Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Baseball Hall of Fame
Episode Date: January 26, 2026In the 1930s, the United States was in the grip of the Great Depression, and baseball was approaching its 100th anniversary. One enterprising business leader in Cooperstown, New York, came up with ...the idea of establishing a museum and a hall of fame to honor the greatest players in the game. Since its establishment, the Hall of Fame has become one of the most beloved institutions in the country and a source of perpetual controversy. Learn more about the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In the 1930s, the United States was in the grip of the Great Depression and baseball was approaching
its 100th anniversary. One enterprising business leader in Cooperstown, New York, proposed establishing
a museum and Hall of Fame to honor the greatest players in the game. Since its establishment,
the Hall of Fame has become one of the most beloved institutions in the country and a source
of perpetual controversy. Learn more about the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum on this
episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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The origins of the Baseball Hall of Fame go back to the 1930s in upstate New York.
The country was in the midst of the Great Depression, and baseball was about to celebrate its 100th anniversary in 1939.
Moreover, professional baseball had now been around for over 50 years, and had established a history of stars and records.
The creation of the Baseball Hall of Fame was largely the work of Stephen C. Clark, a wealthy businessman and philanthropist from Cooperstown, New York.
Clark was an heir to the Singer sewing machine fortune and served as the president of the Singer
Manufacturing Company during the early 20th century. By the early 1930s, Cooperstown was a small
rural village whose economy had stagnated. Clark was deeply invested in its survival and believed
that tourism was the key to its future. Clark's opportunity came from a popular but historically
weak belief that baseball had been invented in Cooperstown in 1839 by Abner Doubleday. This idea
originated from the Mills Commission report of 1907 and was still widely accepted by the public in the 1930s,
even though serious historians already doubted it. Clark understood that the truth mattered less than the
story. If Cooperstown could credibly brand itself as the birthplace of baseball, it could attract
national attention and visitors. In 1934, Clark proposed creating a national baseball shrine
to coincide with the supposed centennial of the sport in 1939.
He offered land and a significant financial backing to make the idea a reality.
Clark worked closely with the National and American Leagues,
as well as baseball writers and executives,
to give the project legitimacy.
Major League Baseball endorsed the effort,
recognizing that a formal institution celebrating the game's history
could enhance its cultural standing
at a time when the sport still bore the lingering damage
of the Chicago Black Sox scandal of 1919.
Clark donated land for the museum and provided financial backing for the project.
The National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum was established as an independent private
nonprofit organization.
It is not controlled by Major League Baseball or any of the teams.
While the first class of inductees would be in 1936, the building hosting the Hall of Fame
and Museum wouldn't actually open until 1939.
In the first Baseball Hall of Fame election in 1936, members of the Baseball Writers Association of America were given the responsibility to pick the hall's initial class of modern era players.
A total of 226 writers cast ballots in the inaugural election. Each voter could select up to 10 candidates from a list of players whose primary careers began after the year 1900.
At that time, there was no retirement waiting period, both retired players and even active players.
players were eligible to receive votes. Also, there were no restrictions on who could be elected,
so players who had been banned for life, like Shulis Joe Jackson, could, in theory, have been
elected. To be elected, a candidate needed at least 75% of the ballots. With 226 ballots cast,
that meant 170 votes were required for induction. The results were announced on February 2,
1936. Five players surpassed the 75% threshold and became the first Hall of Fame class.
Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Honest Wagner, Christy Mathewson, and Walter Johnson.
Ty Cobb received the highest percentage with 98.2% of the ballots.
And it should be noted that despite these being amongst the greatest players to ever play
the game, no one was unanimously elected.
In fact, nobody would be unanimously elected for another 83 years.
In addition to the baseball writers, there was a second means of election to the Hall of Fame that was established, the Veterans Committee.
For the first election, they were limited to players who played in the 19th century.
No one met the vote threshold from the Veterans Committee for the first election.
In 1937, the writers elected Napoleon Lazioe, Tris Speaker, and Cy Young.
The Veterans Committee was replaced by a smaller centennial committee.
committee. They selected four non-players, Connie Mack, John McGraw, Morgan Bullkelly, and George Wright.
In 1938, the writers selected only one player, Grover Cleveland, Alexander, and the
Centennial Committee selected Alexander Cartwright and Henry Chadwick.
In 1939, the last class before the opening of the museum saw the election of Lugarig,
George Cisler, Eddie Collins, and Willie Keeler. With the now Oldtimers Committee, selecting Cap
Anson, Buck Ewing, Charles Old Hoss Red,
Edmund, Albert Spalding, Charles Skimitsky, and William Cummings.
The National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum officially opened on June 12, 1939.
The dedication was time to coincide with the widely believed centennial of baseball,
and was designed as a national celebration of the sport.
More than 25,000 people traveled to the small village, including players, executives, and fans.
The admission process to the Hall of Fame has undergone numerous changes since 19.
Initially, elections were held annually, but the schedule has varied over the decades.
The Baseball Writers Association of America conducts elections each year, considering players
who have been retired for at least five seasons and played at least 10 years in the major leagues.
Players remain on the ballot for up to 10 years, assuming that they receive at least 5% of the vote
in any given year.
The threshold for election has remained constant at 75% of votes cast, though the
the composition and size of the electorate has changed. Originally limited to a smaller group of
established writers, the Baseball Writer Association of America Voting Membership has expanded significantly.
Voters must have been active members for at least 10 consecutive years to now be eligible.
Beyond the baseball writers, various veterans committees have existed to consider players, managers,
umpires, and executives overlooked by the writers. These committees have gone through multiple
reorganizations and name changes.
Currently, several era committees meet on a rotating schedule to evaluate candidates from different
eras of baseball history. This system replaced earlier incarnations such as the Veterans Committee,
which met annually and faced criticism for inconsistent standards and cronyism.
Election standards have shifted considerably across different eras. The earliest inductees
were obvious choices, games undisputed legends. As the hall filled with these immortals,
standards became less clear. The 1960s and 70s saw relatively generous induction rates with some
players entering who would likely not be inducted today. The rise of Sabre metrics and advanced
statistical analysis fundamentally changed how voters evaluated candidates. Bill James and other analysts
developed new frameworks for assessing player value that went beyond traditional statistics,
such as batting average and wins. Metrics such as war for wins above replacement,
OPS Plus for on-base plus slugging adjusted for era and ballpark, and defensive analytics,
gave voters tools to compare players across eras more accurately.
This statistical revolution created tensions between traditionalists and analytical approaches.
Some voters enthusiastically embrace the new metrics while others remain skeptical or even hostile.
These divisions have played out in close elections where traditional stars with impressive counting stats
face competition from players whose analytical profiles revealed greater overall value.
Perhaps the Hall's greatest early failure was its neglect of the Negro League players.
Excluded from Major League Baseball by an unwritten color barrier until Jackie Robinson broke through in 1947,
black players competed in separate leagues that often featured baseball of exceptionally high quality.
In 1971, the Hall formerly recognized the Negro leagues as major leagues for historical
purposes, which then opened the door to inductions.
The first election was Satchel Page, inducted in 1971 through a special committee vote rather
than the standard writer's ballot.
His election established the precedent that Negro League players would be evaluated on their
own historical context, rather than by Major League statistics, which they never had the
opportunity to accumulate.
To handle these cases, the Hall relied on variants of what became known as the Negro League
Committee, composed of baseball historians, former players, executives, and writers with an
expertise in that era.
The committee reviewed surviving records, contemporary accounts, eyewitness testimony,
and later scholarship.
Because Negro League statistics were incomplete and unevenly preserved, selection emphasized
dominance relative to their peers, reputation amongst contemporaries, longevity,
and historical impact rather than just raw statistics.
Pete Rose's banishment from baseball in 1989 for betting on games while managing the Cincinnati
Reds created the Hall of Fame's most enduring individual controversy.
Rose, whose baseball's all-time hits leader, would ordinarily be a slam dunk first ballot
selection. However, a rule adopted in 1991 explicitly barred anyone on baseball's
permanently ineligible list from Hall of Fame consideration. The controversy continues to generate
debate, with Rose's death in 2024 closing the door on any possibility of reinstatement during his
lifetime. But perhaps no controversy has more deeply divided the Hall of Fame voters than the issue
of performance-enhancing drugs. The widespread use of steroids and other PEDs in baseball during the
1990s and early 2000s, sometimes called the Steroids era, has created a moral and statistical
quandary for evaluating players from that period. Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens,
became the faces of this debate. Bonds hit 762 career home runs and won seven MVP awards,
while Clemens won seven Saly Young Awards. Both players, statistical cases, rank among the strongest
in the history of baseball. However, both faced credible allegations of PED use, detailed in
the Mitchell report and other investigations. Neither player was convicted of a crime related to steroid use,
though Bonds was initially convicted of obstruction of justice before the conviction was overturned.
Despite their overwhelming statistical credentials, both players fell short of election during their 10 years on the writer's ballot,
peaking around 65 to 66% of the vote. Their cases expose deep philosophical rifts among voters.
Some argued that suspected or confirmed PED users should categorically be excluded regardless of their statistics.
but others contend that PED use was so widespread during the era that singling out specific players was hypocritical
and that the Hall should reflect baseball history accurately, including its ugly chapters.
Still others noted the lack of clear standards pointing out that voters had elected players who admitted using amphetamines, corked bats, and other forms of cheating.
The Hall of Fame induction process culminates in a formal ceremony held each summer in Cooperstown.
inductees are announced months earlier through the writer's ballot or an era committee vote.
At the ceremony, each new member is introduced, their plaque is unveiled, and they're invited to give an induction speech.
These speeches are personal and unscripted by the hall, though time limits apply.
Family members may accept the honor and speak if the inductee is deceased.
The plaque is the central honor of the induction ceremony.
It's permanently displayed in the hall's plaque gallery in Cooperstown.
The plaque includes the inductee's name, likeness, primary role in baseball, and a short citation summarizing their career.
As of the recording of this podcast, 351 people have been inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
The Hall of Fame currently includes 278 players, 40 executives, 23 managers, and 10 umpires.
A player who is inducted into the Hall of Fame will often see the value of their baseball cards and other memorabilia Skyrocketed.
it. I've had the pleasure of visiting the Baseball Hall of Fame twice, most notably for the
induction ceremony in 1999 when George Brett, Robin Yount, and Nolan Ryan were all inducted.
It was a great experience and something that I would love to do again. You get to see all the
old-timers at the reception the night before, and the museum is actually one of the best in the
country. Cooperstown is actually one of the quaintest towns in America, and if you're looking for
any sort of baseball memorabilia, there are more stores per capital there than anywhere else.
The Baseball Hall of Fame was the first major sport to establish a Hall of Fame, and it served
as a template for the Halls of Fame for other sports. The Baseball Hall of Fame has become the
ultimate achievement for any baseball player and the ultimate destination for baseball fans.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers
are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
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