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Handball’s Sagebrush Champs: Growth of Handball in Montana
By Marcia Melton
Copied from
Volume 36, published in 1986, spring issue (2),
pages 62-71
Handball
is a game that requires individuals to develop physical
agility, foresight, quick reaction time, and eye-to-hand coordination. No team
sport this. No waiting on the bench. No reassuring huddling for group decision
and planning. No time out for reinforcements. The game requires only a small
hard rubber ball, a good pair of sneakers, and a concrete-walled court where
the ball can ricochet at high speed as the players attempt to control its
direction.
Historians of the sport trace
it from the early Egyptians who played the game four thousand years ago. It is
“the oldest of all games played with a ball”: the Princess of Corcepa,
described by Homer, played handball with her maidens for amusement; Roman
soldiers introduced the game as they conquered their way across Europe; Celts
played the game on lonely, windswept islands; courtiers in Italy, France, and
Spain played the fashionable game of “palm play”; at Eton, a fine handball
player was “a person of distinction”; and nineteenth century Irishmen who had
traveled to County Galway for tournaments later searched for cement sidewall in
Brooklyn so they could play “fives” (five fingers to the hand). By the
twentieth century, handball had become so popular in
Montanans first became
interested in handball in the early 1900s. Father John O’Kennedy, a priest from
Bawn Nenagh,
Father O’Kennedy encouraged an
interest in handball in each place he lived. His interest in the game extended
to his lobbying efforts for inclusion of a handball court in the original plans
for St. Anthony’s Church in
Handball had had a curious
history in the
Phil Casey retired in 1900, and
handball as a professional sport fell into obscurity. It was at about this time
that amateur handball was getting its start under the sponsorship of the
Amateur Athletic Union (AAU), which had been founded in 1888. By 1900, amateur
handball was played “in almost every important center in this country.” Among
those centers soon to be counted were
Under Father O’Kennedy’s
tutelage,
Handball
got its start in
It was also in 1919 that the
first National Handball Championship in the
Although
The Great Falls YMCA hosted the
1920 tournament, which included contests in both handball and volleyball. The
two tournaments were held as one annual event until 1925, when there were not
enough volleyball teams entered to provide a competition. The handball
tournaments began to stand on their own as state-wide events.
In 1920, the Butte Miner reported that Butte would go
to Great Falls “with an additional aim to bring the 1921 tourney to this city.”
The first two tournaments had been held in Helena and Great Fall, and Butte
wanted to make its own contribution to handball history. The Butte players
accomplished their goal, and in 1921 tournament play was held at the Butte
YMCA. Dr. R.C. Mohahan, the “grand old man of handball in Montana,” was from
Butte, and the list of Butte contenders soon grew long and respectable. Butte
began to capture many state titles with such quality players as Fred Emmett,
Fred Ackerman, and Ray Gallant. Their efforts were supported by P.F. “Doc”
Doherty, Tim Connolly, Tom Crawley, Quong Huie (“the little Chinese flash”),
“Pidgey” Noonen, Frank Sullivan (“an expert from the Quartz street fire
station”), Joe McCarthy, Joe Harrington, and Gerald Willard.
The Dillon group continued to
practice in Melton’s barn, hoping for suitable facilities to be developed at
the Normal College so the state tournament could be held in the Beaverhead
Valley. In both 1926 and 1931, Dillon players bid for the tournament but was
unable to host it because their facilities were not in shape for state play.
But this did not deter the small, vigorous, and vocal band; they attended every
state tournament, bringing hearty spirit and determined strength to the
contests. Melton, Hartwig, and Russell Frieberg, the first players in Dillon,
were especially responsible for encouraging the sport among younger men. They
brought strong groups of younger players to the meets-Monte Melton, William
Boone, William Bates, Jack Gilbert, and Roy Forrester, Jr. competed-and
encouraged the establishment of a Junior’s Cup in 1930.
While
Helena, Great Falls, Butte, and Dillon were the dominant centers of handball in
the state, during the mid 1920s players in other Montana towns traveled to
where handball courts and good competition were available. They also began to
establish handball in their own towns, Art Trenery of Billings, James Casteel
of Lewistown, and Clyde Churchill of Havre were some of the early players who
widened the circle a bit.
During the 1920s and 1930s,
state tournaments were held in April, alternating between Helena, Great Falls,
and Butte. The pattern was broken only a few times, such as in 1926 when the
Butte Elks club challenged the arrangement by offering its new regulation-size
courts and in 1935 when Helena experienced a damaging earthquake. There were
also Dillon’s always hopeful-but always dashed-attempts to host the tournament.
The state’s newspapers reported
the tournament in detail. By the mid 1920s, handball, which had once suffered
only sketchy newspaper coverage, had begun to occupy space in the center column
of the sports page, often nudging out boxing and basketball. The newspapers reported
packed galleries of fans assembling to view the play. Perhaps handball was
gaining popularity because it was an individual sport requiring a good deal of
stamina. Perhaps interest grew because people from all walks of life competed
on an equal basis, because it was a game in which both older and younger men
excelled, or because the action was rapid and exciting. Or perhaps it was
because many of the Montana handball players were so colorful and
sportsmanlike. The sport’s drawing power was evidenced in such comments at this
one made in the Great Fall Tribune on
April 21, 1929:
When the time came for Loble
and Melton to tangle for the singles crown the bleacher seats back of court No.
1 at the Y.M.C.A. were jammed to more than capacity. Every inch of space was
occupied while a dozen or more prospective spectators stayed close to listen to
the scorekeeper’s count and to pick up information on the game from friends who
happened to be located where the could see what was going on.
The Montana State Handball Association also
arranged exhibition games that were popular with both competitors and fans. The
association invited players for Pocatello and Salt Lake City to play the best
of the state’s competitors. Melton and Loble teamed with their sons to play doubles
contests, and local favorites such as Doc Monahan of Butte and Bob Gordon of
Great Falls played good-natured competition. The newspapers reported these
exchanges in as much detail as they did the regular matches. For example, on
May 16, 1931, the Great Falls Tribune
alluded to the camaraderie of the handball group with a story about a contest
between Monahan and Gordon:
Monahan, according to some of
the handball veterans, has been playing for 45 years. Others insisted he has
been at it for 60 years. At any rate, he is still one of the most enthusiastic
players in the game and thinks he can defeat Gordon, who has been parting his
hair with a towel for a good many years.
Younger players, such as Butte’s outstanding
athlete Ray Gallant and George Melton’s protégé from Dillon, Bill Bates, played
juniors exhibitions in the early years while the acquired the skills they would
need to defeat the long-standing champions.
Social
gatherings were also an important part of the annual
tournaments, and they always rated at least a sentence or two in the local
papers, reporting ravioli dinners at Meaderville, banquets at the Eddy Rose
Room and the Park Hotel, one private party in 1927 where two women’s names
found their way into a handball story when “music was furnished by a duo
composed of the Misses Dorothy Hirschman and Winnifred Frogge.” But it was in
1925 that the social doings gained prominence and the extra-curricular side of
handball was firmly established. That year, the Helena Daily Independent reported the tournament’s titles-a
surprise in themselves when for the first time two Great Falls men, James
Kremer and “Blackie” McNamara upset Hoon and Loble who had held the doubles
title since its beginnings. After a quick round of sports coverage, however, it
was the party that filled the sports page column:
The
annual banquet which was held last night in the Eddy Rose Room was a real
event. . . Pep and good fellowship radiated among the visiting and local
players and speeches, splendid entertainment and a regular feed made the event
one to be long remembered by the boys who were fortunate enough to be present.
The
meeting reached it height with the appearance of Eddie Price and his jazz boys from
Butte, who took a fast ride in order to be present and show the gang that even
though Butte was practically out of the running; their old pep was still
working. . .
Abe
Goodman, of Great Falls, couldn’t resist the strains of peppery jazz and got up
and did a little dance for the boys that would have given the “Black and Tans”
something to shoot at, had they been present.
The
Winter Garden Syncopaters of Helena, opened the show with some smoke that had
the boys well oiled by the time the feed came on, while the Groves did their
stuff to heavy applause. Two excellent little entertainers in Miss Ethel Reinig
and Miss Dorothy Langdorf were called back so many times they hardly had time
to put away any of the “bountiful” which Kirby and the boys provided.
Toastmaster
Ed Phelan called. . . .for speeches, and
was rewarded with a rich output of handball talk that was sufficient to make
rabid handball fiends out of the coldest devotees present.
In
addition to state tournaments, several Montana players also
entered the Northwest Handball Association events in Spokane. Melton, Hartwig,
and Loble were all winners in these events. By 1923, Montanans were ready to
look beyond Montana to the national handball scene.
Lester Loble, Kirby Hoon, and
John Walsh of Helena went to St. Paul for the 1923 Fifth Annual National AAU
Handball Tournament. The St. Paul Pioneer
Press reported:
The tourney, which is to
handball what the world series is to baseball, has attracted sixty-seven of the
leading court players of the United States. . .cities to be represented in the
big meet include San Francisco, Milwaukee, Los Angeles, Helena, Chicago,
Cleveland, New York, Detroit, Duluth, Baltimore, and St. Louis.
Arriving early, the Helena men
set out to make names for themselves; they let the other entrants and the
sportswriters know that Montanans intended to participate fully in national
handball. The Pioneer Press discussed the group in a feature
story and issued a cautious statement that perhaps the Montana players should
be watched:
Handball players from San
Francisco, Helena, Mont., Chicago and Detroit, Michigan, made up the advance
guard of handball players for the National Tournament which is to held here
Mar. 19 to 24. J.R. Walsh, Lester Loble, and Kirby Hoon, the trio from Helena,
were the first to enter the court, and they set out to prove that they must be
watched. Walsh played like an old timer on the St. Paul courts. He is rangy and
has a pretty stroke with both hands.
The Helena Daily Independent jubilantly reported that on March 17, the
second day of the tournament:
Helena went on the national
handball map yesterday morning when John Walsh, one of the Helena Handball
association’s representatives at the national tourney started yesterday in St.
Paul, defeated Hanley of St. Paul in two games straight, 21-20, 21-14. . .St.
Paul newspapers gave the Helena bunch the headlines on their arrival, and told
all about how “rough and tough” they are in a handball court.
On March 25, the Independent reported that “the Helena
men were handicapped by the fact that they were used to a 34-foot court, while
the court at St. Paul was 50 feet.” The handicap proved to be serious, and
Walsh, Loble, and Hoon did not win the series; but their experience provided a
valuable impetus for making changes in court sizes and rules used in Montana
play. The returning players encouraged the officers of the state association to
consider adopting national rules and standards so that Montana would be
nationally competitive. The Montana association adopted the handball rules of
the AAU in 1928; the kind of handballs used in national play were ordered for
state meets; and the now-standard four-wall court of 40 feet by 20 feet by 20
feet became the norm in Montana.
In 1928, another Montanan
headed east to Cleveland to challenge players in the national tournament;
George Melton, the flamboyant Dillon player who was the 1927 Montana State
Champion. Melton had been in the winning circle at regional meets, had fared
well against nationally known players in Minneapolis and Chicago, and had
recently defeated National Champion Maynard Laswell in a California series.
Montanans thought they had an excellent chance to gain the championship. The Butte Daily Post sent Melton off bearing
the titles “Montana’s Most Colorful Champion” and “The Ambidextrous Handball
King.”
The Dillon
Examiner asked Byron E. Toan, a former principal of Beaverhead County High
School who lived in Cleveland, to be its on-the-spot reporter. Toan wired
suspenseful reports of the opening games and described how the skepticism in
the stands changed to amazement:
Believe me, when I saw one of
the old-time boys of the Beaverhead county high school winning those three
games from one of Detroit’s best, I could hardly keep from giving a few of old
Beaverhead’s yells. . .Did they play? They DID! and WOW! It was handball
through about half of the game, and then became nothing but-well, nothing but
intestinal stamina. And our George was the boy who was there with the digestive
apparatus. When those two boys came out of the court they were absolutely all
in. The unanimous verdict of the crowd-many of them players in the
tournament-was that these three games were the class of the day.
Melton’s telegram to Bud
Hartwig read: “Old Pal-Won from Siegel [sic] of Detroit in three hard games,
18-21, 21-5, 21-15. Meet Cleveland’s top player in Joe Goudreau next. Going
awfully tough. They sure play the ball and kill every setup. The old left hand
shot down the side wall saved me-George.
Montana reporters and friends
waited for the reports. Toan wired that Melton’s next opponent would be Joe
Goudreau, the Ohio State Champion; “If he (Melton) can get by this man, he will
and mighty close to the national championship.” But Melton’s next telegram to
Hartwig brought the sad message: “No alibis-he was just too good.” Joe Griffin
of Detroit won the tournament and Melton was a runner-up.
Melton, Loble, and the other
early Montana handball players continued to dominate the sport into the 1930s.
In 1932, however, the forty-three-year-old Melton predicted an entire change in
the personnel of the leaders in handball circles of the state this year. “We
have been lucky to stay in there as long as we have. . .the main reason being
no one came along to oust us, but with such players as Ray Gallant and Joe
McCarthy of Butte “knocking at the door,” the old boys will have to bow
graceful to Father Time and give way to youth.”
During
the following decades, Montanans continued to play handball, and
in 1953 the state finally had a national handball champion when Bob Brady of
Butte won the U.S. Handball Association National Championship. Currently,
handball is receiving competition from racquetball, a popular variation of the
game played on the same court with a short-handled racquet. But the Montana
State Handball Association still exists; its current president is Emmett Boland
of Great Falls. Handball and racquetball clubs provide private courts to
supplement those at the YMCAs, the Butte Elks Lodge, and schools, colleges, and
universities. Tournaments are held each year, with the various city clubs
rotating the sponsorship of separate singles and doubles tournaments held in
Butte, Missoula, Kalispell, Helena, and Billings.
Boland reports the Montana
handball players still represent a cross-section of the state’s residents and
that the social activities and stories surrounding the games and tournaments
continue to give the players a good deal of extra enjoyment. The courts at
Great Falls and Butte still see action from some of the early players, such as
Nick Kalafat and Jim Ritter, who won both the northwest doubles and singles
titles in the 1950s. Bill Peoples, a National Collegiate Handball Champion in
1973, and the University of Montana handball team, composed of Bill Peoples,
Bob Peoples, Tim Boland, and Tom Zedrick, winners of the 1973 NCAA
Championship, are the latest Montanans to win national competitions.
Montanans first began playing
handball in the early 1900s, setting up courts in backyard barns, churches, and
YMCAs. One local competition led to another and by the 1920s the original
Montana players sought to test their skills in regional and national
competitions. The state’s players first began to gain national championships in
the 1950s, and Montana players continue to compete on state, regional, and national
levels. The western birds have indeed learned how to play the game.