It is February and it would be nice if it were warmer.
It is February and it would be nice if it were warmer. If it were warmer we could be playing stickball, a sport best played when the days are longer than now and being barefoot is more appropriate.
The rules of stickball are similar to baseball, but they are also unique to each stickball field and its geographical features. Uniform rules would not suit stickball.
Stickball is played on city streets. It is played in suburban schoolyards with cinder block backstops that are also used as schools. In the Midwest, it is played on the side of barns. Redwoods, 200 feet tall, are home plates in Oregon, with pine cones for balls and branches for bats. It has been said that in Idaho they play inside moving train cars, using potatoes. Chicago is blustery, so pitchers keep a bucket of water next to the mound to give some heft to their balls. And in the Sunshine State they use oranges, where hits are determined by the size of the explosion. Alaskans use ski poles and snowballs.
In Chilmark stickball is played at the Community Center against a plywood wall. The wall sits awkwardly between the post office and the Community Center’s suggestion of a baseball diamond. Some years rocks or bats, or a combination of the two, left holes in the green square that acted as its strike zone. There were decades when divots where the batter would stand looked like the deep grooves from car tires skidding out in soft sand. That was back when the game was more popular.
Stickball is played with a stick and a tennis ball. No one has ever played stickball in Chilmark while wearing shoes. It is a spring-to-fall sport. Winter is left for reading. In the spring the ground is colder, especially so after a frost, meaning stickball is played in the late afternoon. In summer it is better to swim during the heat of the day, therefore stickball is also played in the late afternoon. If you’re going to play stickball at the Community Center, it’s most convenient to swim at Lucy Vincent Beach where the surf can be rough, the rocks are frequent and some people are naked.
The sun sets behind the backstop, between a rock and a rosebush, above the post office parking lot and Stanley Larsen’s house, and Julie Flanders hidden cow pastures, and that sprawling property with the big white houses off Flanders Lane, and Everett Poole’s shop that smells of pipe tobacco, and the jetties and the bell buoy and Dogfish Bar where it eventually disappears into the ocean beyond the Aquinnah Cliffs (that are the same color as the sunset) and Devil’s Bridge.
Though if you are playing stickball at the Community Center you will only see the sun set through the oak tree canopies, where the rules have changed over the years. Keeping track of those changes fell on Peter Simon, who headed the Chilmark stickball league for many decades until his death not too long ago. As a player and commissioner there were some conflicts of interest, but Peter never abused of his power.
Each spring Peter would hold tryouts for the upcoming season by playing at the Community Center with a few friends consistently enough that inevitably some local teens would stroll over and ask Peter and his friends if they would ever consider letting them play in a game. Peter always gave preference to the ones who came prepared, the ones who were barefoot, by allowing them to tryout on the spot. They had initiative, he said.
If selected, the local teens could show up to the stickball field any afternoon around 30 minutes after Peter and his friends last swam in the ocean. If there weren’t enough regulars to field two teams then the local teens could play. If there were enough regulars the local teens had the option to stick around in case an injury occurred. The regulars were old so they were injured more often than the local teens who were teenagers and therefore more pliable.
If a game was knotted after the allotted six innings it would head into extra innings, which is when the pliable local teens were really valuable. The local teens could often be found hunting and pecking around the outskirts of the tennis courts looking for balls with more pop to use during their half of the inning at bat and for balls that looked like they had more pop but were actually flat for the innings when they would pitch.
As arms tired, elbows ached and tempers flared it was common for broomsticks to be substituted for heavier alternatives like broken shovel handles. The idea behind this being that one swing of the bat in a battle with a pitcher who themselves were battling the golden glow of the sunset could end the game — a walk-off home run in a game where there was no rounding the bases.
The shortest path to such salvation was in centerfield where the 10-foot vine covered fence surrounding the clay tennis courts stood. With clean contact a local teen could go from an alternate to regular in an instant and ride their bike home on the hills of South or Middle or North Road with a new found faith that everything might be all right after all.
Chris Fischer lives in Chilmark and New York city.

Comments
Back in the 60's we had a lot
mike SomewhereBack in the 60's we had a lot of softball games played there before the school and Post office were built.
There were 2 fields.
The one down in the corner near the Kurth's house (the adult game) and the other corner up near the library (the kids game).
Good times for sure.
This is just a gorgeous piece
Steven Fischer CambridgeThis is just a gorgeous piece of writing.
Thank you.
Chris’s stickball is a rural
Richard Barbieri Oak BluffsChris’s stickball is a rural variant of an ancient urban game played on city streets. Major differences in New York of the 1950s were a broomstick for a bat, a rubber “Spaldeen,” named for the Spalding company for a ball, and of course shoes. I note with pleasure that the Gazette’s spellcheck recognizes “Spaldeen.”One of the characteristics of the urban version was its ground rules. Manhole covers , one of which was home plate, were the markers of extra base hits, and appropriately distanced parked cars were the foul poles. As I recall two manholes was a triple and three a home run. Then there was stoopball, played on brownstone steps. The batter fired the Spaldeen at the steps, hoping for a “pointer” to hit exalctly at a step’s front edge and sending a deep fly. Other hits produced grounders, which could be hits if they eluded the fielder or fielders. The best thing about stoopball was it needed only two players, batter and fielder. Thanks for the memories.
Such a fun article! I love
ChristineK Oak Bluffs and BostonSuch a fun article! I love your description of the sunset up island...
I never played stickball but I have fond memories of playing tennis against the Chilmark Community Center team and running around the center, barefoot, with friends
Beautiful Chris (your dad's
Bonnie Berger Chilmark, BostonBeautiful Chris (your dad's genes?) - you need to keep writing!
In the outer boro of Queens,
Ken ChilmarkIn the outer boro of Queens, we did play in sneakers. With broomstick bats and “Spaldeens” pitching to a box drawn on a handball wall. We played every day of the year, rain, shine and snow where we had to shovel the courts. The most important thing is you had to pick your team,those being the great days in the 50’sof the Yankees, Dodgers and Giants all being local, know the batting averages to the last decimal and imitate the swings, lefty and righty, of the entire lineup.
Keep up the good writing.
Chris, so lovely a piece of
ANNE LUZZATTO DC til stickball seasonChris, so lovely a piece of writing!
Thank you!
Wonderful writing and great
Brenda Mandel Encinitas and west tisbury some summerWonderful writing and great ways to bat with branches sticks ,broomhandles, so many things and just live hitting tennis balls.
I and Harmony my cat play soccer kicking a tennis ball a cat soccer game and she is training to get in the goalie maybe will send photo of us kicking ,of Our tennis soccer game for readers.
A delightful taste of summer
Carolyn Guilford, CTA delightful taste of summer on this dreary February day.
i've been lucky enough to be
rob the roofer new jerseyi've been lucky enough to be at the right place at the right time and was asked by Peter to play because they were a player down. i said sure and had a great time with the guys and girls there that day. from there my friendship with the little man started. "ONE LOVE' miss you buddy.
Thanks..really enjoyed this.
R. Campbell West Tiz.Thanks..really enjoyed this.
Remember summer???! Thanks
skip OBRemember summer???! Thanks Chris - WAY overdue and time for more!
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