Posted on 04/25/2012 7:10:00 AM PDT by Daffynition
Edited on 04/25/2012 7:13:57 AM PDT by Admin Moderator. [history]
Fans can see hundreds of items once owned by Red Sox [team stats] slugger Ted Williams at a preview of the first major auction of his sports, military and personal memorabilia.
The preview takes place Wednesday through Friday at Fenway Park [map] and is open to the public. The auction will be Saturday and some of the proceeds will benefit The Jimmy Fund, the official Red Sox charity.
(Excerpt) Read more at bostonherald.com ...
I still have my Ted Williams-autographed baseball. It was a foul ball that he hit at old Griffith Stadium in DC in 1956.
Including his frozen head?
Wonder what I could get for my autographed picture of Ted Williams? As a Yankee fan (they were the parent team of my local International League franchise), I didn’t like the Red Sox but always admired the ability and character of Ted Williams.
Are Ted Williams’ head and other remains still languishing in some cryogenic cell somewhere?
Beyond sick.
That pic is an exhibition game the Red Sox played against Columbua in Manhattan on their way North after breaking Spring Break in 1938.
Williams’s son was the mastermind of that. Williams met the son later in life and he was overjoyed. The son soon became the spokesperson for Willams and he tried to market Willams to the point that nobody wanted anything to do with him. I know personally what a rotten guy he was and he became a source of pain for Williams towards the end of his life.
In a strange twist, the son died not long after Williams died. The sad part of Williams’s life is that he worked his entire lifetime to preserve his privacy, and now after death, is the butt of jokes.
From everything I’ve read, Williams’ son, John Henry, was a nasty piece of work. Can you share your personal knowledge of him?
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/545834-every-picture-tells-a-story-ted-williams-holy-cross-1939
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/ted-williams-frozen-head-batting-practice-cryogenics-lab-book-article-1.381985#ixzz0SnqMiGUh
Hardly fitting of the legend that was "The Splendid Splinter",.
There is no end to the controversy surrounding the son, William’s last will and final wishes: http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/people/w/john_henry_williams/index.html
I wonder when they’ll auction Ted Williams’ head?
*he worked his entire lifetime to preserve his privacy, and now after death, is the butt of jokes.*
I think the daughter is one the right track to donate some of the proceeds to the Jimmy Fund, based on Ted’s long standing commitment to the cause: **Ted Williams was the single most influential person in helping to raise funds for the Children’s Cancer Research Foundation (now Dana-Farber Cancer Institute). He was an important aid to founder Dr. Sidney Farber, spreading word of Farber’s research to help save children (and later adults) from the scourge of cancer.
Ted Williams was the Red Sox’ biggest star when the Jimmy Fund was founded in 1948. He had a special love for children and was always willing to visit them in the hospital with no fanfare. He also continuously took part in Jimmy Fund fundraising efforts on behalf of the Red Sox organization, going to Little League games, American Legion banquets, temples and churches, movie houses, department stores for autograph sessions, even cookouts on Boston Common. Williams also announced that all donation checks for the Jimmy Fund sent to Fenway Park would be endorsed with his autograph for the donors.
It is estimated that Williams is personally responsible for raising millions of dollars in the fight against cancer and other related diseases.**
**This auction was always meant to happen, Claudia Williams wrote in the catalog, packed with photographs of hundreds of her fathers belongings. I just never thought I would be doing it without my father and brother by my side. Ted Williams died in 2002. His son, John Henry Williams, died in 2004.**
According to the news articles, never.
**More than 97 percent of the 794 items presented sold at the auction. Overall, 21 pieces sold for more than $16,000. The least expensive lot sold among the top 10 most expensive items that sold was a bat used by Williams in the 1960 All-Star Game that netted $80,500.**
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