Baltimore Kickers

Baltimore Kickers

Share

The Baltimore Kickers were founded on September 23, 1953. The purpose was and is to promote the German culture, heritage, language and soccer.

It is a German social and soccer club.

05/31/2026
05/30/2026

Our next Stammtisch is this Thursday, June 4th at Carson's Creekside Restaurant, located 1110 Beech Drive in Middle River. We will meet at 11am.

Please let us know if you will be joining us

05/21/2026

We visited our old stomping ground, Jerry Ds, for today's Stammtisch. Great time...food was good, server Zeus wonderful, company ausgezeichnet!

Next Stammtisch June 4th at Carson's Creek. Let us know if you will be joining us.

05/21/2026

Mark Your Calendar!

Photos from Baltimore Kickers's post 05/17/2026

We had a wonderful day today for our first Sunday Stammtisch. Our group of 28 made for marvelous company. If we overlook a few service problems at Gunpowder Falls Brewery, it was an almost perfect day.

Our next Stammtisch will be this Thursday May 21st at Jerry D's, located at 7808 Harford Rd. We will meet at 11am. Please let us know if you be joining us. NOTE: Change of location.

05/15/2026

'Fun Facts Friday'
Did you know that yesterday was 'Father's Day' in Germany?

(Herrentag or Männertag)
Father’s Day in Germany: May 14, 2026 in U.S.A. June 21, 2026

Father’s Day in Germany in not like Father’s Day here in the US. It is very different. On Father’s Day in Germany, which is celebrated on Ascension Day (Himmelfahrt-which is 40 days after Easter, which is the Thursday after the fifth Sunday), Fathers spend the day walking around their towns, communities, etc., in groups. They walk while pulling a Bollerwagon, which is a wagon full of beer, wine, schnapps and grillers. Better still, Ascension Day is a holiday so Father’s Day turns out to be a four day weekend. The connection to Ascension is simple. This is the day that Christians celebrate the day Jesus ascends into Heaven to sit at the right hand of his Father.

This practice began many years ago…. in fact, it began in the middle ages. I am not certain about the wagon and how it came about but have read it was related the villagers loading fathers into a wagon and taking them to the center of town for celebrations. I also read that the father with the most children would receive a ham. The ham has been all but eliminated, but the beer has remained constant.

Clubs were formed. Initially the clubs were Men’s Walking Clubs, where men would gather on Sundays or holidays and walk and drink together. The walks became normal parts of their lives. They became similar to bachelor parties, where they would drink, smoke and party without the women folk.

World War II took a toll on the drinking parties and most disappeared, but the drinking and the focus on the fathers, shifted to Father’s Day.

Today it has become a day to be creative and have fun. It is not uncommon for the wagons to be decorated and the men to celebrate throughout their town. They celebrate in their Bier Gartens, restaurants and Men’s Clubs. It is a fun day for men, however, some have been known to get out of control. Some say it is where men can be men, but in fact, it is where men can be little boys again….loud, out of control and a little tipsy.

Photo: Kutsche_Vatertag_2008_Beelitz Father's Day DE. Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0

05/15/2026

Mark your calendars! If you would like to volunteer to work for the club on the weekend of the festival, please let us know! Always appreciated!

Want your business to be the top-listed Gym/sports Facility in Baltimore?
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Telephone

Address


4810 Gunther Avenue
Baltimore, MD
21206