New Blog Topic: HAPPY FELTON’S KNOTHOLE GANG



Baseball History Comes Alive Now Ranked #2 by Feedspot Among All Internet Baseball History Websites and Blogs!

Guest Submissions from Our Readers Always Welcome!

Click here for details

THE BASEBALL HISTORY COMES ALIVE BLOG




 

Please note: As we compose new blog entries, we will now send each one out to all our subscribers as we post them. Here’s a link to see the entire Blog Archives -GL

March 11, 2021

New Blog Topic:

HAPPY FELTON’S KNOTHOLE GANG

Once upon a time, many years ago, there was a pre-game baseball show that actually brought young baseball players of Little League age to the ballpark, allowed them to show their skills to a major league star with the winner of the competition getting a chance to talk with his favorite player. It was the kind of show that achieved something baseball is struggling to achieve today – that is getting more young kids interested in baseball and making many of them lifelong fans. The show debuted 71 years ago in a place called Ebbets Field when the Brooklyn Dodgers were one of New York’s three big league baseball teams. It was called Happy Felton’s Knothole Gang.

The name goes back to the early days of the game, when kids would look for a knothole in the old wooden outfield fences so they could get a glimpse – any kind of glimpse – of a major league baseball game. But the knothole gang we’re talking about here was the brainchild of Francis J. Felton Jr., better known as “Happy,” a former vaudeville performer and orchestra leader, a big guy who played college football but who always wanted to be a baseball player. He knew his great size would preclude that, once saying, “I was a perfect circle. How could I be a perfect catcher?”

Felton met Walter O’Malley one day on a tuna fishing excursion and they got to talking. That’s when Happy mentioned his idea for a TV program that would bring young baseball players to Ebbets Field for a pre-game show in which they could interact with the big leaguers. O’Malley, then vice-president of the Dodgers, liked the idea and brought it back to team president Branch Rickey, who gave it the green light. Happy Felton’s Knothole Gang began in 1950 before all Dodger home games, and continued right through the 1957 season. Unfortunately, it didn’t follow the team to Los Angeles.

Here’s how the show worked. It went on the air 25 minutes before home games at Ebbets Field began. Happy Felton was down in the right field bullpen and he would speak to the three contestants, all of Little League age. Next he would introduce one of the Dodgers players who would work out the youngsters and judge them on fielding ability, speed and overall baseball skills. All three would receive gifts of baseball equipment for appearing on the show and the winner would return the next day with an opportunity to speak with his favorite Dodger.

It was a simple concept and a popular one, with the kids expressing their love of baseball and then having it reinforced by being around the big leaguers. Other kids would be in the nearby stands to watch the competition and see the players. The show was credited for increasing interest in Little League and sandlot baseball all over the city. Proof of the pudding was that it lasted for eight seasons until the Dodgers moved to the west coast.

Happy Felton also did a post game show called Talk to the Stars, where he would sit between a Dodger and opposing player and take phone calls from fans with questions. He’d ask the fan who he or she wanted to speak with. It was more often the Dodger player, but the fans also had a chance to speak with opposing players. Felton was always a genial, smiling host who obviously enjoyed his work.

Baseball: View of Happy Felton with youth fans from his “Knot-Hole Gang” on field before Brooklyn Dodgers vs Philadelphia Phillies game at Ebbets Field.
Brooklyn, NY 8/12/1956
CREDIT: Neil Leifer (Photo by Neil Leifer /Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)
(Set Number: D112423 )

The Knot Hole Gang was the kind of show that really brought baseball to the kids in a refreshing and honest way. The players obviously bought into it and enjoyed working with the kids and giving them tips on playing the game. It’s certainly something the game could use today, especially with young kids seemingly gravitating to other sports as baseball’s demographic ages. And, of course, there were many more day games back then, so other kids had a chance to watch and dream their own baseball dreams.

With the Dodgers getting ready to move to the west coast, Happy Felton began hosting a children’s quiz program in 1957 on WCBS-TV called “It’s a Hit,” which aired Saturday mornings at 11:30 a.m. He died on October 21, 1964, at the age of 56.

The following video is a complete episode of Happy Felton’s Knot Hole Gang, with Jackie Robinson working with the contestants and the last winner talking with Pee Wee Reese. Enjoy something great from long ago, but something that should still resonate today.

Bill Gutman

As always, we enjoy reading your comments

Here’s a link to see the entire Blog Archives

7 thoughts on “New Blog Topic: HAPPY FELTON’S KNOTHOLE GANG

  1. What a great treat, Bill, with Happy Felton! Remember the show well–Jackie Robinson so sharp, nice and always encouraging to the kids as he put them through their paces.
    That Esquire Boot Polish sign in the background sure brings back memories of Ebbets Field.
    Didn’t realize it at the time but Felton was quite a showman. Not that easy to keep things moving with the kids, sponsor and guest ballplayer–like rollin’ off a log for the big guy.
    Thanks!
    Bill

    1. Hey Bill,

      Had a college buddy from Long Island who was a contestant on the show as a Little Leaguer. Remember him also on Talk to the Stars. He’d have a Dodger player on one side and a visiting player on the other. He was in the middle with an old fashioned desk phone. When the calls came in he’d ask who the caller wanted to speak with. I can recall that he’s sometimes almost lean toward the visiting player, then say “Duke Snider” and give the phone to the Dodger.Most of the callers wanted to speak to the home team guys unless the visitor was someone like Stan Musial. But the Knot Hole Gang really helped make kids lifelong fans, something they don’t have today.

      Bill

      1. I’m now 78, and I was a contestant on the show in August of 1956. The Giants played the Dodgers, and I was one of 3 shortstops from the S Orange, NJ Little League who were there on that night.
        Jim Gilliam picked me as the winner, and it was a great thrill for a 12 year old. We all received a Dodger cap, a glove, and a $5 savings passbook.
        I went back to the game the next night as the previous night winner, and got to meet and talk with Pee Wee Reese on the air. I then went down to the Dodger dugout and met the Dodger players and got their autographs on a new National League baseball.
        The entire experience was one of the great thrills of my youth, and one I will never forget. I was a 12 year old Jersey Boy and a Yankee fan, but have always had a soft spot in my heart for the Dodgers!

  2. I always watched the show even though I was a Yankee fan. It was such a great idea and of course it captured our attention because we all wanted to be there, The kids got a Dodger cap and Yearbook plus a chance to step on a major league field and meet a ball player. Every team should do this today, especially teams that are having problems at the box office. Some teams let a kid be the P.A. Announcer for a half inning which is very cool. Get kids involved with clinics or as a guest batboy. Make them feel wanted and important to the game.

    1. Know just what you mean, Joe. I was also a Yankee fan but watched the Knot Hole Gang often. In today’s modern amusement park stadiums they often build play areas for kids. Like that’s gonna make them baseball fans. Getting them involved and talking with the big leaguers is something the game needs for the kids, not just getting an autograph. Fun stuff from years gone by. And all the night games today don’t help, either.

  3. Money changed everything. Can’t fault the players for getting all they can, but when ballplayers had to have second jobs in the winter, they seemed to have more time for people, especially kids.

    1. Right Dave. It was a different world then. No one charged for an autograph and most of the players did work in the offseason. The Dodger players willingly participated in the Knot Hole Gang and really engaged well with the kids. Like I mentioned, that show really got more kids interested in the game and made lifelong fans of many of them. It’s something baseball could use today with its aging demographic. Instead, they build amusement areas for the kids in some of the new parks. Makes it easy for them to ignore the game on the field.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.