When the 39th National Rolley Hole Marbles Championships kicks off in September, attendees will get a chance not only to savor the skill of seasoned marble shooters, but to admire the marbles themselves, little stone orbs made by local craft artists with ingenuity and a passion for perfection.
Elite players will gather at Tennessee’s Standing Stone State Park to compete in a number of traditional marble games, including Tennessee Square, Ringer, and British marbles, but the main event is the Rolley Hole tournament. In Rolley Hole, two partners play against another pair, and each person tries to roll their marble into three consecutive holes positioned on a dirt yard, while preventing their opponents from doing the same. The teams revisit the holes in a specific pattern, and the first team to finish a circuit of 12 holes wins.
In this region, a few counties on either side of the Kentucky-Tennessee border that lie just north of halfway between Nashville and Knoxville, Rolley Hole is an ancestral game of uncertain origin. Despite the tongue-in-cheek “national” in the tournament title, the players are mostly locals, and all are male, the majority of retirement age or older. Last year’s tournament featured several younger players, though, an encouraging sign for those concerned for the game’s future. Friends and family of the competitors were well represented in the tournament crowd, with all ages present—there are kids’ marble tournaments too.

Rolley Hole marbles, like these on display at the championship, are carved from hard stones such as flint or agate.