Warehouse find from 1995 - 23 years ago!
These three Cooperstown Bat Company bats feature Roy Campanella, Duke Snider and Pee Wee Reese. All three bats have painted on the barrel “DEM BUMS” in blue and have a portrait of each player in their Dodgers uniform, along with their respective career statistics in white. Also included is a wood bat holder that is designed to hold three bats and has the “DEM BUMS” painted on the front panel.
- 3 bat set including Campanella, Snider and Reese
- Dem Bums 3 bat wall rack included
- Individually numbered set, limited to 500
- Very limited supply available
- Delivered in original boxes
- Baseball Hall of Fame Exclusive Item
Roy Campanella broke into baseball with the Baltimore Elite Giants of the Negro National League at age 16, and joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1948. He was named to eight All-Star Games and played in five World Series. Strong defensively, “Campy” was also a star with a bat, setting then-records for single-season (40) and career home runs by a catcher. He won three National League Most Valuable Player awards (1951, 1953 and 1955). His playing career was cut short by an automobile accident in 1958.
Dodgers fans loved Duke Snider, “The Duke of Flatbush.” A California-bred centerfielder who declared “I was born in Brooklyn,” Snider led all major leaguers in home runs and RBIs during the 1950s, hitting 40 or more homers each of the last five seasons the Dodgers played at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn. A graceful fielder with a picture-perfect swing, Snider anchored six pennant-winning teams and clouted 11 World Series home runs, including four in 1952 and 1955, while driving in 26 runs in the Fall Classic.
Harold “Pee Wee” Reese captained the dominant Brooklyn Dodgers teams of the 1950s, as a symbol of strength and unity – both on and off the field. An outstanding defensive player, Reese led the National League in putouts four times, double plays twice, fielding percentage and assists once each, while forming one of baseball’s top double-play combinations with Jackie Robinson. Their relationship drew national attention during Robinson’s 1947 barrier-breaking season when Reese offered public support of baseball’s first African-American teammate.
Warehouse find from 1995 - 23 years ago!
These three Cooperstown Bat Company bats feature Roy Campanella, Duke Snider and Pee Wee Reese. All three bats have painted on the barrel “DEM BUMS” in blue and have a portrait of each player in their Dodgers uniform, along with their respective career statistics in white. Also included is a wood bat holder that is designed to hold three bats and has the “DEM BUMS” painted on the front panel.
- 3 bat set including Campanella, Snider and Reese
- Dem Bums 3 bat wall rack included
- Individually numbered set, limited to 500
- Very limited supply available
- Delivered in original boxes
- Baseball Hall of Fame Exclusive Item
Roy Campanella broke into baseball with the Baltimore Elite Giants of the Negro National League at age 16, and joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1948. He was named to eight All-Star Games and played in five World Series. Strong defensively, “Campy” was also a star with a bat, setting then-records for single-season (40) and career home runs by a catcher. He won three National League Most Valuable Player awards (1951, 1953 and 1955). His playing career was cut short by an automobile accident in 1958.
Dodgers fans loved Duke Snider, “The Duke of Flatbush.” A California-bred centerfielder who declared “I was born in Brooklyn,” Snider led all major leaguers in home runs and RBIs during the 1950s, hitting 40 or more homers each of the last five seasons the Dodgers played at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn. A graceful fielder with a picture-perfect swing, Snider anchored six pennant-winning teams and clouted 11 World Series home runs, including four in 1952 and 1955, while driving in 26 runs in the Fall Classic.
Harold “Pee Wee” Reese captained the dominant Brooklyn Dodgers teams of the 1950s, as a symbol of strength and unity – both on and off the field. An outstanding defensive player, Reese led the National League in putouts four times, double plays twice, fielding percentage and assists once each, while forming one of baseball’s top double-play combinations with Jackie Robinson. Their relationship drew national attention during Robinson’s 1947 barrier-breaking season when Reese offered public support of baseball’s first African-American teammate.