Baseball Memories

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Lifestyle

We have entered a very exciting baseball playoff season for our NY teams.  In that spirit, I had a super fun conversation with my aunt this weekend. 

 

I learned that she was a huge Brooklyn Dodgers fan and spent many an afternoon in the mid-1950s at Ebbets Field.  With crystal clarity, she recalled watching exciting games with family and friends, cheering on her team and just the feeling of being in the stadium.  She was distraught when the Dodgers left Brooklyn in 1958.

 

During those years, she amassed a collection of autographs from her favorite players.   The process was fascinating.  She and her friends would show up at the park with self-addressed postcards, find the players whether coming onto the field or leaving, and throw them their blank postcards.  Slowly, the autographed cards, sometimes with a little note, would return to her mailbox.  It was as if everyone knew the rules – the fans brought the medium and the players politely obliged.  She remembered receiving autographed postcards from Duke Snider, Pee Wee Reese, Don Newcombe and more.  

 

The postcards themselves have turned into a memory – but what a memory!

Comments

Daniel Schwartz

That is an awsome story. I can't imagine players doing that today when they know they can get paid for them.
Fred Klein

I remember going to Ebbets Field and the Dodgers Jewish Firstbase coach, Jake Pitler. Little known fact :)
Robert Intelisano

Love the backstory! Where are those postcards today?
Scott Bloom

Most still gladly sign in person. Especially for kids.
Rich Slomovitz

Great story - what happened to the cards? Players will still sign baseballs today before a game for kids. My son got a number of autographs over the years that way. When I was a kid, I wrote letters to players requesting autographs and got many back from Mets players and other greats, including Tom Seaver, Willie Mays, Hank Aaron and Pete Rose. Had them hung up in my room. Of course, there's a good chance it was a clubhouse kid who signed them, but I still have them in an album, frayed edges and all.
Louis Cappelli

Met Fan now, was a BROOKLYN DODGER FAN then, I thought my world came to an end when they moved [ I was only 13 ] my uncle's company had box seats at 3rd base not realizing I was only 30 feet from one of the GREATEST BALL PLAYERS EVER, JACKIE ROBINSON. THOSE WERE THE DAYS MY FRIEND

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