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Who signed the first secretarial or clubhouse signature?
2 Attachment(s)
Attachment 344455
Twenty-five years ago i visited Cooperstown and portrayed myself as a descendant of Jess Burkett. They granted me access, as a relative to the HOF library. They brought out the Burkett file for my review. Honestly there wasn't much in it. They did allow me to xerox a copy of several items however. The letter above was one of the items I copied. The letter itself is a copy as the original that is in the Hermann file. It appears to be handwritten and in the same hand as the signature, but what do I know. The question I raise is that of the history of secretarial and/or clubhouse autographs. When did these practices begin? Was anybody besieging Burkett with autograph requests during his time in Worcester following his playing career. Attachment 344456 He also returned as a coach of the Giants in 1921. Was he besieged by autograph requests upon returning to New York? I don't expect anyone knows for sure, but when did this form of signature (by other than the name signed) enter the baseball autograph market? |
Secretarial signatures on business letters may have always happened as in the above. I have seen ones of Heilbroner, etc. As to when they started for autograph requests I am not sure. It is interesting when my son batboyed in the AZ fall league maybe 10 years ago a not very top prospect asked my son to sigh all his mail (he didn't). I also have a patient who was an NHL star. When ever he would come in I would give him a handful of cards to sign. Once when his wife came along- she grabbed them and started to sign them.
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All I know is that the one time I even mentioned secretarial or clubhouse, I got me head chewed off.
At the risk of having the same treatment, I believe the practice is wide-spread. . |
With Frank starting this I was going to go with . . . Alfalfa in the He Man Woman Haters Clubhouse. :eek:
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