Baseball History Gallery
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El Score from Sept. 23, 1911 with Joe Tinker of Tinker-to-Evers-to-Chance fame on the cover.This was
historylover1230:Alta Weiss, one of the first women to play semi-pro baseball, pitching in a long wo
surroundedbybooks:todaysdocument:Just in time for Game 6 of the World Series:Drawing of Equipment fo
peashooter85:A day that changed baseball forever,During the early years of the Major League, basebal
The Washington Herald, 10/17/1911. Some things never change.
vintagesportspictures:Los Angeles Creamery baseball team (1925)
njdotcom:In a really, really local variant on baseball rules, men in Beach Haven, seen in this undat
monkey baseball Psalter, Flanders ca. 1320-1330.Bodleian Library, Douce 6, fol. 114r
A lady baseball player, possibly in Golden Gate Park (San Francisco, c. 1910).
Yankee Stadium on opening day, April 18, 1923. Opening game was against the Boston Red Sox.
In the 1920s, the prolific Yankee batsman Babe Ruth was having such a great run that he soon scored
Al Capone and the Baseball Bat scene from “The Untouchables”,One of the most iconic scenes from the
Babe Ruth and Jack Dempsey, September 15th, 1923.
Babe Ruth after a successful Turkey hunt.
As another baseball season begins I bring you this old Chicago Cubs ticket stub. Oddly, there is no
Trade cards from the Coupon Cigarettes Baseball Issue (1910):A. O. Jordan (Atlanta)Arch Persons (Mon
Charles Hinton’s Baseball Pitching Cannon,Charles Hinton was a mathematics professor with Prin
cartermagazine:Today In History‘Jackie Robinson, the first Black baseball player in the major league
chubachus:Inhabitants of a Union camp pose for the camera including three near the center who are st
damesalamode:Journal des Dames et des Modes, 1798.OH MY GOD. SO CUTE. Look at his little baseball
Death to Flying Things. (That’s really his nickname. Seriously.)
click on the photo – its actually huge! "League Park, Cleveland.“ Grandstand seati
New York, The Polo Grounds, 155th Street at 8th Avenue, 1921.“Murderer’s Row” of the New York Yankee
1937. Crowd in Line for Tickets at Navin Field
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