There is a moment, standing on the worn clay infield of Beyer Stadium on the west side of Rockford, when the past reaches right out and grabs you by the collar. The afternoon light angles in over the bleachers, the scoreboard looks like it belongs in a sepia photograph, and you realize you are standing on the very ground where the Rockford Peaches played ball — real, fiercely competitive, historically significant baseball — during the years of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League from 1943 to 1954. If you have seen A League of Their Own, you already know the story in broad strokes. Standing here fills in every detail the movie left out.
Beyer Stadium sits in the Beyer Boulevard neighborhood on Rockford’s near west side, an easy ten-minute drive from downtown. The stadium itself was built in 1988 on the same site where the Peaches played their home games for over a decade, and the city has taken real care to honor that legacy. The adjacent Rockford Peaches Museum is a compact but remarkably well-curated space that walks visitors through the full arc of the league — from its wartime origins, when Philip Wrigley launched the AAGPBL to keep professional baseball alive while men were overseas, straight through to the final season and the quiet disbanding of one of sport’s most remarkable chapters.
Inside, you will find original uniforms, photographs, personal letters, scorecards, and equipment that belonged to actual Peaches players. The stories told on these walls are not sanitized. These women traveled by bus across the Midwest, played under strict rules about their appearance and conduct, earned modest wages, and still managed to draw over a million fans to their games across the league during peak seasons. The Peaches themselves were one of the most successful franchises in the AAGPBL, winning four championships. That is not a footnote — that is a dynasty.
What makes a visit here feel genuinely special rather than merely educational is the human scale of it all. This is not a massive institution with a gift shop the size of an airplane hangar. It is a neighborhood ballpark with a story that deserves a full afternoon of your attention. On warm days, walk the grounds, take in the field, and sit in the bleachers for a few minutes. Bring your kids. Bring your parents. Bring anyone who has ever loved sports and wondered why so many great stories get left out of the official record.
The museum is managed with obvious affection by people who understand exactly what they are protecting. Admission is modest, the staff is genuinely happy to talk your ear off about Peaches history, and the experience stays with you long after you drive back out onto Beyer Boulevard. Rockford is a city with a lot of pride and a fair amount of grit, and nowhere is that combination more visible than here, where eleven seasons of women’s professional baseball left a mark that no amount of time has managed to erase.
Plan to arrive with a couple of hours to spare. There is no rushing a place like this, and honestly, you will not want to.