Salado local Dean Dunning, owned a local company that did dirt work in the Salado area in the early seventies, and was part of the original group who established the Salado little league. He also coached and volunteered much of his time and equipment to make the Salado little league a reality. He explains that, “I think that most of us involved played baseball growing up and we all realized how much discipline and life lessons we all learned from the sport and knew our children would benefit in the same way by being involved in an organized baseball league.” At the time, the closest baseball league for ages 9-12 was in Belton. Initially Belton agreed to let Salado participate in their league, so, although they called themselves the “Salado Little League,” they played 4 years in the Belton Little League Association.
In their first season, out of the sixteen boys that tried out to play, they drafted two teams of mainly 10 year olds that dominated the Belton league even though it consisted primarily of 12 year old players. Dean Dunning recalls, “Those Salado boys were the most determined, dedicated players you ever saw.” After four years of this treatment, in 1975, the initially accepting Belton Little League, became a little less hospitable toward their small town neighbors to the south so the Salado League had to find its own ball field to call home.
At that time, Salado was a small community with a graduating class of only three seniors and what is now the Salado Civic Center was then the Salado High School. The only baseball field in the community was a grassy field with only a backstop located directly behind this building which the high school baseball team played on. To keep the Salado Little league going, this group of men worked out a deal with the Salado school district that they would construct a new baseball field on school property if the little league could play their games on it and if they could use the current ball field as their practice field. With donated labor and money the new high school field was built where the current football field sits today. Dunning recalls, “We would have all kinds of fund raisers, anything to raise a buck, from cake auctions to passing the hat at ball games. The most money we ever raised was at a BBQ dinner where people could eat for free and donate what they wanted in a big wash pot.” Archie Guyer who not only helped establish the league, but also coached for years adds, “Everything was donated or done by volunteers, we would even pull volunteer umpires from the bleachers to referee the games. The people of Salado were and still are very supportive of valuable community projects.”
After playing on the new high school field for a few years, another Salado citizen named C.B. Hodge saw the need for youth fields dedicated solely for the younger children. Mr. Hodge generously donated the land where the current Salado Youth Sports Complex is located with the intention of having a little league baseball field and two soccer fields built on it.
Once again with only donated labor and money the roads, parking lot and Salado’s first little league baseball field was built and appropriately named “Hodge Field”. Finally, with their very own ball field built to little league specifications, the pitcher’s mound didn’t have to be moved forward to accommodate the younger players and they could actually knock home runs over the fence! Better yet, with light poles acquired from a nearby central Texas school, games could even be played after dark! After years of persistence and perseverance, the little league had really hit the big-time now and was becoming more established in the community. The concession stand was run by volunteers and all income went directly into the little league fund. Once the league finally had some money in the bank they began purchasing bats, baseballs, helmets and other gear and eventually acquired sponsors to purchase the uniforms.