Joe Louis Vs Max Schmeling Boxing Rare Hand and 50 similar items
Joe Louis Vs Max Schmeling Boxing Rare Hand Signed First Day Cover
$84.99
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View full item details »
Shipping options
Offer policy
OBO - Seller accepts offers on this item.
Details
Return policy
Full refund available within 30 days
Purchase protection
Payment options
PayPal accepted
PayPal Credit accepted
Venmo accepted
PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, and American Express accepted
Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted
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Only one in stock, order soon |
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Posted for sale: |
March 15 |
Item number: |
1730534661 |
Item description
STB030 This stunning first day cover is hand signed too - I have searched and you will find another for sale at 500 so grab a bargain - truly outstanding condition too.
Joe Louis vs. Max Schmeling first day cover signed by Max Schmeling (PSA) Yankee Stadium.
On June 22, 1938 boxing rematch between American Joe Louis and German Max Schmeling is believed to have had the largest audience in history for a single radio broadcast. In 2005, the Library of Congress selected it for the National Recording Registry.
NBC radio announcer Clem McCarthy delivered the blow-by-blow account of the fight, which lasted just two minutes and four seconds. But it was a historic milestone one that an estimated 70 million people listened to on their radios.
In the last of a five-part series produced by independent producer Ben Manilla and Media Mechanics, Weekend All Things Considered looks at recordings recently selected for the Library of Congress prestigious honor.
The fight was a rematch of a 1936 bout in which Schmeling defeated Louis, who had never before been beaten.
After that upset, says sportswriter Patrick Myer, Schmeling was feted in Germany, especially by the Nazis. You know, they trumpeted him as the perfect specimen of the Arian superiority beating the black American, of course and he was the Nazi hero.
The broadcast of the second fight, and other sounds of American history, are being preserved by the National Recording Registry. The group identifies 50 recordings to be placed in its care each year.
There are some events and some broadcasts, some sporting activities, that reach out to millions of people and touch them in a very deep way and express a lot of their deepest cultural, racial, political hopes and aspirations, historian Lewis Erenberg says. And this is one of those events, and we have it preserved here and I think thats a wonderful thing.
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