Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame

The Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum (French: Temple de la renommée du baseball canadien) is a museum located in St. Marys, Ontario, Canada. The museum commemorates great players, teams, and accomplishments of baseball in Canada.

Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame
Established1983
LocationSt. Marys, Ontario, Canada
Typesports museum
DirectorScott Crawford
Websitewww.baseballhalloffame.ca/

History

The museum was founded in October 1983 in Toronto at Exhibition Place and later moved to Ontario Place theme park.

In 1994, it moved to St. Marys, Ontario.

The Hall of Fame and Museum is dedicated to preserving Canada's baseball heritage which dates back to June 4, 1838, when a game which very closely resembled today's game of baseball was played in Beachville, Ontario.

The Hall gained some major attention when Pete Rose became eligible for election for earning his 4,000th MLB hit while playing with the Montreal Expos in 1984. However, Rose has yet to be elected to the Hall.

Awards

Since opening, 125 individual members and teams have been inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame as of 2018.

This includes professional ballplayers, amateurs, builders, teams, and honorary members who have helped popularize the sport in Canada.

In addition, the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame awards the Tip O'Neill Award annually to the Canadian baseball player "judged to have excelled in individual achievement and team contribution while adhering to the highest ideals of the game of baseball" and the Jack Graney Award for Lifetime Media Achievement.[1][2]

Facilities

The 32 acre facility in St. Marys also includes four baseball fields designed by landscape architect Art Lierman of London, Ontario.

Pearson Cup on display

See: Pearson Cup

Rules for nominations

  1. A player must be retired for at least three years.
  2. Must receive 75 percent of the vote to be inducted.
  3. If the person is not Canadian he must have done something significant with respect to baseball in Canada.
  4. The person nominated will stay on the ballot for nine years as long as he receives a minimum of one vote every two years.
  5. All information must be in by December 1 of the year to be eligible for the following year.[3]

Inductees

Bold indicates a member of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum (including J.G. Taylor Spink Award and Ford C. Frick Award recipients) Italics indicates a charter member

Individuals

Teams / groups

gollark: your grammar is fine.
gollark: To be fair, their single-core performance does seem pretty good.
gollark: Only 6 cores, Intel? Really?
gollark: ^ark i7-8700K
gollark: Some of the numbers are bigger, it's fine.

See also

References

  1. Tip O'Neill Award Archived 2011-08-26 at the Wayback Machine at baseballhalloffame.ca; URL accessed July 2, 2009
  2. Jack Graney Award Archived 2011-08-26 at the Wayback Machine at baseballhalloffame.ca; URL accessed July 2, 2009
  3. Rules for Nominations Archived 2011-08-26 at the Wayback Machine at baseballhalloffame.ca; URL accessed July 2, 2009
  4. Inductees Archived 2011-08-26 at the Wayback Machine at baseballhalloffame.ca
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.