Showing posts with label Cooperstown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cooperstown. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Hall of Fame - 50th Anniversary : 1989

1989-Jun-12 Anniversary Station - Cooperstown NY


The National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum is a history museum and hall of fame in Cooperstown, New York, operated by a private foundation. The Hall of Fame was established by Stephen Carlton Clark, an heir to the Singer Sewing Machine fortune. The building was dedicated on June 12, 1939. The first five men elected were Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Honus Wagner, Christy Mathewson and Walter Johnson, chosen in 1936; roughly 20 more were selected before the entire group was inducted at the Hall's 1939 opening.
In addition to the regular 1989 Lou Gehrig first day of issue postmark, the Postal Service also used a pictorial postmark with the 50th anniversary logo of the Hall of Fame.This postmark was also used June 12th which was the actual 50th anniversary date as well as being the same anniversary for the issuance of the 3 cent 1939 baseball stamp. 

June 10 & 11 postmarks

Tuesday, August 7, 2018

Hall of Fame - 1992 : Fingers, Seaver, Newhouser

The Baseball Writers' Association of America voted by mail to select from recent major league players an elected two : Rollie Fingers and Tom Seaver. The Veterans Committee met in closed sessions to consider older players and selected two : Hal Newhouser and umpire Bill McGowan - formal inductions were held August 2, 1992 Cooperstown, NY

Robinson Stamps 
  
Bob Patlen silk screen printed
Gateway
Zasso silk

Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Lou Gehrig - 1989

Cooperstown, NY offered a special commemorative postmark for the 50th Anniversary of the Hall of Fame, which opened it's doors on June 12, 1939.
Robinson Stamps unofficial first day cover (Sch294)

Rockford `89 show covers honoring Lou Gehrig. The first has the unofficial first day Cooperstown anniversary postmark, the second has the Lou Gehrig show commemorative postmark
(Sch296)
re-use of a Rockford 86 show cancel. Cachet features Babe ruth and Ty Cobb

unknown producer Jun 12 Anniversary Station postmark


Sch# from A Checklist of the Lou Gehrig Issue, Elten Schiller, AFDCS July 1990

Thursday, November 24, 2016

Baseball Centennial - 1939

June 12, 1939 Cooperstown, NY

The US Postal Service issued a 3c stamp to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the formation of the rule of baseball. The Cooperstown Chamber of Commerce issued a resolution in 1937 requesting the US Post Office Department issue a stamp in commemoration of the baseball anniversary. This request was probably bolstered by the fact that President F. Roosevelt was an avid stamp collector, Ford Frick, president of the National League was an avid stamp collector and Postmaster General Jame Farley was an avid baseball fan and first baseman.

At Roosevelt's request Farley drew a proposed sketch of boys playing in a field, to which Roosevelt suggested the church in the background. Bureau of Engraving artist William Roach provided the final design of the stamp, which featured boys playing a sandlot game of baseball based on a site in Milford, Delaware. The engravers of the stamp were Charles A. Brooks (vignette) and James T. Vail (lettering and frame).

The first cachet to mention the baseball centennial

A-241 - Leatherstocking Stamp Club  - 855-60a

The Leatherstocking stamp was formed in 1934 with the purpose of promoting baseball and obtaining a commemorative stamp for the 1939 centennial anniversary of formation of official rules of baseball (as thought at that time). Credit was given to Abner Doubleday for the rules, since Doubleday was born in Ballston Spa, served in the Civil War as a General, and played his baseball in a pasture in Cooperstown, NY..

Since National Air-Mail Week was a huge event in 1938, the Leatherstocking Stamp club created a cachet to be used for this event, but to also promote the upcoming baseball centennial. The Air-Mail cachet was designed by Alfred Cobbett
Cobbett also designed several cachets to be used as the official Leatherstocking design. The seal was intended to be used on the reverse of envelopes, parcels, etc.. and were available in local stores.

Small boy covers - It was President Roosevelt's wish that every boy (girls were not excluded) be able to obtain a first day cover of the baseball issue. Any boy sending a self-addressed envelope and 3-cents to their postmaster, would have their envelope forwarded to Cooperstown to obtain a first day cover. This created problems for the Cooperstown staff as the volume of mail was greater than expected and not every child followed the instructions specifically. Cooperstown Postmaster Bundy took on the additional costs required. When their supply of envelopes ran out, Bundy contacted the Leatherstocking Stamp Club and obtained some of their envelopes 9which had the words first day of issue overprinted to complete the orders..
Possible Small-boy cover (with additional autographs from Ed Kranepool and Joe Peptone)

Small-boy replacement cachet (scan from Baseball Centennial - First Days)*
A-242 - 855-60b


1939 Baseball
*Baseball Centennial 1839-1939, Robert D Barron, First Days Journal October 1983
Baseball...Stamps...Autographs, Elten F Schiller, Hentzell Publications, San Diego 1982 (A-#)
Plant's Encyclopedia of Cacheted F.D.C.s, Vol IX, Mike Mellone, FDC Publishing Co, Stewartsville, NJ 1983 (p855-#)