In my reading
of back issues of The Sporting News I
am always delighted to find features about collectors from two or three
generations back.
Such a find was
to be made in the “Looping the Loops” column of TSN publisher J.G. Taylor Spink
in the Aug. 6, 1942, issue.
Spink had been
chronicling his recent tour of the baseball scene in California and made a stop
at the home of one prominent collector. He presented it thus . . .
Al Scully—Souvenir Scourer
While on
the Coast we visited Al Scully’s house. Scully, who lives in Hollywood, owns
what might be termed the West Coast branch of the Cooperstown Museum. Since
last we visited Al’s home he has added to his collection of more than 4,000
baseball photographs a gallery of players in their service uniforms. Scully
started this department shortly after Hugh Mulcahy, Hank Greenberg and several
other early pre-war selectees were inducted and has kept up the collection
since Pearl Harbor. It’s said to be, like Al’s entire collection, the most
varied and strikingly presented private display of its kind in existence.
Collecting
baseball portraits has been Scully’s hobby for 25 years. Scion of a wealthy
Chicago syrup manufacturing family, he has been able to devote at least two or
three hours to his hobby each day. His museum and photographic gallery occupies
one room on the second floor of his residence at 1031 South Rimpau boulevard.
Each picture is uniformly framed and hung in rows from baseboard to ceiling. In
addition to the more than 300 “current” framed portraits on open display, most
of them autographed, Al has a large, systematically conducted file. If you
don’t see your hero on the wall, just name him to Al and he’ll come up with his
picture pronto.
Scully has
maintained his amazing collection strictly on a non-profit basis. He has, of
course, a considerable cash investment in the huge outlay, including
advertising address to other collectors with a view to swapping for items
desired.
Though the
exhibit is in no sense a commercial service facility, Scully at times has
loaned parts of his collection for public display. For instance, the World’s
Fair in San Francisco showed a group of “California favorites,” which included
Harry Heilmann, Chick Hafey, Lefty O’Doul, Freddie Fitzsimmons, Arky Vaughan,
Ray Kremer, Lew Fonseca, Joe DiMaggio, Lefty Gomez, Babe Pinelli, Willie Kamm,
Dutch Ruether and Tony Lazzeri.
Recently Al
branched out from purely pictorial trophies. He has a case of baseballs that
have a historical background and a big lamp-shade crowded with player
autographs. Formerly he had a noteworthy display of Japanese trophies, but
recently he has stored these in the smokehouse.
His section
of old-timers is not to be duplicated, it is said. One of his main
collaborators in this phase of his collection has been Charles Graham,
president of the San Francisco Seals. In his youth Graham played on the famed
Cordovas. Scully says that his Cordova collection is unique.
Scully has
specialized in portraits and groups. He has few action shots.
And, we
almost forgot to tell you: Al, who is a lifetime subscriber to The Sporting News, has bound volumes of
every issue of The News published
during the last 25 years.
* * *
Cullings From the Coast
While Al Scully’s collection runs
mainly to photographs, George Young, the Pacific Coast League’s No. 1 fan, has one
of the most extensive collections of major and minor league passes of any man
in the country. Young, who operates a big wholesale business in Los Angeles and
is a heavy stockholder in the Hollywood club, for years has received annual
pass No. 1 of the Coast league.
And still speaking of souvenirs,
Joe E. Brown, movie comedian, has a collection of autographed baseballs that
perhaps is unsurpassed. These balls are neatly arranged in regular showcase
style in the trophy room of Brown’s home, a typical movie star’s showplace,
with swimming pool, private gate and all the trimmings. We’ll have more to say
about Joe E.’s baseball collection.
There was a
small one-column photo of Scully seated a desk with two walls of his framed
baseball portraits in the background, but it is not suitable for reproduction
here.
Besides collecting baseball memorabilia, Scully was a team owner in the Class C California League in 1941. He owned the Merced Bears, who operated only in 1941, folding due to the exigencies of World War II.
Besides collecting baseball memorabilia, Scully was a team owner in the Class C California League in 1941. He owned the Merced Bears, who operated only in 1941, folding due to the exigencies of World War II.
So, if you
happen to live at 1031 South Rimpau in Hollywood, or know who does, it might be
worthwhile to make an extensive excavation of basement and attic.
If you’re like
me, you’re curious as to what became of Al Scully’s collection. Perhaps
somebody in today’s milieu of baseball memorabilia collectors knows its current
whereabouts.
In our next presentation, we'' take a look at yet another baseball collection that was detailed in that Aug. 6, 1942, issue of TSN.
In our next presentation, we'' take a look at yet another baseball collection that was detailed in that Aug. 6, 1942, issue of TSN.