
02-19-2014, 11:18 AM
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Ben North
Member
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Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: South Dakota
Posts: 10,588
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jayworld
This is sad news. We went to the museum in late July of 2010 as part of a traveling baseball vacation, which included seeing games at Kansas City and Des Moines (Cubs minor league team).
The museum is about a 25 minute drive due west of Des Moines. The building is fairly small, with a main hallway as you walk in (and the gift shop/register on the left, and two rooms to the right of the hall and one to the left. Each room has glassed-in cases featuring different momentous of Feller's career. One case features items from his service in the navy, etc. When we were there, the museum also had a full stadium seat from League Park and also from Municipal Stadium, as well as a model of League Park. We spent about 45 minutes there, although one could take about 10 minutes to see everything if one did not read all the captions and information. At they time, they had plenty of signed baseballs from various players (you can still see this on the website shopping link), as well as a small supply of signed player bats (not game used) and signed jerseys of several players (most of the jerseys Mitchell and Ness branded). The staff was elderly but quite nice; I ended up purchasing a Feller signed HOF bat, ball, signed Feller black book, and a signed Feller seat slat from Municipal that featured (at that time) the other three living members of the 1948 Indians championship team.
I noticed that after Feller died towards the end of 2010, all his signed memorabilia jumped in price on the museum site to at least double. At the time of my visit, the lady in charge told us that Feller would come into the museum 4-5 times a year and sign a lot of material including items sent to the museum through the mail, etc. I'm sure that supply has dwindled.
If you have the chance to go when the museum opens again in April, do go for a visit. Very nice place, but the article is right, that's about all there is to see in Van Meter.
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Thank you for sharing you story. When I go see Alice Cooper/Motley Crue in Des Moines in July I will have to stop and check it out. I know what you mean by you could see everything in 10 minutes. The Field of Dreams in Dyersville(2 minutes) and the Negro League Museum in KC are the same way.
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