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Washington Senators

Shirley POVICH

Item#: 66121 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Washington Senators

SHIRLEY POVICH’S HISTORY OF THE WASHINGTON SENATORS, INSCRIBED TO FAMOUS MANHATTAN “SALOONKEEPER” TOOTS SHOR

POVICH, Shirley. The Washington Senators. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, (1954). Octavo, original red cloth, original dust jacket.

First edition of this account of baseball’s perennial “pushovers,” inscribed by the author, “To Toots, who could come closer than any other man I’ve ever known to getting to Heaven on a Working Press. With true appreciation of your friendship—and Baby’s too—these many years. Sincerely hoping you’ll like this book and will give it a kindly review. Shirley Povich.”

The Senators were long the brunt of Washingtonians’ melancholy gripe, “First in war, first in peace, and last in the American League.” They did, however, win the World Series in 1924, with “Boy Wonder” Bucky Harris at the helm and “Big Train” Walter Johnson on the mound. Shirley Povich was sports editor of the Washington Post. Smith 5406. This copy belonged to Toots Shor, proprietor of the legendary restaurant in Manhattan, and his wife Marion (“Baby”). Shor was known as a “saloonkeeper,” friend, and confidante to some of New York’s biggest celebrities during the ‘40s and ‘50s. Baseball players were especially welcomed. “Toots Shor’s is so crowded nobody goes there anymore” (Yogi Berra).

Interior fine. Rubbing to extremities of original cloth, dust jacket with chips to extremities. A very desirable inscribed copy, with fine sports provenance.

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