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J. Josselson's
"base bag with cover,"

Beneath MLB base
manufactured by Rawlings

Jack Corbett Original Hollywood Base

Beneath 2004 ALDS Game Used Base
Inlaid Logos

Beneath 2017 Game Used Base

 KeyMan Collectibles  NEWSLETTER July 2021   
Jack Corbett Hollywood Bases Covering the Bags
 Steven KeyMan
Steven KeyMan
  - By Steven KeyMan
Founder of Keymancollectibles.com, and a long time collector, Steven KeyMan has more than 30 years of experience in researching, and cataloging information on Baseball Memorabilia. Researching his own personal collection, and helping others find information on their collectibles, the website grew into the largest online resource for baseball memorabilia
 

   Ask Steven: Direct your questions or feedback, about Baseball Memorabilia to Steven KeyMan Steve@keymancollectibles.com You can also Send KeyMan pictures of your personal Memorabilia Display, and get your own Free  Collectors Showcase Room featured on the website..   
 
    The earliest specifications mentioned in 19 century baseball playing rules is that the bases were to cover one square foot, made of canvas, painted white and filled with sand or saw-dust. All bases were to be fastened to the field at each corner. By 1877 the size of first, second and third base was changed to 15 inches square. This would be the standard size to this day. Spalding sold regulation bases in their 1883 catalog.  
   
   RULE 12. in 1943 reads the bases must each be a white canvas bag 15 inches square filled with soft material and securely fastened in place at the points. The bases, except home plate are best constructed of canvas bags filled with sawdust and should be attached to pegs driven in the ground. Bases must be not less than 3 nor more than 5 inches thick.

  John "Jack" P. Corbett a minor league ballplayer from 1887 to 1917 felt that the bases were too loose, and were not safe. He came up with a system in the late 1930s to make bases both tough to move when they're in play and easily removable when they're not. The base, tapered so that it could hug the dirt, had a metal attachment at the bottom that was placed in a metal tube sunk in concrete below the ground.

 Major League Baseball adopted Corbett's rubber bases for use in games in 1940. They were to serve to cut down injuries, give the runners less of a jolt sliding, and hold there shape better than the canvas sacks.

 After he abandoned an application filed on October 14, 1941, John P. Corbett, patented his base in 1944. Approved in 1946, the object of the invention was to provide a baseball base which instead of being in the form of a cushion stuffed with padding; comprise a rigid base covered with a layer of cushioning material, and provide a means for anchoring the base with great accuracy in the position with respect to the base lines of a baseball diamond required by the rules, and with such security as to eliminate all danger of its becoming dislodged from that position during the course of a game.

  In 1951 John P. Corbett filled another patent to improve and simplify the means for attaching the bases to their respective anchoring posts, which assist in locating the base in the proper position with a high degree of accuracy, and which are so designed that they are completely concealed inside the cover of the base where they are least liable to cause injury to a player.

 The patent was approved in 1953 and featured anchoring straps and buckles to secure the body to the post, which is then hidden by a removable cover that will take most of the wear from the players cleats, providing a much greater length of time before it had to be replaced.

 The removable cover  was patented in 1950 by Joseph Josselson, which is also  referenced in the file of Corbett's patent. Josselson's "base bag with cover,"  provides a reinforced wear resisting cover for bases which protects it from the hard usage from cleats on the players shoes, which was considerably less expensive than to replace the entire base. This idea seems to stem from a patent filed in 1939, by William M. Broxton.

 Citing that current bases use straps passing over the top of the bag and extend around and beneath, where they are joined to appropriate anchoring spikes, is not safe for base runners.

 Broxton's base with a convex top, concealed the straps which can trip the runner or baseman who often get their feet tangled in them.  The base having a curved top of gradual convexity eliminates sharp edges and straight walls, presenting a smooth banked surface upon which the baseman or runner cannot stumble and will not have to break his speed for fear of becoming injured.

The following years saw many patents and innovations come and go. Some were developed and others such as the base bag cover were abandoned.  One piece rubber bases were produced for use in the major leagues soon after.

 This ealy1980's base used in the major leagues was manufactured by Rawlings. This style base dates back to at least 1970. It measures 15" x15" x 2" at the edges and 3.5" in the center. These bags were often painted white for aesthetics. By 1988 "Jack Corbett Original Hollywood" logo bases were produced.

  In 1988 "Jack Corbett Original Hollywood" embossed logo was added to the top of the base. It has been written why the bases were called Hollywood bases when Jack Corbett had no connection to Hollywood. He didn't, the bases were name after the company that produced them. This logo was used until 1995.

 Then in 1996 Schutt Sports acquired Hollywood Bases Inc., of Marysville, Calif. "Hollywood" had been a supplier to the Major Leagues since 1939. In 1996 Schutt added there own logo.


The new logo reads; "Original Hollywood Base, Jack Corbett, ®Schutt Sports" with an illustration of runner sliding into a base on the far right. Below features the Official MLB logo. Inlaid plastic logos were added to the four sides of the bases in 2000.

 This 2004 ALDS Yankees Minnesota Game-used Base, features four, 1-1/4 x 2-1/4 inch inlaid Logo plaques on the sides, two Official MLB logos opposite of one another, and two orange American League Division Series 2004 Official logo on the other two sides. 

  In 2009 Schutt Sports changed the logo again. To the right they Added "Schutt™" with an arrow pointing to "Original Hollywood Bases®, Jack Corbett®" with a line and an illustration of runner sliding into a base on the far right. "Hollywood Bases®" again appears below the line, and features the Official MLB logo below that. The embossed Schutt Trademark logo is still used today.

 This Game-Used Base is from the 2017 New York Subway Series, Mets vs Yankees, at Yankee Stadium. The base features four, 1-1/4 x 6-1/2 inch inlaid Logo plaques.

 on the sides, two Mets vs Yankees logos, opposite of one another, and two New York Yankees logos on the other two sides. 
 
 

 
 
 
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