Atogrphed, authentic, how much?
  Find information on Vintage Baseball collectibles, Tips on caring for your Valued Memorabilia collection Price Guide, Dates, and more!  
  Price Guide, Collectors Guide, Worth, Date    
HOME facebook BUY/SELL FORUM CONTACT

NEWSLETTER

  Category
  ADVERTISING
  AUTOGRAPHS
  BASEBALLS
  BASEBALL BATS
  BOBBLE HEADS
  CARDS
  EQUIPMENT
  FIGURINES
  GAMES & TOYS
  GAME USED
  GLOVES & MITTS
  HATS & UNIFORMS
  PENNANTS
  PHOTOS & ART
  PINS & BUTTONS
  PLATES
  POSTERS & SIGNS
  PUBLICATIONS
  RECORDS
  S.G.A.'S
  TICKETS
  MISCELLANEOUS
  Collectors Guides
  BASEBALL CARD
CHECKLISTS
  BASEBALL BAT
DATING GUIDE
  BASEBALL GLOVE
CLEANING GUIDE
  BASEBALL GLOVE
DATING GUIDE
  COLLECTIBLE
GLOSSARY
  EXHIBIT BASEBALL
CARD DATING
  FAKE & REPRODUCTION ALERTS
  OFFICIAL MLB
BASEBALL DATING
  QUESTIONS &
ANSWERS
  PRICE GUIDES
  MICKEY MANTLE
MEMORABILIA 
  SINGLE SIGNED
BASEBALLS
  TEAM SIGNED
BASEBALLS
  WORLD SERIES
PRESS PINS
  WORLD SERIES
TICKET STUBS
  SITE FEATURES
  ABOUT THIS WEBSITE
  COLLECTORS CORNER
  CONTACT
  FACEBOOK GROUP
  FACEBOOK PAGE
  FORUM
  NEWSLETTER 
 
KeyMan Collectibles on facebook
 
 

Published 1917
War Department Commission on Training Camp Activities
War Department Commission on Training Camp Activities

War Camp Community Service Calendar

James W. Brine Co. Knights Of Columbus Bat


 Official National League YMCA WWI Baseball
 

WWII Professional Base Ball Fund "Baseball

Rawlings Special Services U.S. Army Chest Protector

1944 Mud Hens scorecard
Official Score Book Patriotic Wartime Uncle Sam Cover - WWII

Professional Baseball Fund Baseball Bat

1944 Dodgers Yankees Giants Tri-Cornered  game program

Korean War Era USS Valley Forge Uniform

Korean War Era
 Uniform Patch

 1967 USO Shows Major League Baseball Roundup flyer

WELCOME ALL !
Join KeyMan Collectibles Group on facebook
Baseball Collectibles
and Memorabilia
 KeyMan Collectibles  NEWSLETTER May 2022 
Wartime Baseball Memorabilia & Collectibles
 Steven KeyMan
Steven KeyMan
American History II - 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. First used for his own personal collection, and then by 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..   
 
 
  Memorial Day is an opportunity to pause & reflect on the Sacrifices of those who have died in service of our great Nation. Before you throw that burger on the grill this coming memorial day, and watch the Memorial Day ball games, I ask that you repeat the following sentence for all to hear. "In remembrance we celebrate your sacrifice and courage as a free nation. -Thank You"

 This Hillerich & Bradsby Co. No. PG, Playground baseball bat, features "ORDER NO. 1630-J, and the date 10 - 10 - 1918, inside the center brand. The barrel end is branded with the WWI "War Department Commission on Training Camp Activities" logo.
  Days after the U.S. entered the first World War in April of 1917, President Woodrow Wilson created a new Federal Agency, the Commission on Training Camp Activities. The program was designed to clean up the immoral influences associated with encampments and their surrounding communities. It was a great concern to the American Family, for the moral destruction of their sons, and husbands going off to war.

The program would help surround our troops with a healthy, cheerful environment, and to ensure the purity of the camp environment. Training camps would then mold not only soldiers, but model citizens who after the war would return to their communities.

 This 1913-1917 Reach Official American League baseballs features the War Department Commission on Training Camp Activities stamp.

 Shortly after the Commission on Training Camp Activities was in place, Washington Senators owner Clark Griffith launched a plan to support our troops by raising money through the "Bat and Ball Fund," to purchase athletic equipment, to outfit every U.S. military training camp.

The Knights of Columbus was active in raising money for the Bat & Ball fund, which was contributed to the Y.M.C.A. through the Red Cross.

 In 1918 Money was allotted to the Knights of Columbus to send secretaries to France that would take supplies referred to as "War Chests" to the front, and set up "recreation Huts."

  During their first month the Knights of Columbus passed out cartons of chocolate, chewing gum, boxing gloves, footballs, writing paper and envelopes. The trunk also included; four baseball bats, two indoor baseball bats, branded with the Knights of Columbus "K-C" shield, two dozen K-C Stamped baseballs, two catchers mitts, seven fielders gloves, and one chest protector.

Established in 1840, Draper and Maynard Company became a pioneer in the manufacture of baseball gloves in 1882 when it produced a padded model at the suggestion of a baseball player. In 1900 Draper-Maynard opened a new factory in Plymouth and became a major supplier of baseball equipment for both amateur and professional teams.
 
      
   Compliments of the Draper & Maynard Co., this "Songs of the Allies" patriotic pocket tradecard was handed out to our troops during The Great War, to sing along to victory. "A Singing Army Is Unbeatable"

With the "take your girl to the ball game era" coming to an end, America and our National pastime turned it's attention to the war. During the first World War, baseball rallied Americans together to support the war effort. Military displays became a common occurrence at ballparks.

 Harry Von Tilzer, whose brother Albert composed the 1908 hit “Take Me Out to the Ball Game,” created his “Batter Up—Uncle Sam is at the Plate” for these patriotic shows. Billed as “the great baseball war song,” it was frequently performed.

The Lyrics for the WWII patriotic song "You're Gonna Win That Ball Game - Uncle Sam !" was written by George Moriarty, a Major League third baseman, who played for the Chicago Cubs; New York Highlanders, Detroit Tigers, and Chicago White Sox from 1903 to 1916. From 1917 to 1940 Moriarty was an American League Umpire interrupted only by a 2-year stint as manager of the Detroit Tigers (1927-1928).

The Newly written "War Song" was first presented in 1942 at a meeting of sports writers, and radio announcers.

 The song was a hit, copyrighted and published shortly after in 1943. Lyrics include: "You’re gonna win that ball game, Uncle Sam, So pitch that cannon ball the way you can. Show the Axis how we play, in the good old U.S. way, Strike out Hitler and mow down Japan."

Established by the council on Books in Wartime, Armed Services Inc., issued these soft cover "pocket-size" paperbacks to GI's from 1943-1947. The GI's would read, and passed around, the popular Armed Service Editions, given out free to troops fighting in Europe and the Pacific during WWII.  The ASEs were issued in huge lots, to hospitals behind  combat-

areas in all points of the world. They were passed out to the Marines on Tarawa within a few days after the last remnant of Japanese opposition had been extinguished. Others were dropped by parachute to outpost forces on lonely Pacific islands. In Nazi prison camps, the books distributed through the International YMCA were important in making life bearable for POW's.

  Authored by Tim Wolter, and published by McFarland & Company, "POW Baseball In WWII :The National Pastime Behind Barbed Wire;" is the story of POW baseball, complete with guard versus prisoner ball games, radio parts hidden in baseballs, and future major leaguers.

 The book is divided into the various prison camps and describes the types of prisoners held there and the degree to which baseball was played. The conditions under which they were held varied enormously but baseball, in various forms, was a common activity among these prisoners of war.

Not just Americans, but Canadians, British, Australians and New Zealanders took the field, as well as the Japanese and even a few Germans.

  This Seventh Army Air Force team road uniform is what Staff Sergeant Joe DiMaggio would have worn in 1944. DiMaggio and other major league players were transferred to Hawaii in the Spring of 1944.

 Big names like; Joe Gordon, Pee Wee Reese and Red Ruffing, along with Joe, were split into different teams

This 7th AAF grey with blue trim Road jersey features a Sun-Collar, and the Seventh Army Air Force uniform patch on the sleeve. The team's home jersey was a dark-Kelly Green, with white sleeves and trim. The Lowe and Campbell size 38 uniform tag is one of a few that date to the period.

This is a Rawlings No. R1 "Professional Base Ball Fund" baseball that was made for the WWII "Baseball Equipment Fund" headed by Clark Griffith in 1942.

 Since its inception in 1933, All-Star game profits were funneled to a relief fund benefiting retired indigent ballplayers. In 1941, the profits were sent to the USO, to buy athletic equipment for servicemen.

Four days after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, baseball executives established the WWII version of the WWI, "Baseball Equipment Fund" renamed the "Bat & Ball Fund."

  The AAGPBL - All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, was a professional women's baseball league which existed from 1943 to 1954.

 By the fall of 1942, many minor league teams disbanded due to the war. Young men, 18 years of age and over, were being drafted into the armed services. The fear that this pattern would continue and that Major League Baseball Parks across the country were in danger of collapse.

 The All-American Girls Softball League was formed in the spring of 1943. The official League name was changed to the more descriptive All-American Girls Professional Ball League (AAGPBL) at the end of the season. Pictured here is a 1949 Grand Rapids Chicks ticket stub, for home games played at South High School ball field, in Grand Rapids Michigan.

  The Missouri Hickory Co., was a tool handle manufacture operating out of the Myrtle Mo, Mill in Koshkonong. During WWII, more than 85,000 companies were involved in producing materials for the U.S. military's war effort. The Ohio Art Company, best known for its classic Etch A Sketch, made parts for rockets, bombs, and aircraft. Louisville Slugger supplied many rifle stocks. The Missouri Hickory Co., produced handles for tools, and included baseball bats along with the tool handle shipment.
 
   
     Established in 1943 the Amyx Manufacturing Co., opened a small plant for manufacturing juvenile furniture. Three months after they started production, fire destroyed everything. Soon after, an entirely new plant was constructed. A year later the Amyxes were turning out a considerable amount of juvenile furniture, and received a small order for softball bats because they were so hard to get during the war. The bats looked so good, they dropped the furniture business, to concentrate on manufacturing baseball Bats.

 In 1945 the company turned out more than 50,000 dozen baseball bats a year. Amyx ranked fourth in the world with Louisville Sluggers, of course, leading the pack. The biggest order for the Amyx Company in those early years, came from the Army. The firm shipped between 10 and 15,000 baseball and softball bats.
 
     
  Wartime Baseball Memorabilia & Collectibles American History I  
     
  KEYMAN COLLECTIBLES RELATED RESOURCES  
     
  KeyMan Collectibles Collectors Corner - Keep up with the latest collecting news, announcements, and articles of interest on the webs best resource for baseball memorabilia.  
  KeyMan Collectibles Baseball Memorabilia Facebook Group - Post Questions and comments relating to Baseball Collectibles and Memorabilia. Interact with other collectors or show off your collection.  
  KeyMan Collectibles Forum - A great option for those that "Don't do facebook"  Post Questions and comments relating to Baseball Collectibles and Memorabilia  
 
 
 
  Home | Auctions | Message Board | Newsletter | About this Site  
Link Directory | Links Page | Collectors Corner | Contact | Site Map