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The Heater from Van Meter: Iowa Time Machine November 3, 1918

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Iowa Time Machine ⏰: On November 3, 1918, Bob “The Heater from Van Meter” Feller was born in Van Meter. A 1962 Baseball Hall of Fame inductee and 18-year MLB pitcher who led the American League in wins six times and won the 1948 World Series, Feller stands as one of the greatest Iowa athletes of all time.


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Born in Van Meter to a farmer and a schoolteacher, Feller’s father started rolling a baseball for baby Bob before the child could walk. Implementing a routine featuring daily father-son games of catch on the farm, William Feller encouraged his son’s pursuit of baseball. At 8, “Bullet Bob” broke three of his father’s ribs with a fastball. When, as a 9-year-old, Bob could hurl a baseball an alleged 270’, his father decided to put up arc lights on the barn so the two could play catch year-round.


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By 1930, an elementary school-age Feller pitched against the Van Meter High School Team. Continuing to improve the farm to encourage the baseball prodigy, William Feller started to build a ballpark a quarter-mile east of the farmhouse. The ‘original Field of Dreams’ (and now on the National Register of Historic Places) featured a concession stand, bleachers, and its own team called the Oakview, which featured an exceptional young pitcher.


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Signed by legendary Cleveland scout Cy Slapnicka for $1 and an autographed baseball in 1936, and debuted for the Major League team on July 19 without throwing a single pitch in the minor leagues. Although Feller took a break to enlist as a 40 mm gun captain in the United States Navy from 1941 to 1945 and served in both Atlantic and Pacific theaters of World War II, he managed to amass a 266-162 career record while recording 2,581 strikeouts over his storied career. #Iowa #OTD #History #Baseball #MLB


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© 2025 by Kevin T. Mason & Notes on Iowa

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