That was the Group Missionary Activity planned for the month of September--and very well-done by The Heideman's--Kent and Barbara. For each group activity--we have asked one of the Missionaries to lead out in the planning/follow-through of that Activity. It really helps Elder Mumford and me to have others help in this way.
Kent made it really fun by sending out information about the Yankees' Season stats thus far and then he sent this information about the song "đ¶Take Me Out to the Ballgameđ¶"--I found it really interesting!!
The True Story Behind the Song "TAKE ME OUT TO THE BALLGAME"
Who is the most famous songwriting team? Lennon and McCartney? Bacharach and David? George and Ira Gershwin? WaitâŠdid you forget about Norworth and von Tilzer?
Jack Norworth and Albert von Tilzer are a virtually unknown duo that wrote a song that has been sung by millions of people in dozens of cities across the United States. In fact, it is the third-most frequently sung tune that Americans sing, behind only âHappy Birthdayâ and âThe Star Spangled Banner.â
That song is âTake Me Out to the Ballgame,â and as everyone knows, itâs sung at every Major League Baseball game during the seventh-inning stretch. But just where did the song come from?
If you think it was written by an avid fan for his favorite team... and that in no time at all it became an everyday event at Major League Baseball gamesâŠyouâre completely wrong. In fact, the man credited with writing the song had never been to a baseball game.
Hereâs how one of our countryâs most famous songs came about.

Inspiration for a song can be an important event, a romantic interest or something personally meaningful in the songwriterâs life. For 29-year-old songwriter Jack Norworth it was none of thoseâinspiration came from a billboard.
The year was 1908 and Jack Norworth was riding a subway in New York. Being a songwriter, he was always looking for ideas for his next tune. Glancing out the window as the subway rolled along, he saw a billboard announcing an upcoming event. The ad wasnât for Cracker Jack. It wasnât an ad for peanuts. It didnât say, âTake someone out to a ballgame!â
It simply said, âBaseball TodayâPolo Grounds.â
The Polo Grounds was the baseball park where the National Leagueâs New York Giants played. Maybe on that day Jack Norworth imagined riding the subway all the way to the Polo Grounds and catching the game. Maybe he imagined the peanuts and blue sky and the good time heâd have rooting for the home team.
Inspired, Jack took out a scrap of paper and wrote out the lyrics for âTake Me Out to the Ballgame.â Here are the complete lyrics to the song. (Notice that when youâre at a baseball game, youâre singing just eight lines of the song, the ones that make up the chorus):
Katie Casey was baseball mad,
Had the fever and had it bad.
Just to root for the home town crew,
Evâry sou
Katie blew.
On a Saturday her young beau
Called to see if sheâd like to go
To see a show, but Miss Kate said âNo,
Iâll tell you what you can do:
âTake me out to the ball game,
Take me out with the crowd;
Just buy me some peanuts and Cracker Jack,
I donât care if I never get back.
Let me root, root, root for the home team,
If they donât win, itâs a shame.
For itâs one, two, three strikes, youâre out,
At the old ball game.â
Katie Casey saw all the games,
Knew the players by their first names.
Told the umpire he was wrong,
All along,
Good and strong.
When the score was just two to two,
Katie Casey knew what to do,
Just to cheer up the boys she knew,
She made the gang sing this song:
âTake me out to the ball gameâŠ.â
Lyrics need a tune to go with them.
Jack Norworth didnât go to the Polo Grounds that day to catch a game. Excited and with fresh lyrics in hand, he now needed a melody to go with his words. For that, he reached out to a composer friend named Albert von TilzerâŠwho also had never attended a baseball game. Both Norworth and von Tilzer were part of the Tin Pan Alley musicians of the time in New York. When the music was completed, Jack had his wife, Nora Bayes, learn the lyrics and perform the song for vaudeville audiences.
It was an instant hit in 1908. Audiences loved it. Later that year, a man named Edward Meeker recorded the song for the Edison Phonograph Company. It became hit record and was the top song in the country for seven weeks. In fact, âTake Me Out to the Ballgameâ turned out to be the most popular song of the year.
When did the song go to the old ball game?
According to historians, it wasnât until 1934 that âTake Me Out to the Ballgameâ was played at a baseball game. It didnât take place at the Polo Grounds or even New York, but in Los AngelesâŠat a high school baseball game. It wasnât until later that year that it made its debut at a Major League Baseball game.
Thatâs a long time, but the song still managed to beat Jack Norworth to the old ball game. He never did make it to the Polo Grounds in 1908. In fact, Jack Norworth attended his very first baseball game in 1940, some 32 years after he had written the song.
But by then, history had been made. In 2001, âTake Me Out to the Ballgameâ was named the number eight song on the âSongs of the Centuryâ* list.
Turns out, you donât need to be a baseball fan to create its biggest hit.(end of article)
Turns out, you donât need to be a baseball fan to create its biggest hit.(end of article)
So--on September 18th--on a perfect evening for baseball--we met in the Lobby of our Apartment building and headed out to the Subway to the Yankee Stadium in the Bronx. A beautiful Stadium--so well kept and clean!! We caught the "Express train"--bursting at the Seams--but we made our way on. But we went FAST--and we were there way ahead of the Heideman's timetable--but glad to be there early. It was fun to just walk around and "take it all in". We snapped a few pics--of our group and of Ron and I. Then a "Canon Camera promotion guy--approached us and asked to take our group pic--it would later be "For Sale" as we exited that night. Turns out it was "Cap Night" so all of us got a free hat as we entered and part way through the game--I decided to put my hat ON. The pic proves WHY I do not WEAR HATS!! They do not look good on me!! But I had to prove it to myself. So here are some of those pics as "Proof" I was there. Oh and by the way. . . The Yankees had a victory over the Minnesota Twins with a score of 2 to 1 for the Yankees!! Good game!!
It was a really fun night and truly one of my favorite New York Memories!!
"đ¶And it's One, Two, Three Strikes you're Out at the old Ballgame. . . đ¶"
This is our entire Missionary Group
Back: Beans, Heideman's, DeBrys, Adams,
Front: Kathy Nabors, Ron and Carol, Tans, Schoenbergers, Spencer Brown and the Grays
We took this pic because of all the great banners behind us
"Cap Night"
Introduction of the Home Team
From our seats--with the beautiful field in the background
We had really good seats for the price we paid. Great view of the field.
Our Group:
Back row L-R--Pres & Sister Bean, Kent & Barbara Heideman, DeAnna & Lynn DeBry
Front row L-R-- Kathy Nabors, Ron & Carol Mumford, Hazel & SK TanMissing from this picture are Luann & Delmar Gray and Spencer Brown, the Adams and Schoenberger's It was a really fun night and truly one of my favorite New York Memories!!
"đ¶And it's One, Two, Three Strikes you're Out at the old Ballgame. . . đ¶"