When Jews visit the baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York, they can learn about the only two members of the tribe who have been inducted into the hallowed museum: Hank “The Hebrew Hammer” Greenberg and Sandy Koufax.
Now they’ll have the chance to find out about the dozens of other Jews who have played in the major leagues.
Thanks to the effort of a dedicated memorabilia collector, clearly taking Theodor Herzl’s legendary words to heart — “If you will it, it is no dream” — a Jewish baseball museum is, at last, a reality.
Well, make that a virtual reality.
An extensive new website, The Jewish Baseball Museum, is a veritable Jewish baseball nerd’s dream. Set to launch Monday, the site is complete with biographies of nearly all the Jews who made it to the big leagues. There are interviews with former players and prominent baseball-industry types, as well as a timeline of Jewish baseball stories that dates to the 1860s.
The site could be the precursor to an actual Jewish baseball museum in Chicago, according to its creator, Jeff Aeder, a Chicago-based real estate investor and Cubs fanatic.
The Jewish Baseball Museum is a passion project for Aeder, 54, who says he has amassed one of the largest collections of Jewish baseball memorabilia in the country. His collection, which is showcased on the site, comprises some 2,000 objects — among them are a Ron Blomberg bat with a Star of David on the knob and a letter written by Greenberg to a friend during World War II — and approximately 2,500 pre-1990 baseball cards of Jewish players.
Aeder says the website is an opportunity to introduce the stories of older Jewish ballplayers to younger generations.
“Of all the [Jewish] ballplayers who’ve played in the major leagues, everybody always says Koufax and Hank Greenberg,” he told JTA. “But when you learn and read about people like Jimmie Reese [born James Herman Solomon], Al Rosen, Sy Rosenthal, Mo Berg, there are just so many people. And they have unbelievable stories.”
Take Lipman Pike, who in 1871 became the first Jew to play for the majors — and earned a salary of $20 a week.
Aeder — who with his wife, Jennifer Levine, were named Chicagoans of the Year in 2013 for opening the Wolcott School, a high school for kids with learning challenges — will gauge the reaction to the website before moving ahead with plans for the physical museum. He hopes it will open as early as 2017 in his native Lakeview neighbourhood on the city’s North Side.
Aeder said his collection would form the core of the museum’s permanent exhibit.
For now, the site lives up to its title as an “online museum.” Viewers can zoom in for closeups of Aeder’s collectibles and scroll through dozens of videos with footage of classic Jewish baseball moments, from Koufax’s World Series wins to Shawn Green’s four home-run game. Stories and interviews by well-known baseball writers populate the site’s many other sections.
Perhaps surprisingly, Aeder, who says he has a “fairly obsessive personality,” hasn’t spent decades amassing his huge collection. Rather it has taken shape only the past few years, during which Aeder attended auctions, scoured eBay and sent personal letters to owners looking to sell.
Aeder is no stranger to having a successful “hobby” — he’s also the founding owner of Milt’s Barbecue for the Perplexed, a popular kosher barbecue joint near Wrigley Field that serves up old-fashioned ribs and sides and gives its profits to worthy causes. The restaurant has earned the respect of Cubs fans — Jews and non-Jews alike — as well as last year’s Cy Young Award winner, Jake Arrieta.
Early breakfast. Roam the city. Bring Milt’s BBQ to the park, throw on some music, kick back with the fam. https://t.co/0XTHxaQIWn
— Jake Arrieta (@JArrieta34) April 21, 2015
Aeder’s motto for his labour-of-love ventures sounds like something the late Yogi Berra might say: “If you’re going to do something, do it first class,” he said. “Otherwise don’t do it.”
So here’s hoping another sage’s words will come true. In this case, “the voice” from Field of Dreams: “If you build it, they will come.”