 |
 |
Honus
Wagner T206 Tobacco Card, 1909–1911.
© National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum |
I
think there are only three things that America will be known
for 2,000
years from now when they study this civilization: the
Constitution, jazz music and baseball. They’re the three
most beautifully designed things this culture has ever produced.
Gerald
Early, scholar
Baseball As America, the first major
exhibition to examine the relationship between the national pastime
and American culture, comes to the Oakland Museum of California September
17, 2005–January 22, 2006.
Organized by the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum,
in Cooperstown, New York, Baseball As America is on a
four-year, ten-city nationwide tour, marking the first time many
of the treasures have left their legendary home. The national tour
of Baseball As America is sponsored by Ernst & Young.
Baseball As America is
a national celebration of America’s
romance with baseball. The blockbuster exhibition explores the
game’s enduring impact on American society, touching on immigration,
nationalism, integration, technology, and popular culture.
“Baseball and America have grown up together. In fact, the
game is such an integral part of our culture that we often take
for granted its deep day-to-day significance in our lives,” noted
Jane Forbes Clark, chairman of the board of the National Baseball
Hall of Fame and Museum. “In bringing this exhibition to
people across the country, it is our hope that we can learn more
about ourselves as a people with shared values, as reflected in
our national game.”
Exhibition Highlights
- The revered Doubleday Ball, a relic from baseball's mythical
first game in 1839
- Jackie Robinson's 1956 Brooklyn Dodgers jersey
- Artifacts from the All American Girls Professional Baseball
League
- Record-setting bats from Babe Ruth, Roger Maris, and the Mark
McGwire-Sammy Sosa home run chase of 1998
- President Franklin
Roosevelt's January 15, 1942, "Green
Light" letter calling for the continuation of professional
baseball as a way to heighten morale during World War II
- Norman Rockwell's
droll 1949 painting “The Three Umpires”
- "Shoeless" Joe
Jackson's shoes
- The most highly
prized baseball card in the world—the
T206 Honus Wagner, 1909
 |
Jackie
Robinson’s Dodgers Jersey, 1956. © National
Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
|
Exhibition Themes
Baseball As America is organized into seven thematic sections to explore the
changing roles baseball has played in American culture and history.
Our National Spirit. The links between our heritage
and national institutions and the game—baseball as
cultural ambassador abroad and unifying tradition at home. Ideals & Injustices. Baseball
as a microcosm and catalyst for America’s changing attitudes
about equality and opportunity.
Rooting for the Team. A
look at baseball rituals—hot
dogs, the seventh-inning stretch, wearing team jerseys and colors
to the game, fan clubs, baseball cards, and autographs.
Enterprise & Opportunity. Baseball as a business,
notably the introduction of an admission fee and the role of baseball
in advertising and product endorsements.
Sharing a Common Culture. Lo, the ubiquitous baseball
cap! How baseball has become integral to popular American culture,
from Norman Rockwell to mainstream movies.
Invention & Ingenuity. Both on the field and
off—technological advances in sports equipment, the
aerodynamics of the fastball and the curveball, TV and radio
partnerships.
Weaving Myths. Stadiums have become shrines. Players
become legends. Ruth, DiMaggio, Robinson, Mays, and Koufax each
embody an era or an ideal.
Bay Area Baseball Component
Bay Area baseball history is especially rich, with two major league franchises
and its illustrious Pacific Coast League teams. Baseball As America at
the Oakland Museum of California includes a local component, organized by
the museum, with artifacts and photographs of the legendary Billy Martin
and Casey Stengel; hometown heroes Joe DiMaggio, Ricky Henderson, and Joe
Morgan; and players who broke barriers—Oakland native “Pumpsie” Green,
the first black player on the Boston Red Sox, and Glenn Burke, the first
openly gay player.
Publication: Baseball As America
The exhibition is accompanied by a major publication, Baseball As America,
published by the National Geographic Society. The 320-page compendium includes
45 newly commissioned and 30 classic essays, literature, and commentaries from
scholars, humorists, and writers. Historical photos and images of objects in
the exhibition illustrate the book.
Baseball As America premiered in New York City in
March 2002 at the American Museum of Natural History.
It has also appeared at the Natural History Museum of Los
Angeles County, The Field Museum in Chicago, the Cincinnati
Museum Center, the Florida International Museum in St. Petersburg,
the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History,
the Missouri Historical Society in St. Louis, and the
Houston Museum of Fine Arts. The exhibition travels to
the Henry
Ford Museum, in Detroit, after its run in Oakland. For
information on the exhibition, visit www.baseballasamerica.org.
Organized
by the National Baseball
Hall of Fame and Museum, in Cooperstown,
New York, Baseball As America is in the midst of a four-year,
ten-city nationwide tour, marking the first time the treasures
have left their legendary home.
The national
tour of Baseball As America is sponsored by Ernst & Young.
Major Sponsorship of Baseball As America at the Oakland
Museum of California is provided by the Oakland Museum Women’s
Board. Additional funding provided by the Wells Fargo Foundation,
Platinum Advisors, and the Evelyn & Walter Haas, Jr. Fund.
Relax and ride Amtrak to the exhibit; the Amtrak Jack London station
is just a short 8-block walk from the Oakland Museum.
|