4.3 • 737 Ratings
🗓️ 24 November 2025
⏱️ 11 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
On this episode of Our American Stories, long before Jackie Robinson changed Major League Baseball, a group of long-haired ballplayers from a religious commune in Michigan stepped onto fields where others weren’t welcome. Formed at the House of David in Benton Harbor, the team barnstormed the country and played with anyone who loved the game, including talented Black players shut out of the majors.
Their mix of skill, humor, and conviction made them one of the most recognizable teams of their era, and their willingness to stand beside excluded athletes helped shift attitudes long before the MLB integrated. Chris Siriano shares how this unlikely team left its mark on the history of baseball and on the early fight for equality.
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| 0:00.0 | This is an I-Heart podcast. |
| 0:02.6 | Guaranteed Human. |
| 0:16.2 | This is our American stories, |
| 0:18.8 | and one of the things we've come to love is our stories about American history. |
| 0:23.6 | At the turn of the century, baseball was by far the most popular sport in America, and almost everyone was participating in it, |
| 0:30.6 | including a religious colony in Benton Harbor, Michigan, founded by an eccentric man named Ben Pernell called the House of David. |
| 0:39.6 | Here's our own Monty Montgomery with a story of a baseball team of outguests that took America |
| 0:45.8 | by storm. |
| 0:52.4 | Growing up in Bering County, Michigan, I always knew the House of David's existence. |
| 0:57.5 | Mostly due to the curiosity they brought, but what I didn't know was that they actually made a massive impact on the country outside of Benton Harbor. |
| 1:06.6 | And one of the ways they did that was in baseball. |
| 1:09.7 | Started as a way to deal of teenage boys in their religious belief as a colony in celibacy. |
| 1:15.8 | Here's Chris Seriano, founder of the House of David Museum in St. Joe, Michigan, |
| 1:20.3 | with more on that story. |
| 1:25.6 | The House of David baseball team was started because Benjamin loved baseball. |
| 1:30.7 | And in 1914, they had been going for 11 years by then, right? |
| 1:36.9 | They have a lot of teenage boys with a whole lot of pinup energy, and they can't be with |
| 1:41.8 | the opposite sex, no way, no how. |
| 1:44.3 | They need something to do to get rid of this energy. |
| 1:47.0 | So he thought, let's play some baseball. |
| 1:49.2 | They played all the local teams and they were good. |
| 1:53.8 | But they weren't great yet, until they managed to bring in professional players |
... |
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