Founded in 1958 on Table Rock Lake. One of the oldest baseball camps in the country, now part of the Ballparks of America family.
Long before the Strip, before Silver Dollar City, before Ballparks of America had even broken ground — there was Sho-Me. Founded in 1958 on the shores of Table Rock Lake, it's one of the oldest continuously operating baseball camps in America.
For nearly seventy years, players have come to Sho-Me for the same reason they always have: lakefront ball fields, all-grass infields, and the kind of camp-week format your grandfather would recognize. Cabins, mess hall, morning practice, afternoon games, fishing in between.
In 2024, Ballparks of America acquired Sho-Me and reopened it as the home of our 14U and up tournaments. The fields stayed. The history stayed. Everything that made Sho-Me, Sho-Me — stayed.
Visit shomebaseball.com
Lakefront. All-grass. Camp-week format. The historic alternative — and the home of older-division play in the BPoA family.

Right on Table Rock Lake. Outfield breeze off the water. Players swim between games. The kind of view a postcard owes you.

No turf. No new construction. Maintained the way it's been done since 1958. The way the older players want it.

Cabins, mess hall, morning practice, afternoon games. The classic American baseball camp — a week kids in the older divisions remember for life.
14U and up. Lakefront fields. Same all-inclusive package: lodging, meals, umpires, pin trading, the works.




Tournament schedule, registration, history, lakefront cabin photos, and the things that make Sho-Me feel like 1958.
Go to shomebaseball.com