As has been shown by Dan Evenson, the printer of National Pastime did not go out of business. The game simply failed. The company survived until at least 1941 and probably later. Mr. Van Beek even lost a lawsuit over unpaid money.
Yes; I have been subscribed since he came online. I haven’t dug thoroughly into his research yet, which seems based primarily on old newspapers (which I can certainly appreciate). In fact, his speculation about why Seitz chose certain teams for GTOPs led me to set up this long-overdue interview with the folks closest to the primary sources. Great to reconcile old and new research.
This is great. Love this kind of content I really enjoy🙂⚾🎲🎲
Thanks! We aim to get great gaming history on the record in one discoverable spot. i'll get to time stamping this at some point.
@@apbafootballclub411 btw you do a great job with your channel, I enjoy your passion for the preservation of the history of APBA.
Very much appreciated, thank you.
Great video! Always love another peek into APBA history.
Fantastic interview!
What a great Christmas present! Thanks
Well done Geoff!
As has been shown by Dan Evenson, the printer of National Pastime did not go out of business. The game simply failed. The company survived until at least 1941 and probably later. Mr. Van Beek even lost a lawsuit over unpaid money.
Baseball Replay Journal.
Yes; I have been subscribed since he came online. I haven’t dug thoroughly into his research yet, which seems based primarily on old newspapers (which I can certainly appreciate). In fact, his speculation about why Seitz chose certain teams for GTOPs led me to set up this long-overdue interview with the folks closest to the primary sources. Great to reconcile old and new research.