National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum

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818 documents for National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
  • BALTIMORE -- Constellation Energy (NYSE: CEG) today announced that it will supply 2,000 renewable wind energy certificates (RECs) to the National Base...

  • Duke Snider, the Hall of Fame center fielder for the charmed "Boys of Summer" who helped the Dodgers bring their elusive and only World Series crown to Brooklyn, died Sunday. He was 84. Snider died at the Valle Vista Convalescent Hospital in Escondido, Calif., said the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, which announced the death on behalf of the family. Snider had been ill for months. He died of natural causes.

  • SARATOGA SPRINGS -- New York State is the home of several Halls of Fame. The most famous being the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum located in Cooperstown. On the way to Cooperstown you can stop at the International Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, and pick up a few onions while you're there. In June, Iron Mike Tyson and Sylvester Stallone were inducted into the boxing shrine. You can also add the National Soccer Hall of Fame to the New York Halls, located in Oneonta. I was also reminded by my colleague Michael MacAdam of the Schenectady Daily Gazette that the Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame is located in nearby Amsterdam. This Hall is not to be confused with the WWE Hall of Fame! We'll also add that the National Women's Hall of Fame is located in Seneca Falls for our non-...

  • PLANTATION, Fla. -- DHL, the world's leading express delivery and logistics company and the Official Express Delivery and Logistics Provider of Major ...

  • COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. - You have time to think while on the road to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. And you will be on the road, because there is no airport in Cooperstown. This means driving. You think of the game's legends who have regularly visited the small (population 2,200) upstate New York village.

  • COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. -- Edwin Gomez wrote a report recently about Larry Doby, so Eastside's junior center fielder was a little more familiar with the late Paterson legend than many of his teammates. But it wasn't until Gomez stood in front of Doby's plaque Tuesday at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum that the Dominican immigrant gained a true understanding of the impact the Eastside graduate made as the American League's first black player in 1947.

  • Hall of Fame Manager Dick Williams, who won two World Series titles with Oakland and led two other franchises to pennants, has died. He was 82. Williams died from a ruptured aortic aneurysm at a hospital near his home in Henderson, Nev., the Hall of Fame said. We are extremely saddened by the sudden loss of Dick Williams, a Hall of Fame manager whose commitment to the game was legendary," said Jane Forbes Clark, the chairman of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. "He was an intense leader on the field and a gracious member of the Hall of Fame family, who loved returning to Cooperstown.

  • Baseball and America have grown up together," noted Jane Forbes Clark, chairman of the board of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. "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. 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. "Baseball is such an integral part of popular culture," said Christian Overland, vice president of museums and collections, The Henry Ford. "It is only fitting that Henry Ford Museum, an institution that celebrates American ideas and innovations, is a venue for this extraordinary exhibition honoring our national sport." Weaving Myths:...

  • Memories and Dreams is the official publication of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, N.Y. Become a supporter of the hall, and the publication becomes your main membership perk. It is always a good read for an ol' baseball fan. Inside the cover of the current issue is a photo of Lena Horne, one of America's most popular singers since the 1940s, throwing out the first pitch of an Oct. 3, 1945, game in Los Angeles between Bob Feller's All-Stars and Satch Paige's All-Stars.

  • COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. -- "I was the worst ballplayer in the history of Little League," I told the crowd gathered in the cozy Bullpen Theater (capacity: 55) at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. "The only way I could get invited to the Hall of Fame was to write this book. The people laughed, especially the two kids in the front row wearing Red Sox caps, who no doubt play the game better than I did.



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