As a kid,
back in the day, It was a rite
of passage to stick your hand
down the box of a newly opened
cereal box, and claim a FREE
PRIZE! If there were baseball
cards on the back of the box,
they were quickly cut out
before the cereal was finished.
No mailing in boxtops, it was
instant gratification.
Lou
Gehrig of the New York Yankees
was the first athlete to appear
on a box of cereal. In
1934
Wheaties issued a 6" x 6 1/4"
Lou Gehrig "hand cut" card on
the back of the box. 12 FREE!
"Pictures of Famous Champions,"
one on each box, were sold in 1934, and an
additional 15 athletes were
made available in 1935. Other
baseball players included; Wally Burger,
Mickey Corcoran, Dizzy Dean,
Jimmie Foxx, and Mel Ott.
Through the years since 1934, numerous ballplayers appeared on the side
panels and the back of Wheaties
boxes. In 1958 track & field
star Bob Richards was the first
athlete depicted on the front,
but it was not until 1985 when
Pete Rose became the first
Baseball player.
Following the 1985
All-Star
break, Rose needed just 35 hits
to break Ty Cobb's all-time
mark of 4,191, and was expected
to hit the mark in late August.
Wheaties always had a long-time
history of being associated
with sports figures, so General
Mills, maker of Wheaties,
decided to ask Rose, a
champion, to endorse Wheaties
the Breakfast of Champions.
Pete Rose temporally replaced
Mary Lou Retton on the boxes
who was the Wheaties
spokeswoman at the time. Rose
was just making an endorsement.
The first baseball team
depicted on a Wheaties box was
the 1987 World Series Champion
Minnesota Twins. There was
great excitement in Minnesota
over the 1987 Twins going to
the World Series. A feat not
accomplished since 1965, when
their championship dreams were
dashed by
the LA Dodgers. Inspired,
General Mills decided to put
the Twins on the front of the
box if they won the World
Series. The design had to be
ready to go if the Twins beat
the St. Louis Cardinals in the
World Series.
A photo of the team celebrating on the field after winning the American
League Championship Series was
chosen. The
1987 Minnesota
Twins World Champions Wheaties
box was done in 2 weeks, from
design to printing. A task that
typically takes about 16 weeks.
The company produced 5,000
packages, printed in advance of
the World Series. The night the
Twins won the seventh game, the
boxes were filled with Wheaties
and they were in grocery stores
the very next day. The boxes
would have been destroyed if
the team had lost Game 7 of the
World Series.
In 1951 after a 10 year absence
in issuing baseball cards, the
General Mills Corporation was
planning on issuing baseball
cards once again. A set of 9
(baseball) Photographic cards
measuring 5" x 7" were test
marketed and issued in
1951 as
a "test issue" set, in a sample
market to determine public
popularity. However, after only
a few weeks in production, the
set was pulled from the market
because General Mills was not
able to come to terms with two
of its players, Cleveland
Indians outfielder Al Rosen and
a brash young 20-year old
rookie from the New York
Yankees named Mickey Mantle.
Wheaties was able to secure
agreements with 6 of the test
set players; Stan Musial, Roy
Campanella, Bob Feller, Bob
Lemon, Yogi Berra and Richie
Ashburn. In
1952 Wheaties would
go on to use those exact photos
from the 1951 test set and
issued a set of cards on the
backs of cereal boxes. The 10
baseball player, 2" x 3-3/4"
rounded corners, hand cut cards
were part of a 30 athlete set.
Each player was produced in
both portrait and action
drawings, for a total of 60
sports cards, 20 baseball
cards. The cards had a
blue-line drawing, with an
orange background and a white
border. Players name team and
position at the bottom
In 1952, Wheaties provided a
tin tray photo premium that
came glued to the back of the
cereal box. The 4-7/8" x 5-1/8
Tin Tray frames feature a 3" x
4" color photo of one of four
future HOF players; Ralph Kiner,
Stan Musial, Phil Rizzuto, and
Jackie Robinson. Each photo
came with the player's
facsimile autograph. The top of
the tin frame had a hole
punched out for hanging. Most
are found with glue and paper
residue on the back.
Tom Tresh was featured on the
side panel of the 1964 Wheaties
box promoting
Major League
All-Star Player Baseball
Stamps. The stamp album and
stamps was offered for .50
cents and one box top. The set
consisted of 50 stamps, each
measuring 2-9/16" x 2-3/4" and
a Major League All-Star
Baseball Stamp Album. The
stamps feature a full-color
portrait of the player with a
facsimile signature, and a wide
white border. The
Wheaties-orange, white and blue
album measures 8-3/8" by 11"
with 48 pages on which to affix
the stamps. Players include:
Hank Aaron, Roberto Clemente,
Willie Mays, Duke Snider and
Carl Yastrzemski.
- Weather
you're already a collector of
cereal boxes or just starting out,
the question of opening the box or
not will be raised. Many collectors
believe that the value will
diminish after the box is opened. A
major reason to remove the cereal
is the existence of bugs. Boxes
that sit over a long period of time
could attract egg laying insects.
If you remove the cereal and
replace it with a filler to keep
the box from crushing in, it should
hold it's value. A full box could
also cause budging at the bottom.
As with autographs avoid direct
sunlight when choosing a spot to
display your cereal box. UV light
will cause the color on the box to
fade.