Town Ball
 


Town Ball

The Glory Days of Minnesota Amateur Baseball

Armand Peterson and Tom Tomashek

Table of Contents
Video about Town Ball

PRESS:
Fergus Falls Daily Journal
Minnesota Public Radio
Redwood Falls Gazette
Winona Daily News

Town Ball

$39.95 Cloth/jacket
ISBN: 0-8166-4675-9
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-4675-3

 

Relive the golden era of Minnesota’s town team baseball from 1945 to 1960.

Fondly remembered and celebrated throughout Minnesota, old-fashioned town team baseball was the glue that held a community together and generated a great sense of pride and passion among its residents. A love of baseball—and, of course, the desire to whomp the neighboring town’s team—spurred on players and fans alike. The game was intense and personal, connecting people from all walks of life at every hard-fought game.

Featuring individual stories of success and defeat, hundreds of photographs, and scores and statistics, Armand Peterson and Tom Tomashek chronicle the unfolding of a fascinating period of Minnesota baseball history—a span of sixteen years beginning in 1945 and the euphoric postwar days to 1960, the year before the Washington Senators became the Minnesota Twins. During this time Minnesota experienced a magical era of amateur ball, setting records in town participation and attendance that have not been matched since.

Along with the anecdotes, Town Ball offers an in-depth study of the era and examines the social and economic factors that contributed to the postwar boom and subsequent decline. It tells the stories of some of the more successful teams, such as Albert Lea, with five consecutive Class AA championships, and Warroad, a team with ten consecutive appearances—but no trophies—in the state tournament. And it includes profiles of many of the top players in Minnesota, famous locals like Dick Siebert, Paul Giel, and Bud Grant as well as the major-league talents of Bill Skowron, Herb Score, and Hilton Smith.

Here nostalgic baseball enthusiasts and history buffs alike will revel in the wide-ranging stories and compelling portraits of the players and fans—the people who made Minnesota town ball truly great.

“If you are one who loves the history and lore of amateur baseball in Minnesota, this is a book that you will enjoy.” —New Ulm Journal

“The book is a dream come true for the boyhood friends who grew up wanting to be a part of town team ball.” —Advocate Tribune

“For fans of baseball in Minnesota, Town Ball is filled with offbeat tales and pictures of the top players from 1946 to 1961.” —Austin Post-Bulletin

“No wonder most of the fans who remember their community team consider those years, between World War II in 1945 and the arrival of the Twins in 1961, the best in Minnesota baseball.” —City Pages, A-List Picks

“A wonderful book, a time machine full of unexpected surprises.” —Echoes from Lane Field

“This book examines a fascinating period of Minnesota baseball. Peterson and Tomashek not only recount the rich heritage of baseball, they have dug up fascinating facts about teams, towns, friendly (and more vociferous) rivalries, and memorable characters. This is a wonderful book.” —Frazee Forum

“This excellent book would be a super-choice.” —Albert Lea Tribune

“Baseball enthusiasts and history buffs alike will enjoy the wide-ranging stories in the book and compelling portraits of players and fans—all who made Minnesota town ball so great in its heyday.” —Fairfax Standard-Gazette

“Any baseball fan is encouraged to get Town Ball. It is entertaining, informative reading.” —Brownton Bulletin

“This is a delicious book. Run out and get it.” —Hometown Source

“This is a fascinating book.” —The Daily Journal

“A time machine full of many surprises.” —Farmington Newspaper

“For anyone who loves baseball when trousers were bloused and socks showed above the stirrup, the photos will carry you back to those halcyon days. The book is worth the price for the photos alone. For Armand Peterson and Tom Tomaschek, who lived and played it the town they write about, this book was a labor of love.” —NINE: A Journal of Baseball History and Culture

Armand Peterson is a retired engineer and a former town team player.

Tom Tomashek is a retired sportswriter for the Wilmington News Journal and a former town team player.

400 pages | 203 halftones, 7 line art, 2 tables | 8 x 10 | 2006

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Preface
Introduction

Part I. The Town Team Ball Era

The Boys are Back, 1945-1946
Lights on the Prairie, 1947
Amateurs Get Their Own Class, 1948
Swinging for the Fences, 1949
A Season to Remember, 1950
Cracks in the Foundation, 1951-1952
Two Strikes on Class AA, 1953-1954
Return of the Twin Cities, 1955-1956
Class A Loses Clout, 1957-1958
Final Innings, 1959-1960
The End of an Era

Part II. The Towns

Class AA: Minnesota's Big Leagues
Class A: Tough Competition
Class B: Small Towns with Big Dreams

Part III. The Players

Top of the Order: Four Icons of Town Team Ball
Minnesota's Major League Attractions
All-Around Athletes: Stars from Other Sports
Baseball's Nomads: Some Visited, Others Stayed
Family Acts: Brothers Take Center Stage
College Ringers: Summer Jobs Between Semesters
Minnesota's Own: Local Heroes and Metro Mercenaries

Appendix: State Tournament Highlights and Brackets, 1945-1960
A Note on Sources
Index