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1933 All-Star Game Photo

PostPosted: Thu Nov 01, 2012 11:37 pm
by andycummings65
Comiskey Park
American League
Top Row, L-R: Batboy; Bill Conroy, Lou Gehrig, Babe Ruth, Oral Hildebrand, Connie Mack (Mgr.), Joe Cronin, Lefty Grove, Batboy John McBride, Bill Dickey, Al Simmons, Lefty Gomez, Wes Ferrell, Jimmy Dykes.

Bottom Row: L-R: Al Schacht, Eddie Collins, Tony Lazzeri, Alvin Crowder, Jimmy Foxx, Art Fletcher, Earl Averill, Ed Rommel, Ben Chapman, Rick Ferrell, Sam West, Charlie Gehringer.
Image

the angle of the pic is interesting too....
Jimmy Dykes, standing at the right end of the row, was 5'9 and Babe Ruth was 6'2, but by the angle, Jimmy dwarfs the Babe.

Also, Joe Cronin was 27 when this pic was taken, but he looks like he would have had trouble covering much ground at shortstop. He looks huge



John Mcbride, Batboy In 1st All-star Game
October 10, 1998|By Meg McSherry Breslin, Tribune Staff Writer.

John McBride, a White Sox batboy who was possibly the last living member from the game's first All-Star team in 1933, died Thursday following a heart attack in Memorial Medical Center in Woodstock. Mr. McBride, 84, lived in Woodstock and was a former resident of Chicago and Evergreen Park.

While a young boy growing up just a few blocks from Comiskey Park, Mr. McBride would collect discarded bottles at the park in exchange for entry to the next day's game. By age 10, he sold seat cushions and, as he recalled, shamed plenty of men into buying them for their dates.

By the time Mr. McBride reached 14, the White Sox clubhouse manager knew him well enough to ask him to be a batboy. Mr. McBride was thrilled at the opportunity, even though the job wasn't salaried. Instead, his payment was a ball that had been played that day, which he promptly had autographed and sold for as much as $5, a hefty sum for a teenager during the Depression.

Re: 1933 All-Star Game Photo

PostPosted: Fri Nov 02, 2012 1:03 am
by bontomn
Reminds me of an All-Star trivia question: Of the 18 players who started the 1934 game, all but one eventually made it into the Hall of Fame. Anybody want to take a stab at naming the sole exception?

Re: 1933 All-Star Game Photo

PostPosted: Fri Nov 02, 2012 7:04 am
by WeatherNut
Wally Berger

WN

Re: 1933 All-Star Game Photo

PostPosted: Fri Nov 02, 2012 11:50 am
by bontomn
Correct! Want to try to name the other 17 who did make the Hall?

Re: 1933 All-Star Game Photo

PostPosted: Fri Nov 02, 2012 12:45 pm
by PJ Axelsson
My personal story to this game:

My grandfather went to the game. He was a diehard Cubs fan, was able to get tickets, and at the game managed to catch a foul ball that Ruth hit (I think off of Hubbell). The ball was never certified, of course, and had no value except to him. He and my grandmother came to live with us as they got on in years. One day my brothers and I couldn't find a baseball to play with. I knew there was one stashed away in a dresser drawer and grabbed that. Of course, we lost it in the woods, never realizing what we were playing with history.

Years later, I found this ugly, unraveled mess of a baseball buried in the ground, and as far as I'm concerned, that is the ball...

:)

Re: 1933 All-Star Game Photo

PostPosted: Tue Dec 17, 2013 10:18 am
by andycummings65
bump