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In April 1961, the Minnesota Twins played their first game in Minneapolis after relocating from Washington, D.C. This marked the beginning of a new era for baseball in Minnesota.
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Apr. 22—MINNEAPOLIS — April 1961 was a month full of change and new beginnings.
In world news, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first human in space.
Closer to home, Fargo officially changed the name of 13th Street to University Drive, and about 230 miles to the southeast, Minneapolis was welcoming some new boys of summer to town.
The new Major League Baseball team, the Minnesota Twins, played their first game in the state 65 years ago this spring, on April 11, 1961.
The team had moved from Washington, D.C., where they were the Washington Senators. While our nation's capital is synonymous with political debate and division, the team found a similar divide in its new home.
For decades, baseball fans in Minneapolis and St. Paul had rooted against each other — the Minneapolis Millers versus the St. Paul Saints, a rivalry as wide as the Mississippi River that separated them.
So when the former Washington Senators relocated north, the new franchise made a deliberate choice: it would represent the entire state, not just one city.
The name "Twins" was part of that effort. So was the logo — not an "M" for Minneapolis, but an interlocked "TC" for Twin Cities. And on their uniform sleeve, a small but telling patch: a Millers player and a Saints player, smiling as they reached across the river to shake hands. Unity stitched into wool and slapped across a concession cup of Coca-Cola.
And then, in one of the more charming marketing ideas in baseball history, the team decided to take the idea literally.
That first year, they would hire real twins — and only twins — to work on the field with the players.
In the spring of 1961, the team put out the call — not just for bat boys and ball boys, but for identical pairs of twin boys to fill those roles. (Girls wouldn't be hired for those positions until the early 1970s — among them, a future household name whose fame had little to do with Major League Baseball. See sidebar below.)
Dozens of twin boys from all over the region responded.
At Metropolitan Stadium, 74 sets of twins showed up to audition, according to reports. LIFE magazine photographers captured the scene: boys in matching outfits, eating hot dogs and drinking milk as they waited for a chance to wear a big-league uniform.
Among them were two farm boys from Rosemount, Minn.
Richard and Peter King looked younger than their 15 years, with fair skin, blonde hair and blue eyes (a little like Eddie Haskell from "Leave It to Beaver," but presumably less snarky).
What was it like to win the job against 73 other sets of brothers, for a role no one else had ever held, as the first bat boys for the Twins?
Sadly, 65 years after that memorable summer, the King brothers aren't around to share their memories. Peter died in 2022 and Richard in 2024.
But their widows are still here to share the stories their husbands undoubtedly told at cocktail parties for more than half a century.
The Minnesota Twins played their first game on April 11, 1961.
The Minnesota Twins relocated from Washington, D.C., where they were known as the Washington Senators, to bring Major League Baseball to Minneapolis.
In April 1961, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first human in space.
Fargo officially changed the name of 13th Street to University Drive in April 1961.
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"They were very close. Just two great guys," Susan King, Peter's wife, told WCCO-TV in 2024.
They weren't polished baseball insiders. In fact, that may have been part of the appeal.
"Back then, they were looking for twins that did not want to know a lot about baseball," said Cheryl King, Richard's wife.
What they lacked in experience, they made up for in enthusiasm — and the novelty of being identical twins in matching uniforms.
They took it all in stride as photographers chronicled their every move in the early days, from cleaning players' cleats to adjusting their own hats in the mirror.
They showed their "Minnesota nice" qualities to sportswriters across the country, telling The Forum, "visitors will be serviced just as well as the home team."
Their hiring even led to a brush with national fame. That same season, the brothers appeared on the popular TV game show "To Tell the Truth," where panelists, including Betty White and Tom Poston, tried to guess which contestants were the real Twins bat boys.
WATCH: Minnesota Twins twin bat boys appear on "To Tell the Truth" (segment starts around 8:45)
The wives said their husbands were "shy" and "scared to death" about being on the show. Even so, they fooled three out of four panelists. Host Merv Griffin proudly proclaimed that for their efforts, the boys would walk away with $750 in prize money from the sponsor, Salem cigarettes.
But for the King brothers, the real thrill wasn't television.
It was the relationships they built with the players.
Pitcher Camilo Pascual once visited their farm for lunch. And Hall of Famer Harmon Killebrew made a lasting impression.
"He was just the nicest guy," Susan said.
Still, it was work.
After games, the boys often headed home in the chilly early morning hours on a motorcycle.
The Kings weren't the only twins hired that season. Jerry and James Dempster, 16, were chosen as ball boys but didn't receive the same level of attention at the time. The brothers, natives of Huron, S.D., were living in St. Louis Park, Minn., when they answered a newspaper ad seeking twins.
Decades later, The Duluth News Tribune caught up with Jerry Dempster, who had since moved to Duluth, and he still remembered how unlikely it all felt.
"We never thought we had a chance at all," he said, noting their experience selling popcorn and peanuts at ballgames back home may have helped.
He also recalled the moment stepping onto the field: "The size of the crowd and the noise were unbelievable... Our stomachs were in knots."
Looking back, Dempster didn't downplay the experience: "We were the luckiest kids in the world."
After their moment in the spotlight, the boys returned to their lives. So did the Kings.
According to their obituaries, Richard eventually joined the U.S. Army, married Cheryl and settled in Eden Prairie, while Peter lived in Prior Lake with his wife, Susan, and was a longtime principal in the Burnsville school district.
The men attended Twins games over the years with their wives and others and, according to accounts, seemed to enjoy their brief brush with major-league fame.
For the wives they left behind, it's a memory they still cherish.
At a time when Minneapolis and St. Paul were still very much on opposite sides of the river, the Twins found a simple way to bridge the gap — by putting a couple of pairs of them on the field.