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Baseball in Vermont: An Enduring Love of the GameThe exhibit, Baseball in Vermont: An Enduring Love of the Game, remained open through the end of October 2001. VHS, assisted by the Larry Gardner Chapter (Vermont) of the Society for American Baseball Research, showed the history of the game as it evolved over time, and told the stories of the teams at the local, college, and professional level and of the fans and the communities that supported them. ![]() Island Park, Brattleboro, VT The history of Vermont's organized leagues from the semiprofessional Northeastern League of the1880s to the present day professional New York-Penn League provide a chronological outline for telling the story of Vermont Baseball. All thirty-four Vermonters who made it to the major leagues from Fred Mann to Mark Brown were highlighted in the exhibit. Also featured in the show were major leaguers Larry Gardner, Ray Collins, Ray Fisher, and Ralph Lapointe who maintained close ties to the state and contributed to baseballs growth and popularity here. A major focus of the show was on the popularity of town teams. Stories of both homegrown talent like Barre's Cornelius Granai and Walter Lanfranconi to the imported professionals like Richford's Jack Bishop or Montpelier's Robin Roberts were told in the exhibit. Famous exhibition games such as the Red Sox visit with the "Home Run King" Babe Ruth in 1919 to the many visits of African-American teams like the Cuban Giants are recounted. ![]() Richford Rabbits of the 1930s
Links to other relevant baseball sites: National Baseball Hall of Fame |

