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Statewide Sports 6

Arkansas and the St. Louis Cardinals

A

Are you going to be a farmer?”
“No ma’am, a baseball player.”
“For the Cardinals?”
“Of course.”

– From A Painted House – By John Grisham

In the summer of 2018, we made a quick trip up to St. Louis to catch a Cardinal Baseball game. The Cards were fourth in a five-team division and it was a Tuesday evening. On that weeknight, with a team going nowhere, the Cardinals drew 43,000 fans to Busch Stadium. Despite finishing in the middle of their division, and not making the playoffs, the Redbirds would draw more than three million fans that summer and finished second in major-league attendance.

Jack Buck and Harry Caray 1960

I received a transistor radio for Christmas in 1959. It was about hand-sized, had a leather case, and operated on a battery that I soon realized needed a backup ready for emergency transplant. Some of my first radio memories were of a loud, heavily-accented voice, proclaiming that I was listening to the “Cod Nal Baseball Network.”  In the daytime, that network arrived in the Ozarks via KWHN in Fort Smith, and in the evening, from KMOX in St. Louis.

The distinctive voice on that broadcast was Harry Caray, one of the most iconic baseball broadcasters in American radio history. His partner was equally distinctive and celebrated Jack Buck. The Cardinals were not my chosen team, but they were the only game available on my radio in Ozark, Arkansas. I followed every game while claiming to be a Yankee fan. Like millions of my generation, I loved Mickey Mantle, but it seemed every adult I knew was a Cardinal fan.

What is it about the St. Louis Cardinals that unquestionably make them the chosen team of a majority of Arkansans? Some of it is a historical and cultural confluence of several factors from the first half of the 20th century. Arkansas was basically a rural state for much of the early 1900s and baseball was part of the summer routine. Three acres, a ball, and a bat were all it took to play, and every community had a town team. Arkansans from this era grew up in hard times. They endured a world war, a pandemic, a historic flood, and a great depression. Baseball was an escape and they loved the game.

Paul and Dizzy Dean 1934  

Rural baseball near Mountain Home AR 1931

By the 1930s, new and exciting technology brought baseball into their homes. Radio took them to the stage of the Grand Ole Opry and to Sportsman’s Park in St. Louis, places most would never see in person. They identified with the mountain music and they connected with the baseball team playing in St. Louis. Especially, since two of the most famous stars on those early 30’s Cardinal teams were Jay Hanna “Dizzy” Dean and Paul “Daffy” Dean, from Logan County, Arkansas. The Cardinals had won World Series Championships in 1926 and again in 1931, but the 1934 season would be the ultimate event in the romance between Arkansans and the St. Louis Cardinals.

Arkansas country boys were prominent from major league baseball’s beginnings, but at no time was this extraordinary success more evident than in 1934, when one of the nation’s most rural and least populated states produced some of major league baseball’s most celebrated stars. Dizzy Dean was voted the Most Valuable Player in the National League. Waldo, Arkansas’ Travis Jackson finished fourth, Paul Dean was ninth, Montgomery County’s Lon Warneke finished thirteenth in the voting, and Arky Vaughan from Madison County, was twenty-third. Over in the American League, Schoolboy Rowe from El Dorado was fourth in MVP voting and Yankee catcher and White County native Bill Dickey batted .322 and was named to the American League All-Star Team.

The rowdy, impetuous, and talented 1934 version of the Cardinals was tagged with the nickname, “Gas House Gang.” Their accomplishments and rough-and-tumble ways endeared them to their 1930’s fan base and secured their place in Cardinal history. They scrambled to the pennant on the last weekend of the season with the Deans winning the last three games. Our great-grandparents were listening, and Arkansas was indeed Cardinal Country.

Dizzy Dean, Schoolboy Rowe, and Paul Daffy Dean

The 1934 World Series between the Gas House Gang and the Detroit Tigers was billed as the matchup of Arkansas pitching stars, and the first three games played exactly on script, with Dizzy Dean, Schoolboy Rowe, and Paul Dean trading pitching victories. Unfortunately for Rowe, his win took 12 innings and 132 pitches to come to a 3 – 2 conclusion. He was never as sharp the rest of the series and the Cardinals prevailed in seven games, with Dizzy Dean pitching an 11 – 0 shutout in the finale. The Gas House Gang had finished the dream season and caught the imagination of baseball fans everywhere, perhaps nowhere more than in the home state of the Deans, and Schoolboy Rowe.

Few Arkansas fans saw the Gas House Gang in person, but they talked about them like they knew them personally. The games and their conversations about them helped Arkansans through some tough times. They never saw Sportsman’s Park in St. Louis, but they imagined what it looked like. It was green and symmetrical, not unlike the converted cow pasture where they played on Sunday.

They had never seen Dizzy and Paul in person, although most knew someone who had. They knew Diz was tall and lanky, with a shock of unruly dark hair. His uniform didn’t fit quite right and he had a quick country grin. A lot of young men in their community looked like that.

Stan Musial 

Slaughter scores winning run in 1946 World Series

In the 1940s, Cardinal fans, including those in Arkansas, fell in love with a line-drive-hitting first baseman named Stan Musial. Stan “The Man” played more than 3,000 games as a Cardinal and remains the most beloved Red Bird of all time. He helped Cardinal fans through a world war and teamed with a hard-nosed throwback named Enos “Country” Slaughter to win three World Series.

Some tried to copy Musial’s batting style, left-handed, in an awkward slouch, with his bat pointed straight up. They had seen it on the radio. Our grandpas told us about Musial’s heroics and Slaughter’s mad dash from first base to score the winning run in the 1946 World Series. After all, they were there, listening on the radio.

Lou Brock 

Bob Gibson

Dick Hughes

The 1960s radio generation did not have to see Lou Brock steal 888 bases as a Cardinal, the radio broadcast vividly described the Arkansas native disrupting the opposition with his speed. They heard Harry and Jack describe Bob Gibson’s intimidating presence, before finally getting to see him win two championships on TV. In 1967, local fans celebrated Stephens, Arkansas’ Dick Hughes’ amazing rookie season. Forced into the rotation by injury, Hughes went 16-6 and was instrumental in the championship season.

In the last month of the profoundly trying 2020 season, the Cardinal Nation and major league baseball lost two of the game’s all-time greats with the passing of Lou Brock and Bob Gibson.

Regardless of Arkansas baseball fans’ allegiance to today’s St. Louis Cardinals, the Red Birds are culturally and historically the Arkansas team. They are the team of our great grandfathers, and the legacy of baseball tradition found deep in the roots of our rural past. The stories are fading and somewhat muddled in the retelling. But they remain not only stories about baseball, but also about our heritage.

If you think Clayton Kershaw is tough you should have seen Bob Gibson!

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Jim Yeager is a baseball historian who resides with his wife, Susan, in Russellville. A member of the Society for American Baseball Research and the Robinson-Kell Arkansas Chapter of SABR, Yeager is a frequent presenter on the history of rural baseball in Arkansas. His book titled Backroads and Ballplayers features stories of more than 50 rural Arkansans who played professional baseball in the first half of the 20th century. More information on Backroads and Ballplayers – www.backroadsballplayers.com

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6 responses to “Arkansas and the St. Louis Cardinals”

  1. Jim Yeager Jim Yeager says:

    Message from the St. Louis Cardinals Front Office:
    Very cool article. Thank you so much for sharing and please send our love to all of the Arkansas fans!

  2. Jim Yeager Jim Yeager says:

    From the St. Louis Cardinals’ Front Office:
    Very cool article. Thank you so much for sharing and please send our love to all of the Arkansas fans!

  3. […] Mountain View to Springfield to try out for the minor league Springfield Cardinals. The big league Cardinals soon had Mays in their long-range pitching plans. Arm problems reduced what looked like a […]

  4. […] League in the Kansas City area. Davis was playing with Maryville in the BJL in 1941 when the Cardinals discovered him and offered him a […]

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  6. Stephen Nakdimen says:

    What was the first western Arkansas radio station to carry Cardinal baseball?

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