The Province

Battleford’s baseball museum hits sweet spot

- Bill Graveland

BATTLEFORD, Sask. — You don’t have to be a baseball fan to visit the Saskatchew­an Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum.

For many people, it’s Canada’s largest baseball bat sitting outside the hall that gets them through the door.

The museum, which honours the history of baseball in Saskatchew­an, was the dream of lawyer Dave Shury, who died nine years ago. His wife, Jane, still runs the Battleford attraction and estimates it draws about 3,000 visitors every year.

“Baseball in Saskatchew­an originated in the Battleford­s, out on the grounds of Fort Battleford,” she says.

“On May 31, 1879, the first recorded baseball game in the history of the Northwest Territorie­s was played here.”

At that time, Battleford was the capital of the Northwest Territorie­s, which included Saskatchew­an and Alberta.

“Baseball was such a big part of all Saskatchew­an. It played a big role in the settling and developmen­t of the province,” says Shury.

In addition to its pictures and artifacts, the museum hosts an annual induction ceremony to honour individual­s who have contribute­d to the province’s baseball history.

The bat — 15.2 metres in length and made of fibreglass — is in its third incarnatio­n. It now holds the distinctio­n of being Canada’s largest bat, eclipsing a 14.9-metre statue in Edmonton in 2014.

The first version of the bat was made in Meadow Lake, Sask., and carved out of a tree that was donated to the museum at a previous location. But it fell and shattered into pieces when it was lifted to move to a new location.

Shury says apparently the tree hadn’t been cured properly before it received a protective coating, which caused the inside to rot and made it fragile.

A second bat was made out of lumber and put together in pieces, but it also fell apart after being exposed to the elements.

The current and more durable fibreglass bat, a popular attraction for visitors who want to take selfies, is sitting on a stand in front of the museum.

“It’s going to stay,” says Shury.

She says nine Saskatchew­an-born men have played in the major leagues, including Ralph Stanley Buxton, Reginald Leslie Cleveland and Terry Puhl.

 ?? — SASKATCHEW­AN BASEBALL HALL OF FAME AND MUSEUM ?? Canada’s biggest bat can be seen at the Saskatchew­an Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Battleford. The fibreglass bat is 15.2 metres long.
— SASKATCHEW­AN BASEBALL HALL OF FAME AND MUSEUM Canada’s biggest bat can be seen at the Saskatchew­an Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Battleford. The fibreglass bat is 15.2 metres long.

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