THE CHICAGO CUBS - AUTOGRAPHED SIGNED PHOTOGRAPH CO-SIGNED BY: BOB ADDIS, FRANK "THE BEAU" BAUMANN, KEN JOHNSON, BOB TALBOT - HFSID 296106
Price: $280.00
THE CHICAGO CUBS
Photo of the right field stands at Wrigley Field, signed by former Cubs players Bob
Talbot, Earl Bauman, Bob Addis and Ken Johnson. Each has added the years he played
for the team.
Photograph signed: "Bob Talbot 53-54", "Frank Bauman/1960-1965", "Bob Addis 1952-53",
"Ken Johnson 1969". B/w, 8x10. Although they haven't appeared in a World Series since
1945 and haven't won one since 1908, the Chicago Cubs are one of baseball's most
beloved teams, with a large national following. For most of the twentieth century, they
shared that misery with the Chicago White Sox (1917) and Boston Red Sox (1918), but the
Sox teams won back to back Series in 2004 (Bosox) and 2005 (Chisox), to leave the Cubs as
the only remaining original franchise enduring such a long drought. Nevertheless, many
great ballplayers have worn Cubs uniforms, and Wrigley Field, shown here, home of the
Cubs since 1916, is one of baseball's enduring "green cathedrals." The players signing here
were far from Hall of Famers, but that is ok with Cubs fans. Their Washington, D.C. fan
club is the Emil Verban Society, named for an obscure Cubs infielder said to personify the
team. (Members of the club have included Ronald Reagan (once a Cubs broadcaster), Dick
Cheney, Hillary Clinton and Justice John Paul Stevens. (President Obama, a White Sox fan
enlisted in the Society by other members, has been told that membership is permanent and
irrevocable.) BOB TALBOT (19272017) worked his way up through the Cubs farm system,
reaching the parent club in late 1953 and becoming the regular center fielder in 1954.
Despite being a good fielder with a strong arm, Talbot didn't hit well enough to stick in the
Majors, but played in the high minors through 1960. Outfielder and pinch hitter BOB
ADDIS (1925-2016) played in 208 Major League games between 1950 and 1953. Traded to
the Cubs from the Braves before the 1952 season, he was traded again to the Pittsburgh Pirates
during 1953. Pitcher KEN JOHNSON (1933-2015) had a 13-year Major League career
(1958-1970), but only one year was spent with the Cubs, as noted above. Playing mostly for
sub-.500 teams, he compiled a career won-lost record of 91-106. Pitcher FRANK
BAUMANN, a highly touted Red Sox rookie in 1955, never quite lived up to expectations
but had a respectable 11 season record as a starter and reliever, going 45-38 lifetime. He spent
his last six seasons in Chicago with the White Sox (1960-1964) and Cubs (1965). Fine
condition.
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