2019 Peninsula Sports Hall of Fame Inductees Named
Jan. 16, 2019
REDWOOD CITY _ Six individuals will be inducted into the Peninsula Sports Hall of Fame on the evening of April 25 at the San Mateo County History Museum.
The 2019 event, which will include a reception and light refreshments, is being presented by the San Mateo County Historical Association, headquartered in Redwood City.
The master of ceremonies will be KNBR-Radio baseball talk-show host Marty Lurie
The Hall of Fame was created in 1989. With this year’s group of inductees, the total number of honorees approaches 290. Hall of Fame plaques are located at the History Museum.
For more information on the April 25 affair (including ticket prices), please contact the Association at 650-299-0104.
Here are the new inductees:
Nicole Carroll/College of San Mateo
A world-class javelin thrower who starred at CSM and Fresno State, she was a two-time American champion and a member of the 1996 U.S. Olympic team.
Pat Lewis/Mills, Oceana, Jefferson highs
A productive track and field coach for 50 years on the Peninsula, he specialized in tutoring male and female athletes in throwing events (shot put and discus).
Gino Della Libera/San Mateo High
A football and track and field standout, he took his considerable skills to Arizona State University where was an integral part of an undefeated 1957 Sun Devil football team.
Eric Reveno/Menlo School
A basketball state champion at Menlo School, he later played at Stanford and became the head coach at Portland University, earning WCC Coach of the Year honors.
Tod Spieker/Menlo-Atherton High
An outstanding swimmer at Menlo-Atherton and UCLA, and later in masters’ age-group competition, he has had a major impact on aquatics locally and nationally.
John Ward/Carlmont High
An ex-San Mateo County supervisor, he has created and maintained a comprehensive website that charts the long history of Northern California semi-pro/amateur baseball.
Description: C.D. Bunker & Co. was the sponsor for the Custom Brokers baseball team. C.D Bunker was a customs broker and a ship's agent.
Back row (left to right): Chas. Schmitz, A. Benham, P. Craige, Clem Perkins, A. Buja, C.C. Westover, R. Shields, W.M. Miller, H. Ferviera
Middle row (left to right): George Shepston, Joe Bley, Willie Bolger
May | 2017
Gough & Market Merchants
Gough & Market Merchants Area: San Francisco Year: circa 1935
Back row (left to right): 2nd from left is Frank "Dink" O'Brien, 4th from left is Bob Kelley, 6th from left is Red Agaard, 7th from left is William "Bunk" O'Brien
Front row (left to right): far left is Ace Adams, far right is Harry Brown
Description: Marysville Merchants Baseball team takes flight as the first club to fly to an away game. The flight was 80 miles to Woodland Ca and took 43 minutes.
Marysville Merchants baseball team posing before the Friesley Falcon airliner, August 1921. The team posed with the crew in front of the large twin engine aircraft, they recorded the fact that they were the first ball team in history to travel by aircraft to play a baseball game and this is also recognized Baseball Hall of Fame. They are from left to right: Clifford Gottwalls, Warren Eich, Roy Francis (pilot), Capt. B. M. Spencer (designer, builder and pilot), Grafton Reed (mechanic), Clyde Manwell, Louis Wilcoxen, Tyrell Brook, Bryden Kelly, Lou Anthony, unidentified, Allen Eich, Charles Brown, and Harvey D. Eich (manager). The bat boy standing in front is Wonton Eich. The man who funded the Friesley Falcon project was Harold Friesley (aka Friesleben). The Friesleben family had a farm on Highway 70 between Marysville and Oroville. The Airliner was partly constructed on the farm. Although this twelve passenger airliner was not a financial success, the Friesley Falcon was aerodynamically and technologically a success. The Friesley Aircraft Corp. went bankrupt in 1922 and it is believed that the aircraft was sold to China.
Langendorf Royals Area: San Francisco Year: 1938-39 (Winter League)
Description: Noting patch on left sleeve advertising 1939 World's Fair.
Back row (left to right): Dick Hazelton (sponsor, owner of Langendorf Bakery), Ray Viani (ss), Rugger Ardizoia (p), Charlie Nelson (of), Joe Futernick (inf), Don McConnell (of), George McSorley (inf), Roy Wetmore (inf), Hank Imperial (inf), Norman McQueen (mgr.)
Front row (left to right): Tony Patch (c), Logan Hooper (of), Mario Vigo (p), Able (utl), Guido Francesconi (utl.)
Newspaper caption: Picture here is the crack Oakland Police Department baseball team. The cops will meet the San Leandro Merchants nine in a benefit game at the San Leandro ball park on April 3. Ball players of the many teams who use the ball park are behind the benefit fund drive with games that sufficient cash will be raised to cover the cost of improving and enlarging the ball park bleachers.
Back row (left to right): Bob Watry (of), Ira Mitchell (utl.), Carl Ivey (of), Johnny Thomas (cf), Lennie Darnell (p)
Middle row (left to right): Bob Atthowe (rf), Laurie Lenotti (1b), Andy Genovesino (mgr.), Jim McPartland (lf), Sam Cohen (2b), Lester Devine (capt.)
Front row (left to right): Eddie Botelho (c), Gene Machado (ss), Jay Thomas (cf), "Jug" Mandish (3b), Walter Brown (p)
California Wick Wire Company Area: Alameda (Oakland) Year: 1933
Back row (left to right): Ambrose Del Vecchio, Orville Yore, Corly Moore, Ned DiGrazia, Lloyd Barron, Steve Graham, "Pesty" Ryan, Joe Olsen, Joe Silva, Gunny Fagundas, Heinie Lay, Johnny Quinn, unidentified
Front row (left to right): Wiedo Lancione, Ike Cherney, George Amadee, Fred Brain, Fred Milroy, Joe Corbelli, George Scarich, Niggie Silva
August | 2016
Ben's Golden Glow
Ben's Golden Glow Tavern Area: Alameda (Alameda) Year: 1939
Back row (left to right): Roberts, Al White (general manager), Elmer Corbett, Al Brown, Teddy Martin, Lou Vezelich, Ernie Alten, Sam Adragna, Augie Gomes (mgr.)
Middle row (left to right): Harry Profumo, Al Peacock, Virgil Vierria
Front row (left to right): Fred Filipelli, Billy Gonzales, Elmer Sandahl, Carl Monzo, John Erceg
San Quentin All-Stars Area: Marin (San Quentin) Year: circa 1950
Description:Picture was taken at San Quentin prison on day team played C & H Sugar. To view team picture of C & H sugar, please go toC & H Sugar under Crockett.
April | 2016
When baseball was bush league and hit home with everybody
Photo: Chronicle File, The Chronicle
Seals Stadium in the Mission District was the centerpiece of baseball in San Francisco in the diamond days of the 1940s. It hosted the Seals and the Giants.
It is spring, the skies are blue, and baseball is back. The Giants and the Dodgers open up the season this week, a good time to go over to the Double Play Bar and Grill for lunch the other day and soak up some of the flavor.
The Double Play is a San Francisco baseball shrine, right across the street from the old Seals Stadium, where the Giants and the Dodgers brought big-league baseball to the West Coast back in 1958.
We had lunch with John Ward, a walking encyclopedia of baseball. He didn’t want to talk about the big leagues and the season to come. He wanted to talk about small-time baseball and seasons long gone.
Baseball used to be part of everyone’s life in Northern California, he said. It still is, but he thinks there is a big difference. Now people watch baseball on television, or at the ballpark, sitting on their duffs, watching the game.
200 teams in S.F.
Back then, they played baseball on organized teams, in organized leagues. Hardball with wooden bats. The real game. Ward, who has developed a website all about these diamond days, says there were 1,600 teams in Northern California — 200 in San Francisco alone.
Ward’s website, a labor of electronic love, offers 7,000 photographs, rosters of teams, videos, box scores and thousands of names. The website is www.goodoldsandlotdays.com, and it is a celebration of what they used to call the bush leagues.
“Now calling something bush league is kind of an insult,” Ward said, but back then newspapers listed the schedule — “Where the Bushers Play Today” — every Sunday. On Monday morning, The Chronicle’s Sporting Green had almost a full page of bush-league box scores.
Everybody, it seems, had a team: bars, restaurants, breweries, labor unions, big companies with a lot of workers, sporting goods stores, auto dealers.
Bernstein’s Fish Grotto on Powell Street had a team. So did the Double Play. Horsetrader Ed, the famous used car showman on Van Ness Avenue, sponsored a team. Every small town had a team, and so did most city neighborhoods. There were ethnic teams: an African American league played in the East Bay and there were many Japanese teams. One of them, the San Jose Ashahi, was so good it barnstormed in Japan, playing college nines.
The Chronicle had a team that went 18-5 in the Class B National League, playing foes like the Marina Lions, the Columbia Park Boys Club, the San Quentin Prison All-Stars and Romey’s Market. Columnist Herb Caen played first base in 1940 and ’41. The only other big name was Ed Dougery, a former Cal player who covered Oakland cops for the paper.
Rising to big leagues
Ward, a one-time politician who served a dozen years on the San Mateo County Board of Supervisors, got hooked on baseball when he was a kid sportswriter, making 5 cents a column inch for stories in the old San Carlos Enquirer. Later, he managed a semipro club on the Peninsula.
Now he’s a property and political consultant, but he’s never lost his love for baseball.
He has a soft voice and a faraway look in his eyes when he talks about this nearly vanished world. It was a semipro game for the most part.
“Some of the players were paid, and some not,” he said. “The umpires got five bucks a game, and sometimes the sponsor would slip $5 to a pitcher. Or they’d pass the hat.”
The games were pretty good, and the big-league scouts would watch them closely. A few of the players became famous: the three DiMaggio boys out of San Francisco and dozens of others. San Francisco in particular was a hotbed of baseball.
Al Erle, who ran a San Francisco sporting goods store, was the de facto commissioner of semipro ball. He’d schedule hundreds of games a week and fill the newspapers with bush baseball lore.
His motto: “Now remember fellows, it’s all for one and one for all. Go out there and hustle.” Corny stuff, right out of the old ballpark.
Ward recalled famous road trips. “We loved to play the Tiburon Pelicans, a town team,” he said. “We changed in a saloon and went there for beer afterwards.
“A favorite trip was to Occidental, up in Sonoma County. The outfield ran uphill, so you didn’t have to chase the ball when it was hit up there. It would roll back down. After the game was a full dinner at Negri’s or the Union Hotel.”
His website covers 100 years of sandlot and semipro ball, ending in 1980. The peak? About 1947, Ward said, after the young men had come back from war.
Some teams remain
Changing times — and big-league ball — killed off small-time baseball, he thinks.
There are still a few teams. The San Francisco Demons of the Latin American League is one. Their home field is Crocker Amazon playground. There are others, including the Novato Knickerbockers of the Sacramento Rural league. But it’s not the same.
Will it ever come back? Ward shook his head, sadly. “No,” he said.
Carl Nolte is a San Francisco Chronicle columnist. His column appears every Sunday. Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. Twitter: @carlnoltesf
April 3, 2016
MARCH | 2016
Vintage pictures
Vintage pictures of town teams throughout northern and central California from 1870 to 1910 can be found on website.
Please click the links below to view vintage team album.
Breweries were major sponsors of semi-pro teams throughout the bay area and elsewhere in northern and central California during the pre and post-World War II era. Featured on the website are the following (click the links):
Among the players pictured are: Milt Axt (utl), Carl Johnson (1b), Peeney Oliver (cf), Tom Harris (rf), Bob Richards (utl), Carl Holling (p), Ray Andres (3b), Howard Blethen (utl), Ray Viani (ss), Gene Camozzi (p), Bob Reed (c)
Gilt Edge Market Area: San Francisco Year: circa 1935
Left to right (Standing): Jackie Kane, Herman Anti, Babe Tognoli, Ernest "Lefty" Gammino, "Muddy" Johnson, Jack Anti, Max Schutte, John Molloy, Lefty "Ty" Wetmore, Bill Coulter, Gene Willig
Kneeling: Manager J.A. Armitage
MARCH 01, 2015
WEBSITE CONTINUES TO GROW
As of March we have 1,100 teams featured on goodoldsandlotdays.com among some 8,650 images. Latest batch of vintage team photos from San Jose were recently uploaded. Please enjoy the viewing.
Oakland Post 5 – Montgomery Ward Area: Alameda (Oakland) Year:1928
Description:This 1928 Oakland Post 5-Montgomery Ward American Legion team was the first team from Oakland to win a national championship. Players are dressed for the occasion in picture taken in front of Montgomery Ward’s warehouse building at 4814 Loma Vista Ave. in Oakland.
Back row (left to right): Paul Moore, Phil Moore, Arleigh Williams, Dan Hafey, Ralph Harold, Eifert, Hans Hansen, Al Silva, George Wilson, Leroy Sharp (coach)
Front row (left to right): Joe Williamson, Albert Swick, Fred Brain, Pete Vierra, Weido Lancione, Charles Hardt, Einar Sorensen, Warren Rouse, Desmond Williamson
NOVEMBER | 2014
Caliente Mineral Water
Caliente Mineral Water Area: Sonoma (Agua Caliente) Year: circa 1910
Back row (left to right): Frank "Sparky" Corria (mgr, major league scout), Mitch Lisse (p, of), Andy Genovisino (1b), Al Lawrence, unidentified, Al Oliver, unidentified
Front row (left to right): unidentified, Ray Viani, Mel Goulart, unidentified, Pat Clifford (inf), Ike Vincent
Batboys (unidentified)
SEPTEMBER | 2014
Castro Natives
Castro Parlor No. 232, Native Sons of the Golden West (N.S.G.W.) Area: San Francisco Year: 1924 (Jan. 17)
Back row (left to right): Pasquet, Sillineri, Ernest Gammino, Bourne, George McSorley, J. Anti, Wigley
Front row (left to right): Hank Anti, Bonhage, Lou Tognoli, Dito (mgr.), DeFilipo, F. Dito, Jack Dito
AUGUST | 2014
1929 M.J.B. Coffee Company
M.J.B. Coffee Company Area: San Francisco Year: 1929
JULY | 2014
1930-31 Mario's Drugs
Mario's Drugs Area: San Francisco Year: 1930-31 (winter league)
Description: Spalding Class "A" Champions (won 11 | lost 3)
Picture was taken at James Rolph Playground in January 1931, located in outer Mission District on Potrero Avenue at corner of former Army Street (now Cesar Chavez Street).
Back row (left to right): Bauman (p), Long (cf), Dust (cf), Sulding (2b), Clekak (rf), Ward (rf), McSorley (ss)
Front row (left to right): Frickles (mascot), Riley (mgr.), Warnoke (p), Trowbridge (lf), Barry (c), Brundage (1b), Tejeda (3b)
May | 2014
Rockport town team (circa 1920)
Rockport town team Area: Mendocino (Rockport) Year: circa 1920
Back row (left to right): Eddie Worffi, Ray (last name unknown), Chicken Hawk, Guy Rockey, Herbert Ball, Parker Ball, Neils Wally, Charlie Richards, Praggart.
Front row (left to right): Bill Shanno, Ralph Koskella, Darrel Borges, Otis Wright, Otis Rockey.
Bat Boy: unidentified.
Shannon Rangers (circa 1938)
Shannon Rangers Area: Stanislaus (Modesto) Year: circa 1938
Description: Shannon Rangers were sponsored by the Shannon Mortuary in Modesto, which is no longer in business.
Back row (left to right): George Witt (mgr.), Wes Walsh (utl./inf), Ray Gillum (2b), True Raper (3b), George Wietle (c), Earl Thompson (p), Manuel Lopez (Asst. Mgr.)
Front row (left to right): Joe Wietle (of), Glenn Darr (1b), J Leonard Beam (ss), Marvin Lee (p)
Bat Boy: Eddie Witt
Bernstein's Fish Grotto (1930)
Bernstein's Fish Grotto was opened by Maurice Bernstein in 1912 at 123 Powell Street in San Francisco, near the end of the cable car line. It closed in 1981 and there is now a Walgreen's drugstore at the site. Bernstein's was a popular tourist attraction for many years.
...Featuring More Very Old Sandlot Teams
Reseda semi-pro team won the 1939-1940 winter league championship in Los Angeles city playgrounds.
Reseda is a neighborhood in the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles, California.
April | 2014
...Featuring More Very Old Sandlot Teams
PG&E (Pacific Gas and Electric) Area: San Francisco Year: circa 1920
Title: San Francisco Lodge B. P. O. Elks No. 3 Baseball Champions of State Area: San Francisco Year: 1924
Description: San Francisco Lodge team won the state championship tournament against competing teams representing other Elks’ lodges from various districts in the state.
Back row (left to right): Arthur A. Goepp (chairman), William C. Bahr (p), W. D. Powers (p), A. R. Baldocchi (of), Chas. R. Sullivan (p)
Top middle row (left to right): Mervyn Murphy (2b), John Hanley (1b), Roy Corhan (ss), Larry Reeves (p)
Bottom middle row (left to right): Henry Wurkheim (committeeman), E. S. Hallinan (of), A. L. Pierotti (p), Jas. Riordan (c)
Front row (left to right): Sam J. Worth (of), Jas. J. Byrnes (c-mgr.)
Missing: Chas. A. Maggini (of), George Maloney (3b), Tom Tennant (1b), Syd Desmond (of)
Back row (left to right): far left is Etalo Giacomelli (owner)
Front row (left to right): far left is Norm Wilkin (rf), 3rd from left is Al Belletto (3b)
Other players who may be pictured: Batz (ss), D.Sarto (rf-lf), Ogulin (cf), S. Grimes (lf-1b), Meade (1b), Balzarini (2b), Muzio (c), Abney (p), R. Comes (rf-p)
Hatzell Radio Area: Contra Costa (El Cerrito) Year: 1960
Description: 25th Annual NBC Tournament Program 1961 (cover) California State Champions NBC Semipro
Back row (left to right): Ed Hatzell (sponsor), Dick Lawless, Frank Mullany (ss), Emery Phillips (1b), Jim Johnson (c), Gene Faszholz (of), Ed Van Leiden (p), Ed Lampe (p)
Front row (left to right): Ray Malgradi (mgr), Chuck Zeiss (c), Ed Menosse (p, of), Nick Cannuli (3b), Bud McGee (p), Bill Hatzell (2b)
Missing: Don Musto (of), Tom Faszholz
September | Teams of the Month | 2013
Owl Drug Co. Area: San Francisco Year: circa 1945
Back row (left to right | staggered): Ed Calegari, Johnny Vasquez, unidentified, unidentified, unidentified, Walt Lister Sr., Walt Lister Jr., Con Dempsey
Middle row (left to right): Gino Monticelli, Roland "Lola" Petrocchi, Mike Switzer, Bill Miller, Jack Balestreri
Front row (left to right): Al Belletto, Bob Antraccoli, Tony Patch, unidentified
Oroville Olives Area: Butte (Oroville) Year: 1948
Back row (left to right): Harry Gilbert, Paul Christensen, Chet Gibson, Jack Andrews, Bob Strang, Bob McKillop, Bob Powers, Bob Dudley, Oliver Ledford
Front row (left to right): Val Quintana, Joe Felipe, unidentified, Fred Fehr, Kins Damon (batboy), "Red" Butterfield, unidentified
August | Teams of the Month | 2013
Julius' Style Shop has been a family-run business in Sacramento since 1922, founded by Julius Anapolsky, who sponsored teams for more than 40 years in the City Winter League. Julius' won the winter league 12 times, including following seasons: 1931-32, 1934-35, 1935-36, 1936-37, 1938-39, 1950-51, 1952-53, 1955-56, 1956-57, 1957-58, 1958-59, 1967-68. Team only played winter league ball. Clothing store started as a men's shop but over time expanded to include apparel for women. It is currently located in the Pavilions shopping center.
Back row (left to right): Gene Roenspie, Gus Stathos, Frank Bowa, Tommy Tortchia, Babe Perry.
Middle row (left to right): Wally Westlake, Bruce Edwards, Bill Wright, Clyde Haskell, Tommy Glaviano, John Parino.
Front row (left to right): Bill Avila, coach; Prison Official, Frank Glaviano.
Team sponsor Dan Newell owned cocktail lounge in downtown San Bruno at corner of Sylvan Ave. and San Mateo Ave. It still operates with same name, but under different ownership at 497 San Mateo Ave.
San Bruno Newells Area: San Mateo (San Bruno) Year: 1948
Description: Peninsula "Champions": The Newells
San Bruno Herald (caption under picture): “That Sterling (referring to Manager Sterling Hammack) club, The Newells of San Bruno, won another championship. It's for the entire Peninsula. They beat San Carlos and then Redwood City to clinch it. Another huge trophy will be added to large group already on display at the Newell's Store.
Back row: George Brown, Dan Miller, Bob Dau, Bob Jensen, Walt Lister, Merv Silva, Sterling Hammack (mgr), Bob Tscheda
Front row: "Doc" Gildez, Paul Hjort, Gil Bordenave, Eddie Underwood, Burt Corral, Norm Wilkin, Harold Panattoni, Al Tomei.
*Missing: Punch Harmon
July | Teams of the Month | 2013
Starting in July we will be featuring teams of the month. The first teams on display are Moffat Manteca of San Francisco, which earned its reputation by winning league titles in the 1940s and 1950s. Many of the players signed professionally, some going to the major leagues with others playing in the Pacific Coast League and other minor leagues. The Humboldt Crabs, who are still going strong since starting in 1945, have won many state championships and represented California at National Baseball Congress tournaments in Wichita, Kansas. Over the years, many outstanding college players on the team from throughout northern California went on to play professional ball.
Please check out old video – new to our website – showing play action at Marchbank Bowl as Daly City Merchants take on the Laundry Workers Union in 1947 and Machinists Union Local 68 in 1948. Both visiting teams were from San Francisco. You will also see a team photo of Merchants in the Daly City teams section as well as three team pictures of the Laundry Workers from the forties.
April 19, 2013
After more than three years on the internet, we have madea numberof changes to the website’s format and you will find some 2,000 new team pictures and other images gathered from sources all over northern and central California. It is important for viewers to know that teams from larger cities, such as San Francisco, Oakland and Sacramento, are listed separately in the index, while teams from smaller cities and towns are grouped together. With that, you will be able to locate 1000teams. All of the images in each album are shown in chronological order so the viewer can follow the history of baseball in each community. This website covers the history of semi-pro, non-pro and amateur baseball for more than 100 years starting with the late 1870s. We have also provided an extensive souvenir program section, a baseball medley section presenting a variety of interesting aspects of the great American pastime as well as special tributes. You can click on viewing tips on the menu bar at top of our home page for assistance in navigating. A not-for-profit undertaking, the website is still a work in progress after more than four years of travelling the back roads to forgotten fields from the Oregon border to as far south as Kern County. We truly appreciate all of the contributions of memorabilia made by hundreds of individuals and historical societies (see Contributors section). Please let us know if you have memorabilia to share. We hope you enjoy the show and would welcome your thoughts by sending an e-mail to goodoldsandlotdays.com. Starting in May we will feature “teams of the week” under What’s New. Thank you for your interest.
May 1, 2012
Recent antique team photos are now on website. Please see the following: Journals of Hayward (1887), Winters town team (1898),SanFrancisco All-Stars (1917) - See below, Palermo Orphans (1921), Bisceglia Bros. of San Jose (1927), Rippe Bros. of San Francisco (1930) among others. There are numerous turn of the century town team pictures on the website, many of which include names of players.
Please note that website is organized so that names of teams from larger cities, such as San Francisco, Oakland and Sacramento, are listed separately in gallery index (Semi-Pro Baseball by Teams), while teams from smaller cities and towns are grouped under each city name. In some cases where a particular team from smaller city, such as Vallejo Builders or RichmondMerchants, played for so many years the team has its own listing, while other teams from these two cities, as example, appear under Vallejo-Other Teams or Richmond-Other Teams.
November 13, 2011
We have been fortunate to receive wonderful memorabilia from folks throughout northern California since starting this website project in January 2009. Recently and thanks to Matt Macy, grandson of Art Macy, founder of Macy Movers and a fixture in east bay baseball circles during the 1930s and 40s, we were provided with scrapbooks and scorebooks as well as a collection of more than 100 team photographs, mostly from early 1930s. You will enjoy viewing these antique photos in the team gallery, including some interesting sponsors such as Al’s Cigars, Jack’s Barber Shop, Ole’s Waffle Shop, OK Batteries, Square Deal Malts, Durkee Famous Foods and Chapel of the Oaks, to mention only a few. Given the large number of teams playing in San Francisco, Oakland and Sacramento during the pre and post-World War II era, we chose to list each team separately, but you can always go to teams by Area, e.g. Alameda County to find the listing of all Oakland teams featured on website. Baseball was played year round in Sacramento, San Francisco and Oakland where fans experienced highly-competitive winter league play with professional players in the lineups. The website has steadily grown over the past three years and the latest count indicates there are some 2,000 team photos going back to the turn of the last century. The antique photos of small town teams are especially interesting. We have also created a Viewing Tips section (see Home page) to assist our viewers in navigating through goodoldsandlotdays. We will soon be providing updates on a regular basis.
Keep watch of the latest news, updates and tweets!
Welcome to goodoldsandlotdays.com. As we launch our site, we hope that you have a lot of fun browsing through all the rich history, memorable pictures, funny anecdotes, and informative videos contributed by so many.
As always, if you have any further information about the teams, areas, names, etc. posted on this website, feel free to contact us. We have tried to the best of our ability to post the most accurate information as possible with the resources given. We are more than willing to make any edits or take notice of any contributors we may have left out.
We will be continually posting new information as new sources and contributions come in. Keep posted in our News and Updates section for the latest information, links, news, added pictures, etc. in goodoldsandlotdays.com.
Thank you for this great journey down memory lane and for all of the support.