Finished: Plat Map of A.G. Spalding Land Association

Along the edges of the plat mat we discovered that wood glue had been used to glue many weak areas of the paper. This was carefully reversed by softening the wood glue and then scraping it from the vellum and the fabric. Once the map was removed from the muslin it was treated with chemistry baths to neutralize and lift the acid stains. Paper repairs were then administered at the areas of loss, incorporating new paper of a similar quality. Some delicate in-painting returned degraded color to its original strength. Re-lining helped to improve the overall structural integrity.

During our research we learned that A.G. Spalding bought the tract of 773 acres from the Harvey Land Association, and this combined with a previous adjacent tract, brought his total to 903 acres. An article in The Economist stated that Spalding was poised to improve the area with graded streets, sidewalks, trees and other landscape adornments “calculated to make it attractive.”

Albert Goodwill Spalding was an American baseball pitcher, manager, and executive in the early years of professional baseball. He co-founded the A.G. Spalding sporting goods company, and following his retirement as a baseball player, he became the president and part-owner of the Chicago White Stockings. He would later call for the commission that investigated the origins of baseball and credited Abner Doubleday with creating the game. He also wrote the first set of official baseball rules. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1939, a posthomous honor, having passed in 1915 at the age of 66

 

Beatles Autographs and Photograph

This authenticated Beatles signature was written on a ticket stub for a show in Liverpool. The accompanying photograph is of The Beatles first appearance on the Ed Sullivan show, which took place on February 9, 1964. The photograph and signatures had stains and tape residue that were removed and cleaned, and further chemistry baths neutralized the acids. A new frame with archival double-mats and UV-filtering glass was given to keep this treasured memorabilia ready to last for as long as Strawberry Fields do.

The Ed Sullivan show was part of The Beatles’ Winter 1964 US Tour. A record-breaking 73 million viewers watched the event. The set list included:

Part 1:
All My Loving

Till There Was You (Meredith Wilson cover)

She Loves You

Part 2:

I Saw Her Standing There

I Want to Hold Your Hand

At the time of the show, “I Want to Hold Your Hand” was the first Beatles’ record to top both the UK and US charts. Partly due to the Ed Sullivan Show publicity, the single staid on top for seven weeks, which made it the longest-running No.1 for their career at that time, and would later be surpassed by “Hey Jude.”