Marvin J. Miller and Theresa (Terry) Miller Papers
Call Number
Dates
Creator
Extent
Extent
Language of Materials
Abstract
Marvin Julian Miller (1917-2012) was the executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA) from 1966-1983. Miller was instrumental in the MLBPA's development into a powerful labor union that transformed the economics and labor relations of baseball, which ultimately led to profound changes in the nature of U.S. professional sports and their place in society. After Miller retired in 1983, he continued to be active as a consultant to the MLBPA and a frequent commentator on labor relations in sports, labor and economic history, and current affairs. The collection includes correspondence, minutes, reports, legal documents, research and historical materials, photographs, articles, clippings and videocassettes that document Miller's career, principally with the MLBPA, and to a lesser extent, his earlier work for the United Steelworkers of America and in several labor-related U.S. government positions. The papers of his wife, psychologist Theresa (Terry) Miller (1919-2009), also comprise the collection.
Biographical Note
Marvin Julian Miller was born in New York City on April 14, 1917 and raised in Brooklyn. His father, Alexander Miller, was a salesman in the garment district and a devoted Giants fan; his mother, Gertrude Wald Miller, was an elementary-school teacher. Miller studied first at Miami University of Ohio and then at New York University, where he received a B.S. degree in economics in 1938. In the same year he married Theresa Morgenstern; they had two children, Peter, born in 1945, and Susan, born in 1949. Theresa Miller went on to earn a Ph.D. in psychology in 1961 and, after working in clinical and experimental psychology, retired as an Associate Professor at the City University of New York.
After graduation from NYU, Marvin Miller worked briefly for the New York City Welfare Department and went on to positions as a staff economist at the War Production Board and an economist and disputes hearing officer for the War Labor Board. In the post-war period he worked for the United States Department of Labor's Conciliation Service. After brief stints with the International Association of Machinists and the United Auto Workers, he was hired in 1950 as a research economist for the United Steelworkers of America. There Miller worked with general counsel Arthur Goldberg to develop the Steelworkers' innovative and successful post-war collective bargaining strategy. When Goldberg left to become President John F. Kennedy's Secretary of Labor, Miller became the union's chief economist and negotiator, and assistant to Steelworkers president David J. McDonald.
In December 1965 former Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Robin Roberts, representing the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA), contacted Marvin Miller about the newly-envisioned position of full-time Executive Director of the MLBPA. After a long interview process and discussions with all the major league teams, against the back-drop of the Sandy Koufax-Don Drysdale holdout in the spring of 1966, Miller was elected to the new post by an overwhelming majority of players, managers, coaches and trainers. He was joining an organization that lacked staff, adequate office space, a war chest and the full confidence of its constituency. Visionary player-advocates like Roberts and Phillies delegate Jim Bunning were the exception in a culture bound by paternalism, sentimentality and deep divisions based on age, ethnicity, race and status. The owners were also often divided and short-sighted, relying heavily on a cozy relationship with the media and legal establishments.
When Miller began as Executive Director, major league baseball was at a crossroads. Television revenue had increased dramatically but the owners, armed with a reserve rules system that bound every professional baseball player for his entire career to the franchise that had "drafted" and signed him (unless sold to another organization), were keeping salaries, pensions and other benefits at pre-television-era levels. In 1966 the average salary of a major league player was $19,000 a year; the minimum annual salary of $6,000 was only $1,000 above the 1947 minimum.
Miller applied his expertise as a labor economist and negotiator, as well as his human relations and organizing skills, to his new job, and scored some significant bargaining victories. His first Basic Agreement, signed in 1968, doubled pension levels, raised salary minimums and addressed a variety of player complaints about working conditions. These gains and new licensing arrangements which directly benefited players, plus Miller's frequent tours of training camps and open-door policy at his New York office, soon overcame player resistance - even in the face of the owners' persistent efforts to label him a "labor boss" and a communist.
In 1969 Curt Flood, an African-American and the St. Louis Cardinals' star center fielder, was abruptly notified that he had been traded to the Philadelphia Phillies, a team with a reputation for poor race relations. He decided to wage a legal battle against being uprooted and traded as merchandise against his will. After warning Flood of the tough struggle ahead and possible damage to his career prospects, the MLBPA Executive Board, on Miller's recommendation, agreed to back the effort and cover Flood's legal and travel expenses. Miller arranged for Flood to be represented by Arthur Goldberg. After a series of appeals, the case, technically a challenge to baseball's longstanding exemption from the anti-trust laws, reached the U.S. Supreme Court. In June 1972 the Court ruled, in a 5 to 3 decision, in favor of the owners. Once again, professional baseball's uniquely paternalistic system of labor relations was upheld.
In 1972 a hard-line majority of team owners, together with Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, were determined to reverse the union's recent progress and hold the line on pensions, despite the steady growth of television revenue. The blatant anti-union motivation was obvious, since Miller had proposed a formula whereby pension increases could be achieved without additional financing from the owners.
Despite strenuous efforts by Miller to achieve a negotiated settlement the owners refused to budge, and the players went on strike on April 1, 1972. A settlement was reached on April 13th, on terms encompassing those proposed by the players' negotiating committee before the strike began. A total of eighty-six games had been cancelled in what was the first successful strike in the history of professional sports. With this demonstration of solidarity, the balance of power between players and owners had shifted significantly, laying the groundwork for more changes to come.
In 1975 pitchers Andy Messersmith of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Dave McNally of the Montreal Expos, whose 1974 contracts had been renewed without their signatures or consent, filed grievances against the unilateral renewal procedure. In effect, it was a challenge to the Reserve Clause, with the owners, as usual refusing to negotiate. Peter Seitz's arbitration decision in the case, delivered on December 23, 1975, upheld the players. The 1976 Basic Agreement included a guarantee of "the right of players under their present contracts to become free agents" after serving six years with the team that first signed them. Miller was immediately hailed as baseball's "Great Emancipator."
The owners regrouped and mounted another offensive in 1981 - demanding compensation for the loss of free agents. On the advice of Miller, Association general counsel Donald Fehr, former counsel Richard Moss, and their own Negotiating Committee, the players went on strike on May 29th. Player solidarity held, despite a barrage of press criticism and furious protests from fans. A settlement was achieved, again on terms originally proposed by the Association, and players returned to the field on August 1st.
When Marvin Miller retired in 1983, he was widely considered to be the most effective labor leader of his generation. He continued to be active as a consultant to the Players Association and a frequent commentator on labor relations in sports, labor and economic history and current affairs. In 1991 he published a volume of memoirs, A Whole Different Ball Game: The Sport and Business of Baseball(New York: Birch Lane Press), with a preface by Studs Terkel and an introduction by Bill James. A paperback edition, published by Simon and Schuster in the same year, bore a revised subtitle, perhaps more in keeping with the Miller philosophy: The Inside Story of Baseball's New Deal. Miller had been the recipient of many honors and awards. Sport Magazine in 1982 called him "one of the five most powerful men in sports," and ESPN-TV in 1999 deemed him fourth among the ten "most influential in all sports in the twentieth century."
Marvin Miller died in 2012 at the age of 95.
Sources:
Angell, Roger. Late Innings: A Baseball Companion. New York, Simon and Schuster, 1982. Chapter on 1981 strike.Belth, Alex. Stepping Up: The Story of Curt Flood and His Fight for Baseball Players’ Rights. New York: Persea BooksBevis, Charles W. "A Home Run by Any Measure: The Baseball Players' Pension Plan," Baseball Research Journal, 21 (1992).Burk, Robert F. Much More than a Game: Owners, Players and American Baseball since 1921. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2001.Dworkin, James B. Owners versus Players: Baseball and Collective Bargaining. Boston: Auburn House, 1981.Flood, Curt and Richard Carter. The Way It Is. New York, Trident Press, 1971.Helyar, John. Lords of the Realm: The Real History of Baseball. New York: Villard Books, 1994.Koppett, Leonard. The New Thinking Fan's Guide to Baseball. New York: Simon and Shuster, 1991. Chapter 18, "The Players Association."Korr, Charles P. "Marvin Miller and the New Unionism in Baseball," in The Business of Professional Sports, ed. Paul D. Staudohar and James A. Mangan. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1991.Kuhn, Bowie. Hardball: The Education of a Baseball Commissioner. New York: Times Books, 1987.Lowenfish, Lee. The Imperfect Diamond: A History of Baseball's Labor Warsrev. ed., New York: Da Capo, 1991.Miller, Marvin. A Whole Different Ball Game: The Sport and Business of Baseball. New York: Birch Lane Press, 1991.Snyder, Brad. A Well-Paid Slave: Curt Flood's Fight for Free Agency in Professional Sports. New York: Viking, 2006.Yasser, Ray. Sports Law: Cases and Materials. Lanham, MD: University Presses of America, 1985. Section on the Messersmith-McNally decision.
Arrangement
The collection is comprised of five series as follows:
Series I. Early Career and United Steelworkers of America, 1944-1966 Series II. Major League Baseball Players Association, 1949-2002 Series III. Clippings Files, 1966-2002 Series IV. Videotapes (VHS), 1987-2002 Series V. Theresa (Terry) Miller Papers, 1919-1994
Material in series I, II, and V are arranged alphabetically. Material in series III and IV are arranged chronologically.
Scope and Content Note
The Marvin Miller Papers document Miller's nearly two decades of leadership in the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA). The collection is largely comprised of photocopied articles from both local and national newspapers and magazines on the strikes of 1972 and 1981, litigation on the Reserve Clause, and other events during Miller's management of the MLBPA. The collection also consists of correspondence, legal documents, reports, newsletters, research, oral histories, videotapes, and photographs which trace the history of the MLBPA and Miller's work with the union. Most materials date from Miller's term as Executive Director from the mid-1960s to the early 1980s, but some materials on the history of baseball and other sports, and Miller's legacy or work as a consultant predate or postdate this period.
To a lesser extent, the collection includes reports, newsletters, clippings, and photographs related to Miller's involvement with the United Steelworkers of America, as well as his early jobs with the War Labor Board (Pennsylvania Region) and the National Wage Stabilization Board. There is also a small amount of material on the personal and professional activities of Miller's wife, Theresa. Theresa (Terry) Miller's papers consists of her personal and professional papers, including professional papers in the field of psychology and other writings, correspondence, and documents relating to her 1948 run for New York State Assembly on the American Labor Party ticket.
Subjects
Organizations
Genres
People
Topics
Places
Conditions Governing Access
Materials are open without restrictions.
Conditions Governing Use
Any rights (including copyright and related rights to publicity and privacy) held by Marvin and Theresa Miller were transferred to New York University in 2001 by Marvin Miller. Permission to publish or reproduce materials in this collection must be secured from Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Archives. Please contact tamiment.wagner@nyu.edu, (212) 998-2630.
Preferred Citation
Identification of item, date; Marvin J. Miller and Theresa (Terry) Miller Papers; WAG 165; box number; folder number or item identifier; Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives, New York University.
Location of Materials
Immediate Source of Acquisition
The papers were donated by Marvin and Theresa Miller in several batches between July 2001 and March 2003. The accession numbers associated with this donation are 2001.195, 2001.196, 2001.197 and NPA.2003.090.
An additional donation, consisting mostly of Theresa Miller's papers, was made in 2012 by their daughter, Susan Miller. The accession numbers 2012.012 and 2012.046 are associated with this donation.
A donation of 61 videocassettes was added by Susan Miller on April 16, 2013. The accession number associated with this donation is 2013.008.
A final donation was made in 2014. The accession number 2014.024 is associated with this donation.
The copy of the oral history interview with Marvin Miller from the National Baseball Hall of Fame's Fay Vincent Oral History Project was obtained by the Tamiment Library in 2005.
Audiovisual Access Policies and Procedures
Access DVDs for audiovisual materials in the collection are available by appointment for reading room viewing and listening only.
About this Guide
Processing Information
Photographs were separated from this collection during initial processing and were established as a separate collection, the Marvin Miller Photographs (PHOTOS 113). The photographs were then reincorporated into the Marvin and Theresa (Terry) Miller Papers in 2012 and PHOTOS 113 was voided. Videos from an April 2013 accession were incorporated into series IV. Digitization of the videocassettes began in 2013 and was completed in 2015. In the course of digitization, the content of three videocassettes was determined to be unrelated to the collection or duplicative of content held elsewhere in the library. These videocassettes were deaccessioned.
Revisions to this Guide
Edition of this Guide
Repository
Series I: Early Career and United Steelworkers of America, 1944-1966, inclusive
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
Series I. Early Career and United Steelworkers of America, 1944-1966. Included are a few case reports relating to Marvin Miller's work at the War Labor Board (Pennsylvania Region) and the National Wage Stabilization Board, as well as reports, newsletters, leaflets, proceedings and clippings relating to negotiations, committee work, benefits agreements and other work undertaken by Miller as research economist and assistant to the president of the United Steelworkers of America.
Arrangement
Series is arranged alphabetically by topic.
Abel Election, 1965-1966, inclusive
Alan Wood Steel Co., 1965-1966, inclusive
Kheel, Theodore W.: "How to Arbitrate a Labor Dispute", 1946, inclusive
National Labor-Management Panel, 1963-1966, inclusive
National Wage Stabilization Board: Third Region, 1946, inclusive
Steel Strike, 1960-1963
Steelworkers: Convention Proceedings, 1962, inclusive
Steelworkers: General, 1951-1966 , 1979, inclusive
Steelworkers: Human Relations Committee, 1962-1963, inclusive
Steelworkers: Kaiser-Steel Long Range Committee Meeting Photographs, January 13, 1961, inclusive
Steelworkers: Kaiser-Steel Union Sharing Plan, 1963, inclusive
Steelworkers: Photographs (same event), 1962, inclusive
Steelworkers: Photographs (same event), 1963, inclusive
Steelworkers: Photographs, 1947, 1963-1966, undated, inclusive
Steelworkers: Revenue Sharing Plan, undated , 1959-1966, inclusive
Steelworkers: Savings and Vacation Plan, 1962-1964, inclusive
Steelworkers vs. American Manufacturing Co., 1960, inclusive
War Labor Board: Regional, 1944-1945, inclusive
Series II: Major League Baseball Players Association, 1949-2005, inclusive
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
Series II. Major League Baseball Players Association, 1949-2002. These files include correspondence, minutes, reports, legal documents, research and historical materials, articles and clippings. They cover all aspects of Marvin Miller's work at the MLBPA, from his recruitment as Executive Director in 1965-66 to his role as a consultant after his retirement from that position in 1983. There are extensive files on each round of contract negotiations during Miller's tenure and on the strikes of 1972 and 1981. Several groups of files, notably those covering the Baltimore Orioles vs. MLBPA and Topps cases, relate to the history of radio/television and product licensing. Another group of files documents the Curt Flood case (1969-1972) and the Reserve Clause and free agency in general. Background or reference files are devoted to Marvin Miller's life, writings and public testimony, to individual players, owners and Commissioners, and to baseball history, sports journalists, and other sports unions.
Arrangement
Series is arranged alphabetically by topic.
Agents, 1966 , 1977-1987, inclusive
Agents Meetings, 1979-1980, inclusive
Agreements, 1976 , 1981, inclusive
Agreements, 1984-1990, inclusive
Allen, Ricard, 1970-1972, inclusive
AFL-CIO: Sports Unions, undated, inclusive
Angelos, Peter, 1995, inclusive
Antitrust Hearings, 1981-1997, inclusive
Arbitration, 1974-1984, inclusive
Arbitration Cases, 1986-1988, inclusive
Arbitration Decisions, 1984-1986, inclusive
Arbitration Decisions, 1987-1988, inclusive
Ballinger, Lee, 1981, inclusive
Baltimore Orioles vs. MLBPA / Rogers et al. vs. Kuhn et al. (Television Litigation), Part I, 1980-1989, inclusive
Baltimore Orioles vs. MLBPA / Rogers et al. vs. Kuhn et al. (Television Litigation), Part II, 1980-1989, inclusive
Baltimore Orioles vs. MLBPA / Rogers et al. vs. Kuhn et al.: Motions and Affidavits, 1980-1989, inclusive
Baseball Hall of Fame, 1982, inclusive
Baseball History: Articles, etc., 1949 , 1976-1999, inclusive
Baseball History: Negotiations, 1950-1959, inclusive
Baseball Humor, undated , 1968-1981 , 1991, inclusive
Baseball Law: Evers and Fullerton, 1910, inclusive
Baseball Study Committee: Stephen Fehr Salary Study; Moss Remarks, etc., 1992, inclusive
"Baseball's Money Madness" (Newsweek), 1976, inclusive
Benefit Plan, undated, 1962-1970, inclusive
Benefit Plan, undated, 1962-1970, inclusive
Benefit Plan, 1971-1985, inclusive
Benefit Plan, 1990, 1995, inclusive
Benefit Plan: Exhibits, 1990, inclusive
Benefit Plan: NLRB Exhibits, 1983, inclusive
Benefit Plan: Negotiations, 1986-1989, inclusive
Blue, Vida, 1972, inclusive
Bonus Clauses, 1978, inclusive
Boston Red Sox: Ownership Dispute, 1984, inclusive
Boyer, Clete, 1971, inclusive
Bouton, Jim, 1966-1970, inclusive
Burke, Michael, Outrageous Good Fortune (excerpt), 1984, inclusive
Busch, August Jr., 1981, inclusive
Cannon, Robert C., 1966-1970, inclusive
Chicago White Sox, 1988, inclusive
Coaches and Trainers, 1978, inclusive
Collective Bargaining in Baseball: General, undated, 1956-1981, inclusive
Collusion Cases, 1986-1992, inclusive
Commissioners: General, 1967-1968, 1991, inclusive
Contract Depreciation, 1974, inclusive
Correspondence, undated, 1966-2002, inclusive
Coscarart vs. MLBPA: Miller Testimony, 1996, inclusive
Discrimination in Baseball, 1966, 1987, inclusive
Draft System, 1979, inclusive
Drug Testing, 1985-1997, inclusive
Drugs: General, 1984-1986, inclusive
Durocher, Leo, 1973, inclusive
Expansion, 1967-1968, inclusive
Fans against Strike Talk (FAST), 1980, inclusive
Fehr, Donald, 1985, 1989, 1994, inclusive
Finances, undated, 1966-1988, inclusive
Finley, Charley, undated, 1967-1976, inclusive
Flood, Curt: Briefings, 1970-1972, inclusive
Flood, Curt: Briefings, 1970-1972, inclusive
Flood, Curt: Clippings, 1969-1986, inclusive
Free Agency, 1970-1981, 1982-1988, inclusive
Gaherin, John, 1967-1977, inclusive
Garagiola, Joseph, 1982, inclusive
Giamatti, A. Bartlett, 1988-1990, inclusive
Grebey, C. Raymond, 1980-1988, inclusive
Grievances, 1968-1983, inclusive
Hodges, Gil, 1972, inclusive
Horlen, Joe, 1969-1972, inclusive
House Select Committee on Professional Sports, undated , 1976, inclusive
Hoyt, La Marr: Arbitration Case, 1987, inclusive
Hunter, Jim "Catfish", 1974-1979, inclusive
Injuries, undated, 1970, inclusive
Japan, undated , 1981-1982, inclusive
Jenkins, Ferguson: Arbitration (80-25), 1980-1989, inclusive
Johnson, Alex, 1971, inclusive
Joint Committee: MLBPA and Player Relations Committee, 1990, inclusive
Jones, Cleon, 1975, inclusive
King and Kennedy Assassinations, 1968, inclusive
Koppett, Leonard: "The Baseball Revolution is Here!" (Sport), 1968, inclusive
Korr, Charles P., "What's Wrong with Being a Professional?", 1985, inclusive
Kuhn, Bowie, undated , 1969-1991, inclusive
Leavy, Jane: Clippings, 1981, inclusive
Lee, Bill, 1979, inclusive
Length of Season, undated , 1966-1968, inclusive
Licensing: General, 1966-1980, inclusive
Licensing: TV-Radio, 1954-1982, inclusive
List of Players, undated , 1990, inclusive
Lowenfish, Lee, 1978, 1995, inclusive
MacPhail Report: Excerpt, 1978, inclusive
MLBPA: Executive Board, undated, 1974-1982, inclusive
MLBPA: Executive Board Minutes, 1977-1982, inclusive
MLBPA: Executive Director Search, 1982, inclusive
MLBPA: Executive Subcommittee, 1981, inclusive
MLBPA: Finances, 1985, inclusive
MLBPA: General, 1967-1985, inclusive
MLBPA: List of Representatives and Committees, undated, inclusive
MLBPA Newsletter, 1967, inclusive
Major League Player Relations Committee, 1967, inclusive
Major League Player Relations Committee vs. MLBPA (86-12), 1980-1989, inclusive
McLain, Denny, 1969-1970, inclusive
Messersmith/McNally Case, 1975-1976, inclusive
Miller: Appointment as Executive Director, 1966, inclusive
Miller: Baseballs and Baseballs Cards (Signed), 1991, 2005, inclusive
Miller: Bibiliography, List of Articles, 1966-1981, inclusive
Miller Cartoons, undated, 1968-1977, 1980-1981, 1994, inclusive
Miller Clippings (Graphic), 1950s-1980s, inclusive
Miller: Contracts, 1966, inclusive
Miller: General (Clippings), undated, 1966-1999, inclusive
Miller: General, 2000-2005, inclusive
Miller: Photographs, Baseball Hall of Fame, undated, 1972, inclusive
Miller: Photographs, Book Copies, undated
Miller: Photographs, General, 1973, 1982, 1987, 1996, 2000, inclusive
Miller: Photographs, Portraits, 1980, undated, inclusive
Miller: Photographs from Tamiment Event, May 21, 2003, inclusive
Minor Leagues, 1974-1980, inclusive
Moffett, Kenneth E., 1982-1985, inclusive
Moffett, Kenneth E.: Court Case, 1983-1984, inclusive
Moss, Richard, 1977, inclusive
Murphy, Robert: Interview Transcript, 1971, inclusive
National Baseball Network, 1988, inclusive
National Basketball Association, 1967-1987, inclusive
National Football League, 1974, inclusive
National Football League (Clippings), undated, 1967-1994, inclusive
National Football League Players Association, 1972-1976, inclusive
National Football League: MM Times Article, 1982, inclusive
National Hockey League, 1966-1992-1992
National Hockey League Players Association: Eagleson Case, 1994, inclusive
Negotiations, undated, 1966-1969, inclusive
Negotiations (Clippings), 1968-1969, inclusive
Negotiations, 1970-1976, inclusive
Negotiations (Clippings), 1976, inclusive
Negotiations, 1977-1981, inclusive
Negotiations, 1980-1981, inclusive
Negotiations (Clippings), 1980-1981, inclusive
Negotiations, 1982-1995, inclusive
Negotiations: Draft Articles, 1970, inclusive
Nixon, President Richard M., 1969-1988, inclusive
Noll, Roger G., "Baseball Economics in the 1990s", 1994, inclusive
Oral History Interview: American Jewish Committee Project, 1991-1993, inclusive
Oral History Interviews: H. Golatz, Pennsylvania State University, 1971, inclusive
Oral History Interview: Nicholas Mauro, 1979, inclusive
Orange County Business Journal: The Business of Baseball (Special Issue), 1990, inclusive
Organized Labor: General, 1974-1985-1985
Owners: General, 1973-1986-1986
Player Representatives, 1970-1978-1978
Player Selection: Compensation Issue, 1978-1981-1981
Players' Biographies: Misc., 1953 , 1967-1979, inclusive
Playoffs/ World Series Pool, 1984, inclusive
Public Sports Policy, 1978, inclusive
Re-entry Draft, 1970, inclusive
Reserve Clause, 1969-1976, inclusive
Revenue Sharing: MM Column, 1982, inclusive
Rona, Barry: Arbitration Case, 1994, inclusive
Rose, Pete, 1987-1991, inclusive
Rose, Pete (Clippings), 1967 , 1983-1992, inclusive
Rose, Pete vs. A. Bartlett Giamatti et al., 1989, inclusive
Salaries, 1966-1988, inclusive
Salary (MM), 1970-1972, inclusive
Salary Data, 1956 , 1976-1981, inclusive
Santo, Ron, 1973, inclusive
Schedules: Spring Training, 1967-1987, inclusive
Seitz, Peter, 1974-1983, inclusive
Shalit, Gene, 1980, inclusive
Shore, Bradd, "Loading the Bases", 1990, inclusive
Shukan Besuboru [Baseball Weekly], Japan: Miller Articles, July 1992-April 1993, inclusive
Silverman vs. MLBPA and Member Clubs of Major League Baseball: Briefs, 1995, inclusive
Sixty-Forty Case: Arbitration, undated, inclusive
Smith, Red, undated , 1967-1982, inclusive
Speeches: Texts and Notes, undated , 1967-1977, inclusive
Sporting News: Marvin Miller Letter, 1982, inclusive
Sports Union: Proposal, 1979, inclusive
Spring Training Notes, etc., 1979-1982, inclusive
Steinbrenner/Spira Case: Commissioner's Ruling, etc., 1990, inclusive
Strike (Clippings), 1972, inclusive
Strike (Clippings), 1981, inclusive
Strike: Correspondence, 1981, inclusive
Strike: Hank Margolis Paper on 1981, 1993, inclusive
Strike: Radio-TV Clips, 1981, inclusive
Strike: Aftermath, 1981-1982, inclusive
Strike (Clippings), 1985, inclusive
Strike (Clippings), 1994, inclusive
Testimony (Marvin Miller): Unidentified, 1985, inclusive
Testimony (Marvin Miller): Unidentified Grievance Procedure, 1980, inclusive
Tolan Case, 1974-1978, inclusive
Topps Case, May 1993, inclusive
Topps Case: Transcripts, May 1993, inclusive
Topps Case: Transcripts, June 1993, inclusive
Topps Case: Transcripts, June 1993, inclusive
Ueberroth, Peter, 1984-1989, inclusive
Umpires, 1968-1990, inclusive
U.S. Congress: Committee on the Judiciary, Marvin Miller Testimony, 1972, 1982, inclusive
U.S. Congress: Committee on the Judiciary, Selig Statement, 1994, inclusive
U.S. Congress: Select Committee on Professional Sports, Miller Statements, 1976, inclusive
Veeck, Bill, 1972-1976, inclusive
Vincent, Fay, 1989-1992, inclusive
Vincent, Fay: Firing, 1992, inclusive
Vincent, Fay: Steven Howe Dispute, 1992, inclusive
Wald, Malvin, 1982, inclusive
Weaver, Earl, 1979, inclusive
Whole Different Ball Game, 1990, inclusive
Williams, Ted, 1969, inclusive
Winfield, Dave: Tampering Case, 1990, inclusive
Writings (MM): Miscellaneous, undated, inclusive
Wynegar, Harold D. "Butch", Jr., 1986, inclusive
Yastrzemski, Carl, 1969-1970, inclusive
Young, Dick, undated, 1966-1987, inclusive
Series III: Clippings Files, 1966-2002, inclusive
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
Series III: Clippings Files, 1966-2002. This series contains thousands of clippings from a wide range of national and local newspapers, as well as sports-related and general magazines. This series parallels Series II in its coverage of issues and events central to MLBPA history, of baseball matters in general, and of developments in sports and national news that had an impact on labor relations in baseball.
Arrangement
Series is arranged chronologically by year.
Clippings, undated, inclusive
Clippings, 1966-1968, inclusive
Clippings, 1969-1971, inclusive
Clippings, 1973, inclusive
Clippings, 1974, inclusive
Clippings, 1975, inclusive
Clippings, 1976, inclusive
Clippings, 1977, inclusive
Clippings, 1978, inclusive
Clippings, 1979, inclusive
Clippings, 1980, inclusive
Clippings, 1981, inclusive
Clippings, 1982, inclusive
Clippings, 1983, inclusive
Clippings, 1984, inclusive
Clippings, 1985, inclusive
Clippings, 1986, inclusive
Clippings, 1987, inclusive
Clippings, 1988, inclusive
Clippings, 1989, inclusive
Clippings, 1990, inclusive
Clippings, 1991-1992, inclusive
Clippings, 1994, inclusive
Clippings, 1995, inclusive
Clippings, 2001, inclusive
Clippings, January 2002, inclusive
Series IV: Videotapes (VHS and Access DVDs), 1987-2009, inclusive
Language of Materials
Extent
Scope and Content Note
Series IV: Videotapes (VHS), 1987-2002. Contents include news clips, interviews and speeches by Marvin Miller, in which he discusses current baseball developments, his career with the MLBPA, and labor history from a broad perspective, touching on topics as diverse as the New Deal, the Taft-Hartley Act, the Baseball Hall of Fame, and the careers of Joe DiMaggio, Pete Rose and Walter O'Malley. Also included is a PBS broadcast in which Charlie Rose interviews Bob Costas, author of Fair Ball, a study of the economics of baseball.
Arrangement
Series is arranged chronologically.
Howard Cosell with Marvin Miller, 1985, inclusive
Football Strike [Mike Lupica/Marvin J. Miller] (11.5 to 19 mins?); The Coors Sports Page (30 min), Oct 11, 1987, inclusive
Today Show [marker 2370-2550] - Bill Mazur [marker 2600], Jan 14, 1990, inclusive
CNBC: Sports Business, Feb 28, 1990, inclusive
Marvin J. Miller- Barbara Walters, 20/20; Al Trautwig, Ch. 10: Steinbrenner [Marker 1222-1638], Aug 1990, inclusive
Peptalk [Simmons] Long Beach, CA, Jun 25, 1991, inclusive
Up Close Show #615-691 [Roy Firestone], Jun 1991, inclusive
"Today" with Bryant Gumbel, Jun 1991, inclusive
Later...with Bob Costas (22 mins), Oct 14, 1991, inclusive
Later...with Bob Costas: Interview with Marvin Miller, Oct 14, 1991, inclusive
Marvin Miller Interview for Fay Vincent, Sep 1, 1992, inclusive
Marvin Miller: Interview Fay Vincent [time 31:42], Sep 1, 1992, inclusive
Charlie Rose Show - Fay Vincent Resignation [from marker 630-830] [now reset at 0 to 200], Sep 8, 1992, inclusive
At the Plate: Rusty Staub [commissioners, small markets, Vincent resignation], 1993, inclusive
Sports Illustrated Party, Jul 13, 1994, inclusive
HBO: Marvin Miller Interview [S.I. TV], Jul 25, 1994, inclusive
HBO - Sports Illustrated TV - Marvin Miller Interview, Pt. 1 ["Dub of OT-30-4347"], Jul 25, 1994, inclusive
NY Channel 1- Budd Mishkin (to marker 509); NBC Sports Illustrated: "40 for the Ages" (to marker 990); Adam Smith (to marker 1337)., Aug 18, 1994, inclusive
Frank Healy- MJM Interview [Hotel Warwick], Aug 1994, inclusive
Inside Sports- Show #438. Toronto, Canada. Filmed at 211 E. 70th St., Summer 1994, inclusive
Sports Illustrated Party "40 for the Ages" [NBC-Night After the S.I. Party], Sep 14, 1994, inclusive
Talking Baseball with Marvin Miller (Parts 1 & 2), Jan 20, 1995, inclusive
Newsport Talk- Marvin Miller, Founder- MLBPA [TRT: 23:16], Feb 9, 1995, inclusive
Cornell Industrial Labor Relations Dept. (IRL) Interns- Marvin Miller, Mar 27, 1995, inclusive
Newsport Talk Sports News [Port Washington NY 516.621.9451/Michele Elgart], Apr 13, 1995, inclusive
Marvin Miller: Nation Forum, May 1, 1995, inclusive
CNN: Marvin J. Miller [Talk Back Live], Aug 12, 1997, inclusive
Trans World Int'l- Trans World Sport [Michael Maynard/London] [Job No. 20116] VHS NTSC/Prog. 546 (Dur: 52'12"), Oct 15, 1997, inclusive
Baseball Unions National Politics [Del Reddy 1.800.497.1035], Nov 1997, inclusive
Marvin Miller Interviewed by Del Reddy, Nov 1997, inclusive
CNBC- with Marvin Miller [Chris Shearn- Fort Lee, NJ/Assoc. Prod., Sports], circa 1997, inclusive
CNN/Sports Illustrated [This Week in the NBA with Marvin J. Miller], Nov, 1, 1998, inclusive
Real Sports, Show #5, 1998, inclusive
Jim Kaat's Telecast - Birthday Greeting to Marvin J. Miller, Apr 14,1999, inclusive
ESPN Sports Century, "Most Influential 10" [Taped from TV], May 23, 1999, inclusive
ESPN's Sports Century, May 23, 1999, inclusive
Fran Healey: MSG-TV, 2000, inclusive
New York Jewish Sports Hall of Fame Presents Jewish Sports Legends of the 20th Century, Apr 2, 2000, inclusive
The NY Jewish Sports hall of Fame: Jewish Sports Legends of the 20th Century, Apr 2, 2000, inclusive
The Shrine of the Eternals [Induction Day-BB Reliquary] (Jim Bouton/Satchel Paige), Jul 29, 2001, inclusive
The Business of Sports, Season 1, Episode 7; Insight Sports Ltd. (Toronto, ONT), Apr 1, 2001, inclusive
Budd Mishkin (Ch. 1) Interview with Marvin Miller; Charlie Rose (Ch. 13) Interview with Bob Costas; Tim McCarver (MSG-TV) and MM, Apr 2000, inclusive
MSG - Fran Healey (27.5 mins), Apr 2000, inclusive
C-Span [John Feinstein] The New Millennium Baseball and Marvin Miller [30 mins.], Jan 2000, inclusive
Angles with Marvin J. Miller - MSG Network [Al Trautwig], Apr 22, 2002, inclusive
Al Trautwig with Marvin Miller: Baseball Labor Relations, Apr 22, 2002, inclusive
"Angles"- MSG/AL Trautwig; Talking Baseball/Ed Randall, Apr 22, 2002; May 02, 2002, inclusive
Talking Baseball, Show #521 with Ed Randall, May 2, 2002, inclusive
CNN Financial News [FN] Money and Markets [Marvin Miller's Appearance], Aug 22, 2002, inclusive
ESPN Sports Classic - Sports Century: Ball Four (Documentary) Hans Decher, 2002, inclusive
Baseball Reliquary-Induction Day 2003 [B-Roll Tape 3-1hr.-Raw Footage Copy], Jul 21, 2003, inclusive
Reliquary "Shrine of the Eternals"- Induction Day [from Terry Cannon - "very bad VHS copy, but sound should be fine-for transcription purposes only] Raw Footage - Camera A, Jul 2003, inclusive
Peggy Browining Fund (Chicago), May 6, 2003, inclusive
NYU/Tamiment Library - Evening of Celebration in Honor of Marvin Miller Archive (Donation of Papers, Artifacts), May 21, 2003, inclusive
Oral History Interview with Marvin Miller (National Baseball Hall of Fame, Fay Vincent Oral History Project), Mar 26, 2004, inclusive
Use Restrictions
The National Baseball Hall of Fame provided this copy for educational and research purposes only. Any other use must be cleared with the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
Budd Mishkin with Marvin Miller, Feb 9, 2009, inclusive
World Series 2009 - Tim McCarver, 2009, inclusive
Scope and Content Note
Only the portion of this recording relevant to Marvin and Theresa Miller was digitized, approximately one minute of content. During the 2009 World Series broadcast, the announcers offer their condolences to Marvin Miller on Theresa Miller's passing and comment on his importance in the development of baseball.
Jack Cafferty, Ch. 5 (marker 000-2000), July 31
Arthur Ashe, undated
Inside Baseball with Marvin Miller, undated
Budd Mishkin - Channel 1 [to 38 min]; Charlie Rose - Chanel 13 [38 min to 1 hr 14 min]; Tim McCarver - MSG - ch. 27 [from 1 hr 14 min], undated
Today Show (marker 79: Lead-in; 131-244: Today Show; 249-356: Dick Schaap; 379-530: Rock Rote; 540-924: Pete Rose/Jane Pauley; ; 1008-1220: Ed Randall), undated
ESPN Classic: One on One [Dick Schaap][Jim Brown], undated
ESPN's Sports Century [Curt Flood], undated
TSN Series: For the Love of the Game - Behind the Screen (50 min) [Program #3] Producer: Alan Scherberger., undated
Today Show with Bryant Gumbel, undated
Sports Behind Bars - For the Love of the Game (52 mins), undated
Series V: Theresa (Terry) Miller Papers, 1919-1994, inclusive
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
Series V: Theresa M. Miller Files, 1919-1994. This series consists of personal and professional files of his wife, Theresa Morgenstern Miller. Included are her 1961 University of Pittsburgh Ph.D. thesis, several of her professional papers in the field of psychology, and articles she wrote for Union Reporter and Southern Jewish Outlook, among other publications. There are also voters' guides and petitions related to Theresa Miller's 1948 run for New York State Assembly on the American Labor Party ticket.
Arrangement
Series is arranged alphabetically by topic.