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HISTORY
 
What is Little League Baseball?

What does "Little League" mean? Little League is an international baseball organization for children and teenagers with an age range from five years to sixteen years. It was started in 1939 in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, by Carl E. Stotz and Bert and George Bebble.

Millions of children around the world and in more than 100 countries can attest that baseball, softball and Little League are synonymous.

Little League is a program for youth. It is geared to provide an outlet of healthful activity and training under good leadership in the atmosphere of wholesome community participation. Little League Baseball is dedicated to helping children become good and decent citizens. It inspires them with a goal and enriches their lives towards the day when they take their places in the world. It establishes the values of teamwork, sportsmanship and fair play. Everyone is encouraged to teach children how to play and enjoy these great games.

Alexander Joy Cartwright was the chief codifier of the baseball rules from which the present rules were developed.

Every Little League age group has it's own set of rules, applicable for the age group. However, all of the basic rules of the game apply. As the players ages increase more regular baseball rules are added. When the players reach about age 12 or 13 most of the same rules applicable to playing Major League Baseball apply. When a player is 7 or 8 catching a batted fly ball is a major accomplishment, and running the bases often looks more like a track meet, so some of the more sophisticated rules wouldn't be appropriate to the typical skill level.

Each summer, the Little League World Series is played worldwide over an eight-week time span.

 

 

 

 

For 53 years, the Easton Little League has provided the children of Easton an opportunity to experience our national pastime first-hand as a member of a baseball team.  Our youngsters, through the generosity of our town residents and area businesses, gain more that just the skills of the game; they also share many memorable moments with their teammates, families and supporters.  More importantly, they learn what it means to belong to a team-the idea of a group working hard, depending on each others' efforts to achieve a common goal.  They establish friendships that may last a lifetime. 

 

 

Baseball Facts:

  

  • "Whoever wants to know the heart and mind of America had better learn baseball, the rules and realities of the game," wrote American author and historian Jacques Barzun.

 

  • Baseball rules, in general, have changed almost every year since 1845.

 

  • The balk rule is baseball's least understood rule, and it has been in the rule books since the nineteenth century!  

 

  • The Little League World Series involves over 37,000 games each summer.

 

  • Over 3 million youth play Little League baseball every year.

 

  • Baseball is the National Game of the United States, and is played in over 77 countries.  

 

THE OLD DAYS:

 

1860's

-Pitcher's delivered the ball underhand.

-Any ball caught on one bounce was an out.

 

1880's

-Umpires began calling strikes, but batters could request "high" and "low" pitches.

-A batter walked on ball six.

 

 

 

Little League's Roots:


Little League’s roots extend as far as baseball’s history itself – even into the 18th century. Soldiers of the Continental Army played ball at Valley Forge during the American Revolution. U.S. citizens played more modern versions of the British games of cricket and rounders through the early 19th century, often called "town ball." In the 1840s, New Yorker Alexander Joy Cartwright and his acquaintances played a game they called "base ball" that was very similar to the game we know today. (Stories later arose saying Abner Doubleday invented the game, but historians generally regard the stories as myths.)


On June 19, 1846, in a contest many historians consider the first scheduled baseball game, Cartwright’s New York Knickerbocker Baseball Club was defeated by the New York Baseball Club, 23-1, in four innings.
During the American Civil War, soldiers on both sides played baseball to pass the time between battles. In 1869, the Cincinnati Red Stockings became the first openly professional baseball team. By the end of the 19th century, baseball was known as "America’s Pastime."


As early as the 1880s, leagues were formed for pre-teen children in New York, but they were affiliated with adult "club" teams and did not flourish. Children often played "pickup" baseball in streets or sandlots instead, and with substandard equipment. Cast-off bats and balls were taped and re-taped, and catcher’s equipment in children’s sizes was almost nonexistent.


In the 1920s, the American Legion formed a baseball program for teen-age boys that exists today. American schools also started baseball programs. But there was still a void for pre-teen boys who wanted to play in organized games. Other smaller programs cropped up from time to time, but did not catch on beyond local areas.


In 1938, a man named Carl Stotz hit upon the idea for an organized baseball league for the boys in his hometown of Williamsport, Pennsylvania. Carl had no sons of his own, but he often played ball with his young nephews, Jimmy and Major Gehron, and wanted a way to provide an organized program for them.
Carl gathered several of the neighborhood children and experimented with different types of equipment and different field dimensions during that summer. The program still did not have a name, and no games were played.


In 1939, Carl and his wife Grayce took the experiment a step further, enlisting the help of brothers George and Bert Bebble and their wives, Annabelle and Eloise, respectively. Carl, George and Bert were the managers of the first three teams: Lycoming Dairy, Lundy Lumber and Jumbo Pretzel. John and Peggy Lindemuth soon joined the group, with the eight volunteers making up the very first Little League board of directors. Carl also talked to his friends in the community and came up with the name: Little League. His idea was to provide a wholesome program of baseball for the boys of Williamsport, as a way to teach them the ideals of sportsmanship, fair play and teamwork. The sponsorships (the fee was $30) helped to pay for equipment and uniforms for 30 players.

 

Since then, sponsorship of Little League both at the local league level and at the Headquarters level have helped to keep costs to parents to a minimum.


On June 6, 1939, in the very first Little League game ever played, Lundy Lumber defeated Lycoming Dairy, 23-8. Lycoming Dairy came back to win the season’s first-half title, and faced second-half champ Lundy Lumber in a best-of-three series. Lycoming Dairy won the final game of the series, 3-2.
In the following years, other programs emulating the first Little League sprung up. Boundaries for each league were established to ensure each league could thrive without worrying about neighboring programs "raiding" its players.


From those humble beginnings, Little League Baseball has become the world’s largest organized youth sports program. In the space of just six decades, Little League grew from three teams to nearly 200,000 teams, in all 50 U.S. states and more than 80 countries.
And the basic goal remains the same as it did in 1939, to give the children of the world a game that provides fundamental principles (sportsmanship, fair play and teamwork) they can use later in life to become good citizens.