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The BASEBALL RELIQUARY Inc.
THE
BASEBALL RELIQUARY PRESENTS
WILLIAM ROBERT STEELE’S
EBBETS FIELD REPLICA
AT THE JACKIE ROBINSON CENTER
1020 N. Fair Oaks Ave., Pasadena, California
The Baseball Reliquary’s Ebbets Field replica
was dedicated during a special ceremony on May 11, 2002 at the City of
Pasadena’s Jackie
Robinson Center , where it will be on exhibit indefinitely. Nearly
100 people attended the unveiling, which was preceded by a program of guest
speakers discussing a variety of historical topics related to Ebbets Field and
the players who performed there. The roster of speakers included Peter Dreier,
Ray Bartlett, Andy McCue, and Michael C. Ford.
The E.P. Clapp Distinguished Professor of Politics and Director of the
Urban and Environmental Policy Program at Occidental College in Los Angeles,
Peter Dreier addressed the cultural legacy of Jackie Robinson. (The Jackie
Robinson Center is just blocks away from the former site of Robinson’s
childhood home in Pasadena.) He told an anecdote about how he talked his
parents, both lifelong Democrats, into taking him to a Richard Nixon rally in
his New Jersey hometown in 1960 for the sole purpose of meeting his boyhood
idol, Jackie Robinson. Robinson’s decision to campaign for Nixon, whom he felt
would be more supportive of the civil rights movement than John F. Kennedy, was
one he would later regret. Dreier argued persuasively that the City of Pasadena
needs to build a permanent educational exhibit to help enshrine Robinson’s
place in local and national history and that the Pasadena Unified School
District should incorporate Robinson’s story into the regular curriculum.
Ray Bartlett, a lifelong friend of Jackie Robinson, reminisced about some
of their experiences growing up together in Pasadena. The two played
side-by-side on the football, basketball, baseball, and track teams at Pasadena
Junior College and UCLA. While at the latter school, Bartlett introduced Jackie
to his future wife, Rachel, and he still maintains his link to Jackie by
participating on the UCLA Jackie Robinson Scholarship Committee.
Ebbets Field Replica |
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Baseball historian Andy McCue, an economics consultant based in
Riverside, California who is currently writing a biography of Walter O’Malley,
provided interesting historical details on Charles Ebbets and the ballpark that
bore his name. Discussing how Ebbets Field reflected the changing stability and
economics of baseball, McCue noted that the concrete and steel stadium opened in
Brooklyn in 1913 during a period in which many major league owners began
replacing their cheaply constructed wooden facilities, many of which had
crumbled, collapsed, or burned. According to McCue, the construction of new
ballparks such as Ebbets Field signified the fact that baseball had entered an
important period of prosperity and maturity as a sport.
No program concerning the Brooklyn Dodgers could possibly be complete
without some mention of the interesting personalities who regularly frequented
Ebbets Field. To this end, Los Angeles-based poet Michael C. Ford, who received
a Pulitzer Prize nomination for his volume of selected works from 1970 through
1995, spoke about Marianne Moore, the celebrated modernist poet and recipient of
virtually every major American literary award. Moore lived in Brooklyn, where
she worked as a librarian and valiantly rooted for the Dodgers. Ford concluded
his biographical remarks by reading Moore’s tribute to the Dodgers, entitled
“Hometown Piece for Messrs. Alston and Reese.”
Immediately following the formal program, the Ebbets Field replica was
unveiled. Confectionery artist William Robert Steele, a graduate of the Baking
School of Technology in Belfast, Northern Ireland, constructed the replica under
commission from the Baseball Reliquary. Begun in the fall of 2001, the replica
was originally to be made entirely of cake icing. For reasons of structural
rigidity and longevity, however, Steele used a variety of materials in its
construction, including wood, plastic, cement, potter’s clay, pastillage (a
combination of powdered sugar, gelatin, and wine vinegar), and royal icing.
Although Steele worked exclusively from photographs in building the model, the
detail is extraordinary, even incorporating authentic touches such as the
scoreboard in right field with clothier Abe Stark’s famous advertisement:
“Hit Sign Win Suit.” The approximate dimensions of the replica are 50” x
39” x 34” x 43” (and 15” high).
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Dedicated in memory of beloved Brooklyn Dodgers fan Hilda
Chester and the immortal Jackie Robinson, the Ebbets Field replica is housed
in a specially-constructed Plexiglas case, which includes a baseball signed by
the artist, William Robert Steele. A fascinating aside to this project is that
when Steele signed the baseball on May 11, 2002 for inclusion with the exhibit,
it was the first time he had ever touched a baseball in his life. In fact,
Steele had never attended a baseball game of any kind at the time of the
dedication. His primary interest in Ebbets Field was more in its uniqueness as
an architectural structure than its importance in baseball history.
The Ebbets Field replica is on exhibit indefinitely at the Jackie
Robinson Center, along with a display of Jackie Robinson paintings and
photographs sponsored by the Baseball Reliquary. Included is artist Michael
Guccione’s celebrated “Jackie Robinson Icon.”
Located at 1020 N. Fair Oaks Avenue in Pasadena, California, the Jackie Robinson
Center is open Monday through Thursday from 8:00 AM to 9:00 PM and Friday from
8:00 AM to 5:00 PM; closed Saturday and Sunday. For directions to the Center,
phone (626) 744-7300.
COLOR PHOTOGRAPHS COURTESY OF LARRY GOREN
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