The Story Behind the Formation
of a Successful Society
by Ernie Montella
In 1975, two former high school classmates formed the Eastern Pennsylvania
Sports Collectors Club (EPSCC), in a joint venture to promote the
collection of baseball cards and other sports memorabilia in our
area. Twenty-one years later, this move would lead to the birth
of the Philadelphia Athletics Historical Society, in a heartwarming
display of fan loyalty and remembrance.
Many friendships that remain to this day developed during these
twice a year conventions held in Willow Grove, Pennsylvania. It
was common to see baseball fans from all over the country in attendance.
A bond was built among those lovers of the game that allowed middle-aged
men and women to relive their youth and reminisce about the team
that was taken from them in the fall of 1954, the Philadelphia Athletics.
This bond continued to grow through the decade of the 1980's. In
March 1990, EPSCC management invited former A's great Eddie Joost
as its celebrity autograph guest. Joost, one of the most popular
Athletics of modern times, had twice (1947 and 1951) been voted
Philadelphia's most valuable major league player by local fans.
The great turnout of autograph seekers created by Joost's appearance
showed clearly that there was a solid base of Athletics fans living
in and around Philadelphia-fans who wanted more than just an occasional
visit as a reminder of their lost youth.
Hearing of Joost's ambition to be inducted into the Bay Area Sports
Hall of Fame in his San Francisco hometown, a small group of Athletics
fans initiated a course of action that would have several surprising
conclusions. In the summer of 1990, this group , consisting at first
of Jack Boyett, Bob Burns, Carl Goldberg, Jack Laufer, Max Silberman,
Tom Saboy, myself, and later Joe Dugan, Bill Doonin, Clara McGonigal,
Chuck Pizagno, Tony Risi, and Bob Tangi, went to work. We began
the first of two separate campaigns that would have an unexpected
but lasting effect on the Philadelphia sports scene.
Local sports columnist Ted Taylor, learning of this effort through
copies of correspondence sent to him by the Joost effort committee,
wrote in August 1993 about the first Joost campaign in his weekly
Philadelphia Daily News column. This publicity brought other fans
into the campaign. After a five year non-stop letter writing effort,
and with the assistance from Joost's West Coast fans, Joost was
finally inducted into the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame on February
15, 1995 in ceremonies held at The Westin St.Francis Hotel in San
Francisco, California. Other inductees in this, BASHOF's 16th annual
event, included Vida Blue, Lee Evans and Curt Flood.
Contemporaneously with the BASHOF effort, the committee in 1993
had also begun a campaign to have Joost placed on Philadelphia's
Veterans Stadium Wall of Fame, an honor accorded to one Phillie
and one Athletic each year. Once again, aided by the publicity of
Taylor's column in 1993 and 1994, success was attained and Joost
was selected for the honor in the fall of 1995.
Eddie Joost's plaque went up on the Veterans Stadium Wall on April
1, 1996. To coincide with this occasion, local sports card show
promoter Jim Lutz organized the first Philadelphia Athletics Reunion
that weekend at the Holiday Inn in Fort Washington. Thirteen former
members of Connie Mack's A's were invited.
Ted Taylor's coverage of this historic event, appearing in the
Daily News and Sports Collectors Digest, was met with such enthusiasm
that Taylor, along with myself, formed the Philadelphia Athletics
Historical Society in September 1996. Much credit is also due to
Californian, David Stephan for relentlessly pushing Taylor and myself
to organize the Society. The rest is history.
We are currently accepting new members. If you have a love of the
game of baseball as it used to be, when players wore flannel uniforms
and received salaries comparable to the rest of society, when there
were Philadelphia A's and Washington Senators and St. Louis Browns,
we will be happy to have you become a part of the Philadelphia Athletics
Historical Society.

Eddie Joost and Hank Majeski reunite at the Eastern
Pennsylvania Sports Collectors Convention at the George Washington
Motor Lodge in Willow Grove, Pa in March 1990. It was this
convention that eventually led to Joost being inducted into
the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame (BASHOF) in February 1995,
followed a year later with his induction into the Phillies
Wall of Fame that eventually led to the formation of the Philadelphia
Athletics Historical Society in September 1996.
Photo compliments of Carl Goldberg |

Hank Majeski and Carl Goldberg at the EPSCC Convention
in March 1990. Carl is one of the early founders of the A's
Society.
Photo compliments of Carl Goldberg |
"THE
MOST SUCCESSFUL HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF ITS KIND IN EXISTENCE TODAY."
Click here to become become part of
the Philadelphia Athletics Historical Society.
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