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National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum

The National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum is a history museum and hall of fame in Cooperstown, New York, operated by private interests. It serves as the central point of the history of baseball in the United States and displays baseball-related artifacts and exhibits, honoring those who have excelled in playing, managing, and serving the sport. The Hall's motto is "Preserving History, Honoring Excellence, Connecting Generations". Cooperstown is often used as shorthand (or a metonym) for the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum.

"Baseball Hall of Fame" redirects here. For other uses, see Baseball Hall of Fame (disambiguation).

Established

1936 (1936) (Baseball)
Dedicated June 12, 1939

[1]

  • Photo Archive
  • National Baseball Hall of Fame Library (Manuscripts, Books, Publications)
  • Recorded Media Collection
  • Artifact Collection
[1]

  • 250,000 photographs
  • 14,000 hours of moving images and sound recordings
  • 40,000 three-dimensional artifacts
[1]

260,000/year
(average as of 2018)[2]

Josh Rawitch[3] (since 2021)

Jane Forbes Clark[3]
(Board of Directors)

Tom Shieber[3]
(Senior Curator)

The Hall of Fame was established in 1939 by Stephen Carlton Clark, an heir to the Singer Sewing Machine fortune. Clark sought to bring tourists to the city hurt by the Great Depression, which reduced the local tourist trade, and Prohibition, which devastated the local hops industry. Clark constructed the Hall of Fame's building, which was dedicated on June 12, 1939. (His granddaughter, Jane Forbes Clark, is the current chairman of the board of directors.) The erroneous claim that Civil War hero Abner Doubleday invented baseball in Cooperstown was instrumental in the early marketing of the Hall.


An expanded library and research facility opened in 1994.[4] Dale Petroskey became the organization's president in 1999.[5] In 2002, the Hall launched Baseball as America, a traveling exhibit that toured ten American museums over six years. The Hall of Fame has since also sponsored educational programming on the Internet to bring the Hall of Fame to schoolchildren who might not visit. The Hall and Museum completed a series of renovations in spring 2005. The Hall of Fame also presents an annual exhibit at FanFest at the Major League Baseball All-Star Game.

One committee voted on managers and umpires for induction in every even-numbered year. This committee voted only twice— and in 2009 for induction in 2010.

in 2007 for induction in 2008

One committee voted on executives and builders for induction in every even-numbered year. This committee conducted its only two votes in the same years as the managers/umpires committee.

The pre–World War II players committee was intended to vote every five years on players whose careers began in 1942 or earlier. It conducted its only vote as part of the election process .[17]

for induction in 2009

Baseball at the Movies houses memorabilia while a screen shows footage from those movies.

baseball movie

The Bullpen Theater is the site of daily programming at the museum (trivia games, book discussions, etc.) and is decorated with pictures of famous .

relief pitchers

Inductee Row features images of Hall of Famers inducted from 1937 to 1939.

The Perez-Steele Art Gallery features art of all media related to baseball. served as an artist for various projects at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum for 20 years, starting in 1981 [52][53]

Dick Perez

The Plaque Gallery, the most recognizable site at the museum, contains induction plaques of all members. Since 2016, sculptor has been creating the bas-relief likeness plaques due to a commission from Matthews International.[54]

Tom Tsuchiya

The Sandlot Kids Clubhouse has various interactive displays for young children.

Scribes and Mikemen honors and Ford C. Frick Award winners with a photo display and has artifacts related to baseball writing and broadcasting. Floor-to-ceiling windows at the Scribes and Mikemen exhibit face an outdoor courtyard with statues of Johnny Podres and Roy Campanella (representing the Brooklyn Dodgers 1955 championship team), and an unnamed All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player. A Satchel Paige statue was unveiled and dedicated during the 2006 Induction Weekend.[50]

BBWAA Career Excellence Award

An Education Gallery hosts school groups and, in the summer, presentations about artifacts from the museum's collection.

Notable events[edit]

1982 unauthorized sales[edit]

A controversy erupted in 1982, when it emerged that some historic items given to the Hall had been sold on the collectibles market. The items had been lent to the Baseball Commissioner's office, gotten mixed up with other property owned by the Commissioner's office and employees of the office, and moved to the garage of Joe Reichler, an assistant to Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, who sold the items to resolve his personal financial difficulties. Under pressure from the New York Attorney General, the Commissioner's Office made reparations, but the negative publicity damaged the Hall of Fame's reputation, and made it more difficult for it to solicit donations.[56]

All-American Girls Professional Baseball League § National Women's Baseball Hall of Fame inductees

Award share

Baseball awards § United States

Bob Feller Act of Valor Award

(1946) (managers, executives, writers, umpires)

Honor Rolls of Baseball

List of Major League Baseball awards

List of members of the Baseball Hall of Fame

Negro Leagues Baseball Museum

Nisei Baseball Research Project

Official website

from Major League Baseball

Hall of Fame History

. Baseball-Reference.com (including HOF inductees, Hall of Famer Batting and Pitching Stats, and HOF Voting Results for 1936 to present)

Awards and Honors