The House of David: A Midwest Cult That Was REALLY Good at Baseball (Summer 2019 | Volume: 64, Issue: 3)

The House of David: A Midwest Cult That Was REALLY Good at Baseball

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Authors: Lauren Nicole

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Summer 2019 | Volume 64, Issue 3

The House of David
The House of David baseball team fielded players with impressive hairstyles.

While cleaning out my grandmother’s home, my mother and I came across a sepia-tone postcard tucked among a pile of old photos. The postcard featured 15 remarkably hairy baseball players. Underneath the players the words: “The House of David Ball Team. Benton Harbor, Michigan. 31.”

Knowing that my grandmother, by then in a nursing home and suffering from dementia, wouldn’t be the best resource for information, I took to Twitter to share my discovery. Many were just as curious as I was, but a handful knew who the House of David Ball Team was, and they shared with me stories of the dark, intriguing history behind the players and the religious commune of which they were members. 

Benjamin and Mary Purnell ran the cult until he was arrested.
Benjamin and Mary Purnell ran the cult until he was arrested.

The House of David was founded in 1903 by husband-and-wife preachers Benjamin and Mary Purnell. Purnell thought of himself as the 7th messenger of God, and his wife the co-messenger. Inspired by the belief that Jesus would return and restore The Garden of Eden, the Purnells practiced strict principles: grow your hair long, stay clear of dead people and abstain from wine, meat, and sex. 

After traveling the Midwest throughout the late 1800s and getting turned away from various communes and towns for their unique ideals — the corpse-fearing couple was banished from Fostoria, Ohio, for not attending the funeral of their daughter who was killed in firecracker factory explosion — they finally settled in Benton Harbor, Michigan, roughly 100 miles east of Chicago along Lake Michigan.

It was in Benton Harbor that the House of David blossomed, and their followership grew to nearly 1,000 and their acreage to 100,000. Purnell was a believer in strong work ethic and generating income, so he quickly devised ways to busy his followers and turn his commune into a money-making machine.

The cult’s Eden Springs amusement park was the Midwest’s premiere tourist attraction during the first half of the 20th century.

In a short period of time a public zoo, garden, resort, dairy farm, restaurant, arcade, movie theater, bowling alley, amphitheater, and the world’s largest miniature locomotive popped up on the House of David grounds. They named their new amusement park Eden Springs, and during the first half of the 20th century, it was the Midwest’s premiere tourist attraction. To this day Mid-Westerners old enough to remember the park proudly share their fond memories.

The House of David was also industrious in the making and distribution of everything from ice cream and grape juice to string instruments and jewelry. It is believed that the cult invented the waffle cone, first introduced at the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis. 

Another byproduct of the commune’s energy and entrepreneurship was the House of David Ball Team, formed in 1913.