Forty years ago, Stephan Field at the southeastern corner of Drake and
Shawnee Run was a simple baseball diamond, with two lakes out back. It is
named for Paul Stephan, whose enthusiastic promotion of knothole baseball
earned praise and whose leadership inspired hundreds of boys in the 1950's
and 60's
Paul and Alice Stephan hailed from the farm country of Brown County,
Ohio. As newlyweds, they lived in Clifton; with Alice working on her
degree from UC and Paul in the government office at the stockyards. He was
the first local broadcaster of agricultural news, quoting noon market
prices of livestock on WLW. Leaving the Cincinnati stockyards, he became a
superintendent at Schroth Packing Co. As their family grew, the Stephans
wanted to return to farm life. While looking for a farm to buy, Paul was
offered a position as manager of a Graves Road estate, a job he held from
1950 until 1963. After this he was manager on a Shawnee Run Road estate,
and their sons attended Indian Hill schools.
In 1953 second son Paul, Jr. asked his father to manage his baseball
team. Paul agreed, and thus started a long-time commitment to baseball in
Indian Hill. Though he had never played, he was familiar with the game and
a loyal Reds fan. Learning by doing,, Stephan was coach/manager for two of
his sons, and then manager/promoter of many other teams for over 20 years.
Paul loved his teams, spending up to six hours a night on baseball. The
1950's knothole teams practiced wherever they could get a field: Drake
Elementary, the Village diamond, and Country Day School. He did every job
imaginable: lining and dragging the fields, carpooling, scheduling, and
finding umpires, sponsors, uniforms, and equipment. Alice helped with
storing and mending uniforms. Urging his players to practice every day, he
taught them to love the game. Paul, Jr., later batting practice pitcher
for the Cleveland Indians for 15 years, threw hundreds of baseballs each
night into a basket on a barn wall.
The teams grew from one in 1953 to three in 1955. Stephan tried to find
a team for every boy and said baseball was special because "small
boys can compete on an equal basis with larger boys". Early team
names were Rangers, Chiefs, Braves, Juniors, Regulars, and Pee Wees. Later
names were changed to such colorful titles as Maulers, Tomahawks, Apaches,
and Cherokees. By 1962 there were 12 teams, and many Indian Hill boys
learned competition and sportsmanship from Paul Stephan. Some championship
teams won District Titles, bringing home trophies to be displayed in the
Village Hall.
In recognition of Paul's volunteer labor, Stephan Field was dedicated
and named for Paul Stephan in August, 1964. The ceremony included speeches
by the Mayor and Council members. Coaches and players from past years came
to see the awarding of the bronze plaque which stands there still. Three
Cincinnati Reds players delivered a letter of commendation from the Reds,
and later Stephan was inducted into the Cincinnati Knothole Hall of Fame.
Today Stephan Field is used for baseball, soccer, picnics, Summer
Recreation program, walking, jogging and roller-blading. The Field
continues to change: state-of-the-art playground equipment attracts little
ones, and the Bicentennial Sculpture stands as a stone storybook of the
history of the Village. And, the dreams of Paul Stephan are fulfilled each
warm evening, as village residents come to share Stephan Field--a village
treasure, a delight to all. It honors a man who taught the lessons and the
love of baseball to many a child in Indian Hill.
