Thanks to Joe Lechner and the TCA sponsored TTML for this introspective tie in with toy trains and history.
For those that are interested check out the below Babe Ruth link:http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/r/ruthba01.shtmlMike SpanierPS No <G>, I never saw Babe Ruth but I was always fascinated by his legacy asone of the, if not, the great baseball player ever.###########################################################When George Herman Ruth made his farewell appearance as a New York Yankee inYankee Stadium 75 years ago today, he was widely admired as the greatestbaseball player who ever lived.Ruth acquired his famous nickname in 1914 when his Baltimore Oriole teammatesbegan referring to the 19-year-old rookie as Jack Dunn's new "babe". As asouthpaw pitcher for the Boston Red Sox (1914-1919), he set a World Seriesrecord of 29 consecutive scoreless innings that stood for 42 years.After Ruth was sold to the New York Yankees in 1920 for $100,000 (by far thelargest deal in MLB up to that time), he became an outfielder and quickly earnednational fame for his batting prowess. The Bambino led the American League inhome runs for twelve seasons and appeared in ten World Series.Joshua Lionel Cowen was surely a fan of Babe Ruth's. Cowen would often invitehis associates to Yankee games, and according to biographer Ron Holland, he wasnotorious for betting on every pitch.Advertisements for the Baby Ruth candy bar have appeared on Lionel trains sincethe 1930s. Curtiss Candy Company (which introduced the bar in 1921) deniednaming it after Babe Ruth, but Curtiss sued and won when a competitor attemptedto market a "Babe Ruth Home Run Bar" (with Babe Ruth's approval). Curtissclaimed that its candy bar was named for Ruth Cleveland (daughter of formerPresident Grover Cleveland) who had died at the age of twelve in 1904. Itspublicists even claimed that Miss Cleveland had visited the candy factory -which was impossible, since Curtiss was not founded until 1916. Quite possibly,this Cleveland story was invented as a defense against the inevitable objectionthat Babe Ruth hadn't authorized Curtiss to use his name.Baby Ruth and Lionel share a long history together. Ads for the candy bar beganappearing on Lionel products as early as 1931, possibly motivated by promotionalpayments from Curtiss, or by Joshua Lionel Cowen's preoccupation with the NewYork Yankees, or both.The first Lionel product to wear the Baby Ruth name was #1514, a 6" lithographedboxcar introduced in 1931. Other prewar boxcars included #1679 (1933-1939) and#2679 (1938-1942).Lionel's #156 station platform (introduced in 1939; still cataloged after WorldWar II) and its postwar successor #157 both had picket fences on whichadvertisements, lithographed on tinplate rectangles, were mounted. Almost allvintages of these stations include an ad for Baby Ruth candy bars, as do the#256 freight station and the #356 operating freight station with baggage carts.Lionel's first postwar boxcar, the #2454 (1946-1947) was lettered for both BabyRuth and the Pennsylvania Railroad. So was the smaller #1004 Scout boxcar(1948-1952) and its knuckle-coupler successors #6004 (1950) and #6014(1951-1956). Even the Electronic Control Set (1946-1949) included an orange BabyRuth boxcar, #4454.According to "Authoritative Guide to Lionel's Postwar Operating Cars" (ProjectRoar Publishing), Lionel considered putting the Baby Ruth name on the #3454merchandise car. Production versions of #3454 had only a PRR logo, but thecrates they delivered DID say Baby Ruth, as did crates for thescale-proportioned #3854 merchandise car.Fundimensions continued this illustrious tradition when it introduced the #9854Baby Ruth billboard reefer in 1973.Joseph Lechner
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