Milwaukee County Stadium Seat Back Home of the Milwaukee Brewers Braves

                                       National League Milwaukee Braves (1953-1965)

                          American League Chicago White Sox (1968-1969) 20 games 

                         American League/ National Milwaukee Brewers (1970-2000)

                     National Football League Green Bay Packers (1953-1994) 3 games year    

$89 Seat Backs Green & Red Each Delivered Free Shipping

This is an original plastic seat back RARE that was removed during 2000 demolition. Great for Autographs, matching players uniform number.  

Comes with Letter of authenticity from Authentic Stadium Seats

Please Inquire on other seat backs available: (I have other numbers available please ask)

Below are some of the most popular:

Milwaukee Brewers MLB (1970-2000):  #4 Paul Molitor, #19 Robin Yount, #49 Teddy Higuera ,#50 Pete Vuckovich, #20 Gorman Thomas, #8 Ryan Braun, #7 Don Money Etc..

Milwaukee Braves MLB (1953-1965):   #44 Hank Aaron, #41 Eddie Mathews, #21 Warren Spahn Etc..

Green Bay Packers NFL (1953-1965):  #4 Brett Farve, #5 Paul Hornung, #31 Jim Taylor, #92 Rewggie White, #26 Herb Adderly, #66 Ray Nitschke, #15 Bart Starr, #87 Willie Davis, #80 James Lofton, #84 Sterling Sharpe Etc..

Ask for Quantity Discounts

 History:                                                                                                 

These seats have seen: HOF Eddie Mathews, HOF Warren Spahn, Willie Mays 4 hr. game (1961), Harvey Haddix 12 in perfect game, Hank Aaron last home run 755,Nolan Ryan’s 300th Win, Robin Yount’s 3000th Hit, Paul Molitor’s 39 Hit Streak,

Milwaukee Braves (1953–1965) Milwaukee County Stadium (mainly known simply as County Stadium locally) was a multi-purpose stadium in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Opened in 1953, it was primarily a baseball park for the major league Milwaukee Braves and Brewers. It was also used for football games,ice skating, religious services, concerts, and other large events. Its final season was in 2000, when it was replaced by the adjacent Miller Park.

On July 12, 1955, County Stadium hosted the 22nd All-Star Game. The National League won, 6–5, on a 12th-inning home run by Stan Musial.The Braves hosted back-to-back World Series in 1957 and 1958, both against the New York Yankees. The stadium continued to be the National League’s top draw until 1959 when the Dodgers, who had moved to Los Angeles two years before, overtook the Braves (both in the stands and on the field). In the early 1960s attendance fell, along with the Braves’ standings, amid an unstable ownership situation. The Milwaukee Braves used the stadium through the 1965 season when new owners, seeking a larger television market, moved the team to Atlanta.

Chicago White Sox (1968–1969) In an effort to return Major League Baseball to Milwaukee after the departure of the Braves, local businessman and minority Braves owner Bud Selig brought other teams to play at County Stadium, beginning with a 1967 exhibition game between the Chicago White Sox and Minnesota Twins. The exhibition game attracted more than 51,000 spectators, so Selig’s group contracted with Sox owner Arthur Allyn to host nine Chicago White Sox home games at County Stadium in 1968. Selig’s experiment was highly successful – those nine games drew 264,297 fans. In 1969, the Sox schedule in Milwaukee was expanded to include 11 home games (one against every other franchise in the American League at the time).

Milwaukee Brewers (1970–2000) The new Milwaukee Brewers, named for the American Association club for which County Stadium was originally built over 20 years earlier, called it home from 1970 to 2000. On July 15, 1975, County Stadium hosted its second All-Star Game. As in 1955, the National League beat the American League, this time 6–3. With an attendance of 51,480, it was the largest crowd at the stadium at that time.The Brewers were represented by George Scott and Hank Aaron, who had recently returned to Milwaukee in a trade with the Braves. Aaron spent the last two years of his career in Milwaukee and in the American League (where the Brewers played then; they would move to the National League in 1998), where the designated hitter position allowed him to extend his playing career. Aaron hit his final home run at County Stadium, giving him a career total of 755, establishing at the time the career home run record he first took from Babe Ruth in 1974. Aaron’s final home run took place in the 7th inning with a solo shot off California Angels right-hander Dick Drago on July 20, 1976, a game that the Brewers would win 6–2

Green Bay Packers (1953–1994) The National Football League’s Green Bay Packers played two to four home games per year at Milwaukee County Stadium from 1953 to 1994, The Packers compiled a 76–47–3 (.615) regular season record at County Stadium over 42 seasons. By 1995, multiple renovations to Lambeau Field made it more lucrative for the Packers to play their full home slate in Green Bay again for the first time since 1932. County Stadium was partly responsible for Lambeau Field’s existence, as it was not only intended to lure an MLB team to Milwaukee, but also to lure the Packers to Milwaukee full-time. As originally constructed, County Stadium was double the size of the Packers’ then-home, City Stadium, leading the NFL to give the Packers an ultimatum—build a bigger stadium or move to Milwaukee. Green Bay responded with a referendum that resulted in a new City Stadium, which opened in September 1957.After eight seasons, the venue was renamed “Lambeau Field” shortly after the death of team founder Curly Lambeau in 1965. The Minnesota Vikings (15 times) were the Packers’ most frequent foe at County Stadium, as the Packers would traditionally host at least one divisional rival from the NFC Central in Milwaukee each season. Only once, however, did the Packers play their ancient arch-rivals, the Chicago Bears, in a regular-season game in Milwaukee, defeating the Bears 20–3 in 1974.The Packers’ final game at County Stadium was a 21–17 victory over the Atlanta Falcons on December 18, 1994;with fourteen seconds left, the winning 9-yard  touchdown run was scored by quarterback Brett Favre. The Packers hosted one NFL playoff game at County Stadium, in 1967, defeating the Los Angeles Rams 28–7 in the Western Conference championship game

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