English: William Alfred "Bill" Shea ( June 21, 1907 – October 2, 1991) was a lawyer who is best known for his part in The Continental League, breaking down the Major League Baseball expansion barrier, the expansion era of baseball, and the return of National League professional baseball to New York City after the departure of the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants after the 1957 season, and for the NY Met's original home stadium was named in his honor
"No copyright restriction known. Staff photographer reproduction rights transferred to Library of Congress through Instrument of Gift." See also https://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/076_nyw.html
Photographs in this collection other than those identified by such stamps as "World-Telegram photo" or "World-Telegram photo by Ed Palumbo" might not be in the public domain. Works within the collection may be attributed to other news services that retain copyright, works of the U.S. government that are in the public domain in the US, or works with no attribution for which copyright cannot be determined.
Captions
William "Bill" Shea, lawyer and MLB executive responsible for bring the New York Mets to New York in the expansion era of professional baseball, circa 1959. (Original Mets stadium was named in his honor)
William Shea<\/a>"}},"text\/plain":{"en":{"P180":"William Shea"}}}}" class="wbmi-entityview-statementsGroup wbmi-entityview-statementsGroup-P180 oo-ui-layout oo-ui-panelLayout oo-ui-panelLayout-framed">
{{Information |Description=William Shea, head of the New York City mayor's baseball committee |Source=Library of Congress. New York World-Telegram & Sun Collection. http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3c11607 |Date=1959 |Author=World Teleg