their lives,” St. Peter team captain Ben Leonard said.

St. Peter doesn’t have a vintage team right now, but Leonard thinks they’d be able to field one. Leonard actually plays occasionally on the St. Croix team he faced Sunday.

“It’d be fun to play the teams from around the area,” he said.



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