From the desk of: FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS
Road Trips 2017: Cooperstown Museum
and Baseball Hall of Fame
Spanning the Borough, To Give You The Constant Variety of Bums
Gone but hardly forgotten, the old Trolley Dodgers are quite alive and doing very well. Despite being scarred and broken, Dem Bums of yore remain dear in the hearts of Brooklyn's citizenry, whom still wear their baseball caps, t-shirts, jerseys, and jackets like a red badge of courage. Here in Kings County, at least, New York City is still home to three teams.
However, Gotham's municipal powers presently and historically have always demonstrated little or no interest in recognizing, preserving, or promoting their near 180 year baseball legacy, much less Brooklyn Dodgers history. Therefore, I make it my business to seek out and reveal Fingerprints of the Bums wherever they may be. This is the first in a series of reboots and original content featuring items you may already be familiar with, and hopefully many things you're not so familiar with.
PART ONE: STREET ART and DODGERS MURALS
Why not begin at Chavez Ravine, for the above mural is not located in Brooklyn, but at Dodger Stadium itself. Speaking as a native Brooklynite, it's an appreciated acknowledgement of their Trolley Dodger roots.
The picture itself was provided by my friend and L.A. Dodgers fan extraordinaire @crzblue ... Thank You!
The Dodger Stadium mural is a popular and familiar image of a Franklin Avenue (or Washington Avenue) local negotiating the right turn onto westbound Empire Boulevard. This Trolley would have been travelling southbound on Franklin Avenue along the left field/third base side of Ebbets Field. Technically, Charles Ebbets purchased the lots bounded by Bedford Avenue, Sullivan Place, Montgomery Street, and Franklin Avenue. However, the park itself was bounded by Bedford, Sullivan, Montgomery, and McKeever Place. Jackie Robinson School is situated on the lot bounded by Franklin, Sullivan, McKeever, and Montgomery (placing Ebbets Field on the other side of McKeever Place).
P.S. 375 Jackie Robinson
and Middle School 352 Ebbets Field
As the route continued westward along Empire Boulevard, two blocks away the Trolley would have rumbled to our next destination:
The above mural was painted by an MTA employee. It once covered the entire front wall of their maintenance yard located just five blocks from the former site of Ebbets Field, across the street from Prospect Park where Ocean Avenue, Flatbush Avenue, and Empire Boulevard converge. I'll venture to guess I took this picture at least a decade (and four or five phones) ago. The mural had existed for quite some time at that point with nary a reason to believe it risked being painted over. Famous last words! I made a huge mistake by cropping the original pictures in order to focus on the team holding up their 1955 pennant. If you look closely at the left border, you'll notice a brown door. There was indeed more to this mural than what is presented here, depicting Ebbets Field's exterior facade. Trust me, all these years later I'm still kicking myself in the posterior. As fate would have it, the above mural was indeed painted over and replaced with an (unfinished) alternative version featured below.
circa 2015
Ponderously, this mural also has been painted over. My mole told me it was management's call due to the employee/artist's retirement. Today, no mural exists at the site.
This image is located inside Trader Joe's;
intersection of Atlantic Avenue and Court Street.
Inside Atlantic Center
Atlantic Avenue @ Flatbush Avenue
Commissioned for the Wythe Hotel
Williamsburg, Brooklyn
Exterior of U.S. Post Office
Avenue N at Flatbush Avenue
This Ebbets Field mural is located inside the TD Bank lobby at the
corner of Montague Street and Court Street; the same address where the
Brooklyn Dodgers offices were once located.
Jackie Robinson at Sullivan Street
between Rogers Avenue and Nostrand Avenue.
Duane Reade Pharmacy Murals
Bedford Avenue across street from former Ebbets Field
Inside U.S. Post Office
Fillmore Avenue at Flatbush Avenue
Artist: Bonnie Siracusa (516-314-5060)
Oil on window pane by Ron Nesbitt
Vanderbilt Avenue
I even found Fernando Valenzuela hanging out on Montgomery Street
three blocks from Bedford Avenue!