Little League Baseball
is a microcosm
of American history, filled with countless anecdotes, good fortune,
adversity, and hope.
In 1947, when the
first Little League Baseball World Series was played, there were seventeen
teams in two states. Since then, Little League has achieved global recognition
and has touched the lives of children and families in more than one
hundred countries.
The World Series
is the culmination of dedication and teamwork in more than 16,000 games
ending in a sixteen-team tournament in Williamsport, PA.
The Little League
Baseball World Series remembers the history of the tournament and its
role in bringing together communities. More than 2,500 spectators witnessed
the first championship game in 1947, when the Maynard Midgets took home
the trophy, and the results were printed in newspapers around the country.
Now, millions more tune in to ABC's Wide World of Sports and ESPN for
live coverage of the final game. Little League Baseball has enriched
the lives of more than 30 million boys and girls who have worn a Little
League uniform.
Well-known figures
such as Derek Jeter, Kevin Costner, and Pres. George W. Bush were all
Little League players. The Little League World Series celebrates this
rich baseball history and the best teams the leagues has produced through
the years.
Robin Van Auken
is a
freelance writer and owner of The Omnibus, an editorial agency promoting
and mentoring writers, photographers, individual artists and musicians.
She too has served as a Little League volunteer sponsor, team mom, vice
president, and concession-stand worker.
Her educational background includes degrees in mass communications
(associates/St. Petersburg College) and anthropology/historic archaeology
(bachelor's and master's/University of South Florida).
She has been a professional writer for 25 years, writing, corresponding,
or editing for newspapers in Florida and Pennsylvania. she married Lance
Van Auken. They have two children. The couple live in South Williamsport,
Pennsylvania, in the shadow of the Little League World Series stadium.
Each year, more than 40,000 people gather in their "backyard"
to attend and enjoy the series.
Lance was a Little League player from the ages of 7 to 18. Since 1980,
he has served as a Little League volunteer in such capacities as umpire,
manager, coach, and league vice president. A sportswriter for 11 years,
he is presently employed by Little League Baseball as director of media
relations and communications, but he still volunteers as a Little League
umpire.
Together, they are the authors of Play
Ball! The Story of Little League Baseball, a book that charts
Little League's history from the earliest days and shows how, in many
respects, its history parallels America's history: isolation in the
beginning; rapid expansion; a civil war of sorts, followed by reconstruction;
struggles over civil rights and gender equity; and foreign entanglements.
A microcosm of American society, Little League reflects, and is affected
by, cultural, political and historical trends.
Little League Baseball
is found in more than 100 countries and, at the height of the
season, Little League is played on 12,000 fields in the United States
alone. An estimated 360,000 children play on a typical day. The next
day, 360,000 more children play. A microcosm of American culture, Little
League's history is filled with anecdotes and stories of good fortune
as well as adversity.
In 1947, when the first Little League Baseball World Series (then
called the National Tournament) was played, only seventeen leagues existed.
All were Pennsylvania, except one, which hailed from Hammonton, New
Jersey. Although not much of a national series, the world soon noticed
the budding baseball program. Adults were enchanted and girls buzzed
around the adolescent ballplayers, a youthful mirror of the major leagues.
Soon, Williamsport, Pennsylvania, the former lumber center boasting
to be the home of more millionaires per capita than any other city,
had a new identity: Home of the annual Little League World Series.
In addition to coverage by newspaper writers, radio and television
journalists were eager to report on the young athletes and descended
upon the baseball complex. Williamsport's Community Trade Association
was proud of its river city, quaint and adorned with Victorian mansions
of a bygone era, and its dynamic boy's baseball program. City officials
opened their arms to the series and organized parades and dinners, shuttled
series participants to and from hotels, invited dignitaries (most often
their favorite baseball players), and reveled in the glory brought to
them by Carl Stotz and his cadre of loyal volunteers.
Visitors to the series have included baseball notables Cy Young, Connie
Mack, Jackie Robinson, Mickey Mantle, Tom Seaver, Jim Palmer, Nolan
Ryan and Orel Hershiser, as well as George Bush (a few months before
he became vice president) and his son, President George W. Bush, Vice
President Dan Quayle and Senator Bill Bradley. Entertainers, actors,
and best-selling authors also are attracted to the series and visits
have been made by Kevin Costner, Tom Selleck, Kenny Rogers and John
Grisham.
Grisham even penned a screenplay, directed by Hugh Wilson, about the
Little League World Series. His movie, "Mickey," is about an over-age
Little Leaguer who deceives all by pitching in the World Series. The
story is eerily reminiscent of the much-publicized fraud perpetrated
by a Bronx, New York league in 2001.
Founded in 1939, granted Federal Charter on July 16, 1964, Little League's
mission remains "to promote, develop, supervise, and voluntarily assist
in all lawful ways, the interest of those who will participate in Little
League Baseball."