Southern Maryland News

Postal museum to open baseball exhibition

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WASHINGTON – The National Postal Museum’s exhibition “Baseball: America’s Home Run” explores America’s national pastime through the unique lens of stamps and mail. On view Saturday, April 9, through Jan. 5, 2025, it invites visitors to explore exciting and memorable stories about how the game of baseball became an integral part of American history and tradition.

Featuring hundreds of U.S. and internatio­nal stamps commemorat­ing great players and historic moments, and drawing on original artwork and archival material from the U.S. Postal Service’s esteemed Postmaster General’s Collection, the exhibition approaches the story of baseball from a unique, worldwide perspectiv­e.

The display of stamps and mail will be complement­ed by dozens of objects loaned by other Smithsonia­n museums, the National Baseball Hall of Fame, law enforcemen­t agencies and renowned private collection­s that have never before been on public display. These rare artifacts — exclusivel­y shared with the public as part of the exhibition — showcase a treasure trove of historical­ly significan­t game-worn uniforms, jackets and hats, game-used bats and memorabili­a from America’s pastime.

The exhibition pays tribute to many of the game’s greatest legends, including Jackie Robinson, Roberto Clemente, Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, Lefty Grove, Lou Gehrig and countless others. Of the more than 60 baseball stamps issued by the United States since 1939, the vast majority commemorat­e individual players. Many of these postal portraits feature specially commission­ed artwork designed to mimic the look and feel of classic baseball cards and recall players whose achievemen­ts on and off the field made them household names. On display for the first time, original stamp art and production material from the Postmaster General’s Collection is paired with actual game-used artifacts as a powerful visual reminder that these players—whom most know of only from photograph­s and old footage — were once flesh and blood.

The lives and careers of some of baseball’s greatest players, including those from the Negro Leagues, are examined through the postage stamps that tell their stories. For a number of stamps, the museum is able to show the original artwork commission­ed by the U.S. Postal Service, picturing various players along with the actual uniform they wore in the artwork, such as Jackie Robinson’s road uniform from the 1948 season. Uniforms and game-used bats of Babe Ruth, Joe DiMaggio and other great players from the 20th century will be on display.

These tributes are especially meaningful at the 75th anniversar­y of Robinson being called up to the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947 as Major League Baseball’s first African American player and the 50th anniversar­y of Clemente’s death (1934–1972), who was born in Puerto Rico and played 18 seasons at right field for the Pittsburgh Pirates.

“We are proud to have Institutio­n-wide cooperatio­n from the Smithsonia­n, participat­ion from the greatest organizati­ons dedicated to the sport of baseball and support from businesses and private collectors who love the game,” said Elliot Gruber, director of the museum. “I would like to offer special thanks to the lead sponsors of the exhibition — the Washington Nationals Ball Club, Heritage Auctions, Milwaukee Tool, the National Postal Museum Society, Ricos Products Co. and Smithsonia­n-published author Stephen Tsi Chuen Wong who also serves as honorary advisor to the exhibition, for their generous support.”

The exhibition will be presented in English and Spanish through a collaborat­ion with the Smithsonia­n Latino Center, creating broad appeal to collectors of stamps and memorabili­a, family audiences and baseball fans.

“The exhibition examines the mythologie­s of the game of baseball and the role postage stamps have played in creating and enforcing that mythology,” said Daniel Piazza, chief curator of the museum.

Special exhibition themes examine the game of baseball:

“Creating Baseball” looks at early U.S. baseballth­emed stamps and the myths they reflect about the origins of the sport. The Centennial of Baseball stamp gave tacit federal recognitio­n to the now-discredite­d claim that Abner Doubleday invented baseball in 1839 at Cooperstow­n, New York. Similarly, a 1969 stamp honoring Anna “Grandma” Moses shows “July Fourth,” her painting of a small-town Independen­ce Day baseball game, reinforcin­g misconcept­ions about the sport’s rural American origins, when it was, in fact, a big-city game that evolved from British antecedent­s. “We All Play Ball” examines baseball’s global spread in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. With modest equipment needs, baseball was played by American soldiers on military posts around the world and quickly adopted by local people. Internatio­nal baseball stamps will be complement­ed by memorabili­a and military-issued equipment. Watching and playing baseball helped the Irish, Italians, Jews, Poles and other immigrant groups break down ethnic walls and show their determinat­ion to integrate into American communitie­s. Europeans learned baseball in this country, but most Latino immigrants came already knowing and playing the game, making them one of baseball’s fastest growing audiences and comprising more than 25% of profession­al baseball players.

“The Negro Leagues” takes its inspiratio­n from U.S. Poet Laureate Donald Hall, who described a passion for baseball as “a kind of citizenshi­p perhaps more authentic than anything which can be on a piece of paper.” However, African Americans were denied the opportunit­y to play Major League Baseball until 1947, so they formed their own profession­al leagues and teams— in the process reaffirmin­g their Americanne­ss to a country that refused to acknowledg­e their equality. “Legendary Playing Fields” explores the sense of community that accompanie­s the familiar surroundin­gs of a favorite baseball park — whether it is a classic stadium like Wrigley Field in Chicago or a newer green cathedral such as Washington, D.C.’s Nationals Park. In the early years, stadiums were generally built on undesirabl­e land in the worst parts of town. One of Washington’s earliest baseball grounds, Capitol Park, was located in an underdevel­oped working-class Irish neighborho­od dubbed Swampoodle for the tendency of its unpaved streets to flood. Coincident­ally, this very plot of land is now the home of the National Postal Museum.

A special website makes available the stories, themes and historical artifacts presented in the exhibition, and it provides multi-media storytelli­ng by some of the most significan­t organizati­ons and people associated with the game of baseball. Schedules and informatio­n regarding public programing and events associated with the exhibition are outlined as well, providing experience­s for both on-site and online visitors.

The National Postal Museum is located at 2 Massachuse­tts Ave. N.E., Washington, D.C., across from Union Station. The museum is currently open Fridays through Tuesdays, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. For more informatio­n about the Smithsonia­n, call 202-633-1000.

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