Stickball (Native American)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stickball can also refer to a baseball-like game. See Stickball.
Choctaw Stickball 1830s painted by George Catlin.
Choctaw Stickball 1830s painted by George Catlin.

Stickball (also called toli or kapucha toli) is a Native American field team sport. The object of the game is to strike a post or other object with the ball. The ball may either be thrown at the post or the ball may in the sticks and striked against the post. The equipment consists of a ball (called the towa, a rock wrapped in cloth then laced with leather cord) and a tall stick, typically ranging from ten to twenty feet tall. Some tribes, like the Choctaw and Cherokee had goals similar to American football goals. The exact point values vary with the players. The field may have been anywhere from a few hundred yards to a few miles.

The game is full-contact. A player holding the ball is a target for every player on the other team, who will body-slam, tackle, trip, or otherwise attempt to regain the ball. The player's own team will, in turn, attempt to hurl the other team away from the thrower so he may aim carefully.

In premodern times, these games could result in serious injury, maiming or death; its nickname, "the little brother of war," was apt as it was often a way to resolve intra- or inter-group hostilities with a lower death rate than outright combat. Even when played today, it can result in broken bones or lacerations.

This game was used as part of a strategy, by the allied tribes, in 1764 to gain entrance to Fort Mackinaw.[1]

[edit] Variants By Tribe

Stickball rackets by tribe: a. Iroquois b. Passamaquoddy c. Chippewa d. Cherokee.
Stickball rackets by tribe: a. Iroquois b. Passamaquoddy c. Chippewa d. Cherokee.
"Ball players" painted by George Catlin
"Ball players" painted by George Catlin

A variant form of the game, historically often played by women, used no stick and was played with the hands. This game was called shinny, and in the western part of North America it was more popular than stickball.[2]

Among the northern tribes, a single racket was used, but in the south each player used two, and could grasp the ball, by cupping them together.[3]

The game is still played on a large scale on the Choctaw reservation in Mississippi and in the Cherokee Nation in both Oklahoma[4] and North Carolina. Also, the game is played at large gatherings of the Boy Scout Order of the Arrow, where the ball is a tennis ball wrapped in duct tape.

Related games are played, or have been played, by indigenous peoples throughout the Americas.

Stickball is similar to the Canadian, and increasingly-popular American sport Lacrosse, whose name comes from the French term for the "stick" (crosse) used in the game as a club and to pass the ball.

[edit] References

  1. ^ HODGE, FREDERICK WEBB. HANDBOOK OF AMERICAN INDIANS NORTH OF MEXICO, IN TWO PARTS, PART 1; WASHINGTON, GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 1907. PAGE 127.
  2. ^ HODGE, FREDERICK WEBB. HANDBOOK OF AMERICAN INDIANS NORTH OF MEXICO, IN TWO PARTS, PART 1; WASHINGTON, GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 1907. PAGE 127.
  3. ^ HODGE, FREDERICK WEBB. HANDBOOK OF AMERICAN INDIANS NORTH OF MEXICO, IN TWO PARTS, PART 1; WASHINGTON, GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 1907. PAGE 127.
  4. ^ Stickball Game Scheduled During 52nd Cherokee National Holiday

[edit] External links

Languages