Before we enjoy a cup of
baseball memorabilia coffee in the
morning we have to find a pot to
percolate.
Vincent Marotta was the co-creator
of the famed
Mr. Coffee automatic brewing system.
After the machine hit the market in
1972, Mr. Coffee machine Sales were
good, but Marotta felt, to really
make it a national brand, they
needed a spokesman. Marotta, had
signed with the St. Louis Cardinals
in 1942, but was called to serve in
World War II before spring
training.
He was a big fan of Joe DiMaggio,
and decided to recruit the former
Yankee to be a spokesman.
Now we need some coffee grinds
to brew. This 3 pound size coffee
can features a brightly colored
“Youth League Baseball”
illustration. In a 1966 promotion,
Mickey Mantle invited "you to
enter... The Butter-Nut Coffee
Family Baseball Sweepstakes."
The grand prize included; you and your family being a personal guest of
Mickey Mantle at Yankee Stadium.
The
keepsake coffee tin was sold
with a wrap around paper coupon for
a special offer for a Rawlings
Mickey Mantle baseball glove, and a
little league baseball.
Living in the St. Louis area with
his family, Stan Musial always
worried about his baseball career,
about getting hurt, and wanted a
business to fall back on. After
befriending Julius "Biggie"
Garagnani, owner of Biggie's Steak
House, Musial bought a house.
Stan then spoke with Biggie about a partnership in the restaurant. Musial
officially became Biggie's partner
in January of 1949. This coffee mug
is from Stan Musial & Biggies Steak
House in St. Louis.
Don Heffner played in the Major
Leagues for the Yankees, Browns,
Athletics and Tigers from
1934-1944. in 1953 he secured a
copyright to produce ceramic
baseball gloves, and did so until
1958 when he returned to the Major
Leagues as a coach.
The Don Heffner of Monrovia Cal.
ceramic baseball gloves were sold
in souvenirs shops, and ballparks
during the 1950's, and
raised stitched baseball coffee mugs
were part of the inventory.
In 1957 the Mickey Mantle 32 lane
bowling center opened in Dallas
Texas. The bowling center became
part of a contract dispute in 1959.
The Yankees wanted Mantle to take a
$15.000 cut in pay, and Mantle said
he would not take the cut, but
deserved a $3,000. raise to
$75,000. He publicly stated he
would be more than happy to stay in
Dallas and run his bowling alley
rather than accept the pay cut.
Two
coffee cups were produced by Fire
King. One a 200 Club cup, given
as a gift to bowlers that threw a
200 game in league play. The other
was a gift for bowlers that threw a
300 game.
Part of a six piece table settings
this coffee mug was made for the
Dallas based
Mickey Mantle's
Country Cookin' franchise. Mantle
was named chairman of the board of
ten restaurants and drew a yearly
salary of $100,000. He was fired
late in 1969 after the stock
plummeted from $15.00 a share to
$2.00. Despite coming up with the
advertising slogan: "To get a
better piece of chicken You'd have
to be a rooster," Mantle officially
resigned in 1970.
This
Harry Caray's Chicago
Spinners™ coffee mug features a
spinning Baseball located at the
top of the handle. Right handed
coffee drinkers get to view the
famous Harry Caray caricature Logo.
Left handed drinkers, the "Harry
Caray's Established 1987 Chicago"
logo.
Harry Caray's Restaurant Group
began when the first Harry Caray's
Italian Steakhouse opened in
Chicago's River North neighborhood
in 1987. Located at 33 W. Kinzie
St. it was once home to the
notorious enforcer of the Al Capone
gang, Frank Nitti. He lived in an
apartment on the fourth floor with
his wife Annette, who’s family
owned the building which was built
in 1895.
In 1987, New York Yankees first
baseman Don Mattingly opened
Mattingly’s 23 Restaurant & Lounge,
at 1700 N. Morgan Center Drive,
Evansville, Indiana. The 7,000 sq.
ft. restaurant and lounge, featured
a carpeted floor laid out like a
baseball diamond, and two dugouts
where you could sit.
Mattingly's 23, which took its name from Mattingly's jersey number, seated
269 people and featured sports
memorabilia throughout the
establishment. Coffee cups were
made available at the Souvenir
stand (gift-shop) which also
included; jackets, sweatshirts,
t-shirts, caps, posters, baseball
bat pens, mini bats, 1991 Coca-Cola
Mattingly's 23 restaurant baseball
card sets and more.
In 2020 Cubs slugging second baseman Ian Happ partnered with Connect
Roasters, a coffee roasting company
that sends part of its sales to
community organizations where it
grows its coffee, to give back to
COVID-19 relief efforts.
Happ and
Connect Roasters have released a
line of coffee,
Quarantine Coffee,
where part of the sales will go
directly to COVID-19 relief
efforts. Each bag of coffee sells
for $15 and $3 from each bag sold
goes to COVID-19 relief charities.