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Lou Gehrig Autograph; Cleveland Electric Car; Philadelphia Freedom
Paper
Lou Gehrig Autograph - An Oregon man has a baseball ticket that
bears a "Lou Gehrig" autograph and a scribbled date: July 4, 1939.
The contributor's mother was an avid Yankees fan who regularly paid
homage to the team at their home stadium in the Bronx. The date is
one of the most famous in baseball, when Gehrig announced his
retirement, stating to a Yankee Stadium crowd of 62,000 that he was
"the luckiest man on the face of the earth." For months,
unbeknownst to Gehrig and his fans, he had been suffering the
progressive effects of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a
degenerative disease. HISTORY DETECTIVES heads to Yankee Stadium
and Cooperstown's Baseball Hall of Fame to learn whether this
ticket was in fact signed by Lou Gehrig and to explore how the
athlete once known as the "Iron Horse" was memorialized by fans and
by his own family.
Cleveland Electric Car - A Cleveland man with a passion for trains
has long wondered about an electric street car in his city's
transit museum. He is curious to learn what happened to the city's
once extensive and highly praised electric trolley car network.
Streetcars were once the most popular form of urban transportation
in the country - by World War I, most cities of more than 10,000
people had an electric railway system. But by the 1950s, this form
of transportation had all but disappeared. HISTORY DETECTIVES hits
the road to Washington, DC, and Cleveland, Ohio, to track the
evolution of urban mass transit systems, and investigate the fate
of downtown areas and the rise of suburban sprawl.
Philadelphia Freedom Paper - A Bronx, New York, man with a
longtime interest in African-American history recently purchased an
intriguing document at a flea market; he believes it is a "freedom
paper" for an African-American man named John Jubilee Jackson. The
paper was issued in Philadelphia in 1821, and indicates that
Jackson was from Virginia, a state where, by 1780, nearly half of
all slaves resided. HISTORY DETECTIVES heads to Philadelphia,
Mystic, Connecticut, and New York City to investigate the document
and the life of John Jubilee Jackson, uncovering the remarkable and
contradictory reality of free blacks struggling to get by in a
racist society.