Showing posts with label National Baseball Hall of Fame. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Baseball Hall of Fame. Show all posts

Sunday, June 9, 2019

National Baseball Hall Of Fame Salutes Fans’ Timeless Love Of Baseball Cards In Its Newest Permanent Exhibit, “Shoebox Treasures”

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Photo Credit: Milo Stewart Jr., National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
From MBPR! on behalf of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum:

Cooperstown, New York  – They’re rubber-banded together in boxes or filed in binders, stuffed under beds or tucked away in attics, stored on the top shelf of a closet or hanging out in your parents’ basement. They’re rectangular pieces of cardboard with a photo on one side and statistics on the other … and yes, you probably know those numbers by heart. They’re baseball cards, and if you didn’t collect them yourself, there’s a good chance that you have a sibling, parent, spouse or friend who did. 

For generations, baseball cards have provided the perfect way for fans of the National Pastime to connect to their favorite teams and players. Now they’re the focus of the newest permanent exhibit at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum“Shoebox Treasures,” which celebrates the history, design and production of baseball cards … and the fans who love them.

The exhibit occupies a 700-square-foot space on the Museum’s third floor and comes in response to feedback from visitors who yearned for a dynamic way to learn the story of how a childhood hobby transformed into a multi-million-dollar industry. The interactive exhibit allows visitors to explore the history of trading cards, trace how the design of baseball cards has evolved over the years, take a deep dive into the passion behind collecting cards, and ultimately arrive at displays of some of the rarest and most cherished cards in history. 

In the past and throughout many of the other displays in the Museum, the Hall of Fame has used baseball cards to show images of players or share impressive statistics. In this new exhibit, however, the cards finally get to tell their own story … which is often a quirky or unexpected one. For example, there’s an entire section devoted to “error cards” – those that featured reversed photos, misspelled names or even incorrectly identified players. (Or, in one case, used a photo of the team’s bat boy rather than a player!)

So far, visitors have especially enjoyed the section titled “The Cards Your Mother Threw Away,” which uses interactive vertical files to trace cards through time, from the earliest in the collection, which dates to 1878, through modern day. That portion of the exhibit features more than 2,000 cards, which represents a mere one percent of the cards in the Hall of Fame’s overall collection. 

The journey through “Shoebox Treasures” concludes with the “Holy Grails,” 10 cards that are among the rarest and most sought-after in the industry’s nearly 140-year history. These cards, which are displayed in special cases that protect them from light and other elements, include Honus Wagner’s famed T206 card from 1909, Babe Ruth’s 1916 Red Sox rookie card from the Sporting News, a 1949 Leaf Jackie Robinson card, and a 1952 Topps Mickey Mantle card.

The color schemes, fonts and designs incorporated into the entire “Shoebox Treasures” exhibit were drawn from the cards themselves. Those visitors who pay close attention will realize that even the pink subway tiles at the exhibit’s entrance look like fresh sticks of bubble gum, and guests have already remarked that the room’s long, narrow shape reminds them of an attic. In short, this isn’t just a display; it’s an interactive interpretation that honors one of the most effective marketing campaigns ever conceived and celebrates fans’ passion for collecting. 

For those who are so inspired, there are even interactive stations where visitors can pose for their own baseball card photo, choose a favorite team and position, and email themselves a collection of cards that shows what they would have looked like through generations of baseball cards – and thus become their own part of baseball’s history.

For more information about “Shoebox Treasures” or any of the one-of-a-kind experiences available only at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, please visit https://baseballhall.org/. To plan your trip to Cooperstown to see the exhibit yourself – and to explore packages that will allow you to truly discover “America’s Most Perfect Village” – check out https://www.cooperstowngetaway.org/.

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

National Museum of American Jewish History Explores America’s Favorite Pastime in Chasing Dreams, The Groundbreaking Exhibition Opens in Philadelphia March 13, 2014


Jewish Jocks



There are people whose contributions to baseball history went far beyond mere batting averages or stolen bases. They didn’t just play the game, they changed the game. For generations of American Jews and other minorities, they served as athletic, cultural, and ethical role models.

 On March 13, 2014, just in time for the start of baseball season, the National Museum of American Jewish History (NMAJH) will open a groundbreaking new exhibition highlighting these game changers and—just as importantly—the fans, ideals, and culture they inspired. Chasing Dreams: Baseball and Becoming American is the first large-scale exhibition to use the story of Jews and baseball as an opportunity to highlight ways in which our national pastime is part of the history, and ongoing story, of how immigrants and minorities of many different backgrounds—including Italians, Asians, Latinos, African-Americans, and many others—become American, to feel a part of the society in which they might otherwise be on the margins.

 The exhibition is co-curated by Dr. Josh Perelman, chief curator and director of collections and exhibitions at NMAJH, and Ivy Weingram, associate curator. It will be on view at the Museum through October 26, 2014.

With major support from the National Endowment for the Humanities, in close collaboration with Major League Baseball, and featuring important loans from the Baseball Hall of Fame, Chasing Dreams features more than 130 original objects, including game-worn uniforms, game-used objects, correspondence, newspaper accounts, board games, awards, baseball cards, signed baseballs, Jewish ritual objects, ballpark giveaways, stadium seats, Little League memorabilia, and more. Objects from the Museum’s collection will be complemented by loans from public and private collections, as well as the Museum’s public collecting initiative on Tumblr. Original films feature interviews with baseball executives and everyday fans. Interactive displays will offer visitors various opportunities to play, participate, and learn.

“Since the nineteenth century, baseball has been an exhilarating metaphor for America, a land of so much promise and opportunity,” says Perelman. “And for minority communities in this country, the sport has long served as a path to learning and understanding American values, representing a shared American identity and sometimes highlighting our differences. It is, in short, a mirror of America.”

Visitors to Chasing Dreams will explore baseball’s legends and myths, its heroes and flops, its struggles and its moments of triumph. The exhibition will celebrate well-known Jewish heroes such as Hank Greenberg and Sandy Koufax and iconic baseball pioneers like Jackie Robinson, Joe DiMaggio, Roberto Clemente, and Ichiro Suzuki, as well as baseball’s extended family of vendors, team owners, minor leaguers, amateur
players, scouts, broadcasters, journalists, novelists—and especially, fans. Chasing Dreams explores how baseball has served as an arena in which values, identity, ethnicity, and race have been projected, contested, and occasionally solidified. It poses questions such as: Why have so many immigrant groups and minority communities identified with, taken pride in, and felt connected to the nation’s pastime? Did baseball impact how American Jews established affinities with other racial and ethnic minorities? What does it mean that Jews consider Jackie Robinson to be one of their own heroes?

Chasing Dreams addresses these questions through the exhibition’s four key sections:
Introduction to the exhibition and early baseball history: Establishes the exhibition’s principal themes and immerses visitors in the early history of the game and its key figures, from Lipman Pike to Helen Dauvray and Barney Dreyfuss, co-inventor of the World Series.

Shaping Identity: Examines baseball as a lens through which to learn and understand the values of a rapidly changing nation. Features players such as Hank Greenberg and Joe DiMaggio, who proved their mettle on the field and in their conspicuous patriotism. Highlights Moe Berg, who showed that a catcher could also be a spy and Thelma “Tiby” Eisen of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, who proved that women could play at a competitive level.

Overcoming Adversity: Explores how baseball has been intertwined with the history of racial, ethnic, and gender integration, as well as the complexities of Jewish racial identity. Beginning with Jackie Robinson’s debut, this gallery features notable barrier-breakers such as Hank Aaron, Roberto Clemente, Ichiro Suzuki, and Justine Siegal, the first woman to pitch major league batting practice. Special attention will be paid to
Sandy Koufax, whose unparalleled athleticism yielded millions of flashbulb memories and whose decision not to pitch the first game of the 1965 World Series because it fell on Yom Kippur unexpectedly made him a hero

Family and Community: Examines how baseball has impacted communities, shaped relationships within families and established new, personal meanings for each generation of fans in Little League, at camp, or through ballpark concessions. This section will feature memorabilia culled from the Museum’s Tumblr-based public collecting initiative, objects related to broadcasters and journalists such as Mel Allen, more recent players like Shawn Green and Brad Ausmus, and an illustrated timeline of notable events in baseball history.
Within this thematic exploration, Chasing Dreams also provides several opportunities for pure, playful fun. Museum-goers are invited to interact with a simulation game created specifically for Chasing Dreams called Catching History. Visitors are invited to “field” balls hit by a variety of baseball greats and are rewarded with facts and trivia for every play. An interactive, touchscreen database entitled People of the Game will provide an encyclopedic exploration of approximately 200 Jews in the major leagues—each represented by a baseball card, as well as biographical and statistical information—and an opportunity to build one’s own virtual “dream team” which visitors can then e-mail to themselves. The Museum’s concourse level will feature Koufax on the Koncourse, an interactive experience complete with Koufax’s rookie jersey and a pitcher’s mound that invites baseball fans of all ages to don a reproduction jersey, then pick up a ball and try their hand at pitching like the indomitable Dodgers’ ace. As a celebration of passionate fandom, the Museum’s first floor will feature nearly 100 original baseball cards, along with some of their stories.

Chasing Dreams will be complemented by a dedicated website, educational and public programming, school curricula, and a family guide. Title I schools are eligible to bring their students to the exhibition free of charge and additional funding is available to subsidize other schools and camp groups. A fully illustrated, 256-page companion book will also be available. The book includes original pieces by more than 40 notable
authors, including John Thorn, the Official Historian of Major League Baseball who often appears on ESPN, MLB, The History Channel, and other television outlets as a sports authority and commentator; Ira Berkow, former New York Times sports columnist and recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting; Doug Glanville, retired major league player for the Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago Cubs, and Texas Rangers, an ESPN baseball analyst, and a regular contributor to ESPN.com and The New York Times. The book and related exhibition merchandise, including a set of baseball cards developed by Jewish Major Leaguers, Inc. for the Museum and the American Jewish Historical Society, will be available at the Museum Store onsite and online.

After closing in Philadelphia, Chasing Dreams will tour to museums nationwide. A panel version of the exhibition (without artifacts) will also travel to ballparks, historical societies, libraries, community centers, and synagogues.


Chasing Dreams has received the endorsement of MLB Commissioner Allan “Bud” Selig. The full project team in addition to Mr. Selig includes John Thorn (chief historian for Major League Baseball, Daniel Okrent (author of the baseball classic Nine Innings and first public editor of the New York Times), Josh Perelman (chief curator and director of collections and exhibitions at NMAJH), Martin Abramowitz (founding president of Jewish Major Leaguers, Inc.), Rabbi Rebecca Alpert (author and professor of religion at Temple University), Adrian Burgos, Jr., (author and director of graduate studies and professor of history at the University of Illinois), Jeffrey S. Gurock (Libby M. Klaperman Professor of Jewish History at Yeshiva University, as well as author and past-chair of the Academic Council of American Jewish Historical Society), Jane Leavy (journalist and Sandy Koufax biographer), Peter Levine (author and sports historian), William Ressler (assistant professor of strategic communication at Ithaca College), Steven A. Reiss (author and sports historian), Justine Siegal (barrier-breaking pitcher, coach and founder of the non-profit organization Baseball for All), Scott Simon (author, journalist, and host of NPR’s Weekend Edition), Ivy Weingram (NMAJH associate curator and co-curator of Chasing Dreams) and Beth Wenger (director of the University of Pennsylvania’s History Department and Jewish Studies program).



The National Museum of American Jewish History, located on historic Independence Mall in Philadelphia, brings to life the 360-year history of Jews in America. Tracing the stories of how Jewish immigrants became Jewish Americans, the Museum invites visitors of all backgrounds to share their own stories and reflect on how their histories and identities shape and are shaped by the American experience. An open door for all, NMAJH honors the past and contributes to a better future by sharing the power of imagination and ideas, culture and community, leadership and service, in ways that turn inspiration into action.

The National Museum of American Jewish History is located at 101 South Independence Mall East at the corner of Fifth and Market Streets in Philadelphia. Museum hours are Tuesday to Friday, 10:00 am - 5:00 pm, and Saturday and Sunday 10:00 am - 5:30 pm. NMAJH is closed most Mondays, including federal holidays and some Jewish holidays. Museum admission is $12.00 for adults, $11.00 for senior citizens and youth, free for children 12 and under, Museum Members, and active military with ID.

 For information on the Museum please call 215.923.3811 or visit the website at NMAJH.org.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

6 Places To Spend A Night At The Museum

Ever since Ben Stiller discovered what happens to exhibits after the sun goes down in the blockbuster movie Night at the Museum, sleepover experiences have taken off at attractions across the country. These overnight adventures invite big kids, 'tweens and sometimes young teens (and a parent) for an overnight stay that delivers fewer crowds and the chance to explore with some exclusive, VIP activities thrown in.
As you might expect, overnight events at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City and the National Museum of Natural History in D.C. -- the backdrops for Night at the Museum and its sequel -- are hot tickets that can sell out months in advance. Programs at other museums can often have shorter waiting lists.
What can you expect? In general, museum overnights are aimed at the 6-to-12 crowd, but be sure to check the age range at each institution. Count on paying between $100 and $140 per person and bringing a sleeping bag, flashlight and sense of adventure.
Still game? Here are six more can't-miss museum sleepovers around the country.
Field Museum of Natural History: Chicago, IL
The wildly popular Dozin' with the Dinos overnight program is always a sellout as parents and children ages 6-12 bring their sleeping bags to explore one of the most beloved attractions in Chi-Town. The evening is filled with self-guided tours and workshop activities, leading up to bedtime stories in the shadow of Sue, the Field's famous T-Rex.
National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum: Cooperstown, NY
Little sluggers can spend an evening with legends of baseball as part of Extra Innings Overnights. This sleepover lets kids ages 7-12 explore the museum's collection of baseball artifacts after hours and enjoy special interactive activities, like re-creating radio broadcasts of famous homerun calls. Kids can also take in a private multimedia screening of "The Baseball Experience" for a look into the history of baseball.
International Spy Museum: Washington, D.C.
Every few months, the International Spy Museum lets kids ages 9-13 channel their inner Bond, James Bond at Operation Secret Slumber. Young agents are given top-secret KidSpy training as they take on secret identities, perfect cover stories, and gather intelligence. Throughout the night, kids make and break secret codes, uncover secrets, and hunt for a mole within the ranks. As day breaks, enemy agents are exposed and participants revert back to their true identities.
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County: Los Angeles, CA
Themed family overnight adventures feature hands-on science demonstrations, after-dark tours, and family games and activities. Junior paleontologists can make casts of fossils atCamp Dino while budding Indiana Joneses get to take part in a mock excavation withCamp ArchaeologyTip: On another night, consider heading over to the nearby La Brea Tar Pits for special flashlight tours and scavenger hunts.
Maritime Museum of San Diego: San Diego, CA
Overnight adventurers get to sleep aboard the Star of India, the world's oldest active sailing ship. On an imaginary voyage back to the 1870s, kids can raise sails, hoist cargo, sing sea shanties, and learn the principles of celestial navigation. Museum staff serve as time-travel guides who share what life was like for immigrants and crew who lived aboard the ship.
University of Pennsylvania Museum: Philadelphia, PA
The Penn Museum's 40 Winks with the Sphinx lets kids ages 6-12 take a journey through time and across continents to explore mummies, hieroglyphics, the Ancient Greeks and Romans, and more. Games, crafts, a scavenger hunt, and an evening expedition by flashlight are all part of the fun.
-- Erin Gifford of Kidventurous contributed this to MiniTime.com.