Constellation Tours, LLC

Constellation Tours, LLC Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Constellation Tours, LLC, Tour guide, Houston, TX.

Whether you are just visiting, new to the city, or a Houston-area "lifer" just looking for something to do, Constellation Tours has a little something for everyone!
* AVAILABLE FOR FIELD TRIPS *

Really loved being a part of this wonderful couple’s special day!! Awesome family, excellent venue, wonderful planner, a...
03/15/2024

Really loved being a part of this wonderful couple’s special day!! Awesome family, excellent venue, wonderful planner, and great photography! 🖤🤍🖤

Look who made the cover of a national publication 👀
12/19/2023

Look who made the cover of a national publication 👀

Our 1958 Buick Special, Black Betty, has been working hard over the past few months, giving tours, providing a unique an...
08/20/2023

Our 1958 Buick Special, Black Betty, has been working hard over the past few months, giving tours, providing a unique and gorgeous backdrop for parties and photo sessions, and helping to make several couples’ special day that much more magical. Yesterday, we discovered what 103 degree weather can do to a 65-year-old fuel system. While working a wedding at the Lone Star Flight Museum, Betty experienced v***r lock, which is where, due to excessive heat, the fuel boils in the fuel lines before reaching the fuel pump, thus making the pump unable to send liquid fuel to the carburetor and rendering the car inoperable. Luckily, I happened to have some freeze packs in my cooler which I used a couple to rapidly cool the pump and fuel system, and I was able to get her restarted. When restarting a v***r-locked engine, you need to press the accelerator all the way to the floor to help clear the lines of v***r, and Betty hasn’t had her accelerator all the way to the floor in a looooooong time. Unfortunately, the stress of the evolution snapped the accelerator return spring in the throttle linkage and stuck the accelerator pedal to the floor! I immediately shut the engine down, but I couldn’t repair the spring. Then, Kevin, one of the managers from the museum happened to stop by. For those of you who aren’t aware, the Lone Star Flight Museum maintains a fleet of vintage aircraft which actually still fly (you can even book flights aboard these amazing planes, including a real WWII B-25)! Kevin is a fantastic mechanic, and as great mechanics do, happened to have a pair or needle nose pliers and a pair of channel locks in his pocket. He was able to reset the spring’s tension, make new hooks for the ends, and reinstall the spring into the throttle linkage, completely saving the day for my customers and me, and getting me home at the end of the night without needing to call a flat bed. Thanks so much to Kevin and the Lone Star Flight Museum for going well above and beyond the services of a standard events venue and for keeping this 65-year-old beauty on the road!

Wonderful wedding venue, couple, and staff!! We really enjoyed providing our 1958 Buick for this wedding and working wit...
05/31/2023

Wonderful wedding venue, couple, and staff!! We really enjoyed providing our 1958 Buick for this wedding and working with this excellent team! ❤️🥂

Our 1958 Buick Special 4-door sedan is NOW AVAILABLE for Houston-area tours, photography, static display for parties and...
02/22/2023

Our 1958 Buick Special 4-door sedan is NOW AVAILABLE for Houston-area tours, photography, static display for parties and events, and for chauffeured transportation for big days such as weddings, quinceañeras, proms, or other special occasions!

https://constellation-tours.com/1958-buick-special

THEY'RE HERE!!! 👻💀🧟‍♂️The Death on Wheels Houston-Area Ghost Tour is back for Halloween season! Want to have your bones ...
09/30/2022

THEY'RE HERE!!! 👻💀🧟‍♂️
The Death on Wheels Houston-Area Ghost Tour is back for Halloween season! Want to have your bones hauled around Houston and visit the spookiest places in town? This undertaking will make appearances at many spectral locations including Founders Memorial Cemetery, the old Jefferson Davis Hospital, and several downtown haunts. We can stack up to six (6) bodies into our hearse-like, triple-black Lincoln Navigator for this other earthly experience. Public tours are now scheduled from 7pm-9pm on all Fridays and Saturdays in October as well as Sunday, 10/30, Halloween Night, and Dia de Los Mu***os. Public Tours: $30 per person ($25 with Military/First Responder ID). Click the link below to purchase tickets.
https://constellation-tours.ticketleap.com/death-on-wheels/dates
Private tours are also available.
🎃TOUR DETAILS🎃
💀Start Time: 7:00 P.M.
💀Duration: 2 hours
💀Ages: All ages welcome
💀Starting Location: Tour meets inside the Founders Memorial Cemetery at 1217 W Dallas St, Houston, TX 77019

Set up a small exhibit last night and conducted a Holding History presentation for Houston’s Larry Dierker Chapter of th...
09/20/2022

Set up a small exhibit last night and conducted a Holding History presentation for Houston’s Larry Dierker Chapter of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR). September is a big month for the chapter’s namesake who has a birthday on 9/22/46, made his MLB debut on 9/22/64, and became the first pitcher in Astros franchise history to win 20 games in a season on 9/17/69 (he also set a still-standing franchise record of 20 complete games in a season that day).

Dierker is one of the most important people in the team’s history having been the only member to be officially uniformed in all 3 of the franchise’s MLB stadiums while pitching in C**t Stadium for the C**t .45s in 1964, in the Astrodome for the Astros from 1965-1976, managing the Astros in the Astrodome from 1997-1999, and christening Enron Field (now Minute Maid Park) as the team’s manager in that ballpark from 2000-2001. Additionally, Dierker served as a longtime broadcaster for the team, and he was great at everything he did. Not only a 20-game winner, he was also a two-time all-star receiving his first selection in that 1969 season, and he pitched a no-hitter in the Dome in 1976. As a manager he led the team to 4 division titles in 5 seasons managed all with no management or coaching experience and during which time he underwent brain surgery to remove a tumor that caused him to collapse in the Astros dugout during a game in 1999. Dierker is a member of the Astros Media Wall of Honor, and he is an inaugural inductee to the Astros Hall of Fame (2019), selected as a player, manager, and broadcaster. His number 49 has been retired by the franchise.

On display last night was a Larry Dierker game jersey from his magical 1969 season as well as the jersey he wore in his final All Star Game appearance as a coach for the NL team while managing the Astros in 2000. Also on display were seats from all three of the aforementioned stadiums as well as exhibits representing the Astrodome’s field, scoreboard, concessions, and a few other rare items. To book your own Holding History presentation, visit https://constellation-tours.com/baseball-museum-1.

Anyone remember these little guys? The Transogram baseball figures were the 1960s, Mk I version of the Starting Lineup f...
08/20/2022

Anyone remember these little guys? The Transogram baseball figures were the 1960s, Mk I version of the Starting Lineup figures kids of the 1980s and 1990s grew up with. This is a Don Wilson figure from 1968, complete with his shooting star jersey. Some of these figures are worth a ton of money now such as the 15-figure special edition set that came out in honor of the ‘69 Amazin’ Mets. That set included a very young Nolan Ryan. I haven’t seen many Astros Transogram figures, although I know that in addition to Wilson, a Jimmy Wynn was model was also produced. Anyone have any other photos of Astros Transogram figures?

The Sugar Land Space Cowboys invited us to Constellation Field this evening to help celebrate Black Heritage Night with ...
08/19/2022

The Sugar Land Space Cowboys invited us to Constellation Field this evening to help celebrate Black Heritage Night with a black history exhibit from the Portable Houston Baseball Museum. Unfortunately, the game was postponed due to the much needed rain in the area, but many of the fans who had arrived at the ballpark beforehand were able to enjoy the exhibit. ⚾️💫

Excited for the Portable Baseball Museum to have a table at the Conroe Sports Cards & Collectibles Show on September 3rd...
07/19/2022

Excited for the Portable Baseball Museum to have a table at the Conroe Sports Cards & Collectibles Show on September 3rd! Be sure to come by and see us and all of the other great vendors! Admission is free and info is below. ⚾️💫

We are excited to announce our next show!

Saturday September 3rd! 9am-4pm
Homewood Suites by Hilton
3000 I45N Conroe TX

Along with many of our great vendors of the past shows we are excited to have several new vendors as well. It is our goal to keep the show fresh for our great community.

One of our new vendors at the September 3rd show will be Constellation Tours, LLC . They will have a table displaying some artifacts from their Portable Houston Baseball Museum. If you love the History of Houston Baseball you definitely will want to come check them out.

There are more exciting surprises we have in the works. Make sure you follow our show page Conroe Sports Cards & Collectibles Show for all the latest updates!

Stay tuned...

This beauty made it into the museum last night, just in time for the grand finale of our exhibition. Today’s the last da...
07/17/2022

This beauty made it into the museum last night, just in time for the grand finale of our exhibition. Today’s the last day to see the Portable Houston Baseball Museum until our next exhibition, which is still TBD. We’re open from 10am-6pm today at Shady Oak Primary School so be sure to come by to see this awesome Astrodome Shuffle Board Bowling machine from 1974 and all of the other wonderful artifacts from Houston’s baseball past! Tickets available online or at the door! ⚾️💫

07/13/2022

Happy 7/13 to the 713!!


07/13/2022

In case you missed it, here’s the segment featuring the Portable Houston Baseball Museum from this evening on KHOU 11 News! Thanks, again, to Jason Bristol and his team! The museum is open daily from 10am-6pm, but our final day for this exhibition will be this Sunday, July 17. Tickets are available at the door and online at https://constellation-tours.ticketleap.com/portable-houston-baseball-museum/ ⚾️💫

Be sure to catch the Portable Houston Baseball Museum on KHOU 11 News with Jason Bristol tonight at 6:00PM, and don’t fo...
07/12/2022

Be sure to catch the Portable Houston Baseball Museum on KHOU 11 News with Jason Bristol tonight at 6:00PM, and don’t forget to visit us at Shady Oak Primary School while we are still here! The last day of our exhibition is this Sunday, July 17th. Tickets available at the door or online at https://constellation-tours.ticketleap.com/portable-houston-baseball-museum/. ⚾️💫

We had a blast learning all of the educational values behind America’s Game! We will definitely be bringing Diamond Mind...
07/06/2022

We had a blast learning all of the educational values behind America’s Game! We will definitely be bringing Diamond Minds back next summer, and in the meantime, we have several other baseball options including the Orbiting the Horsehide Sphere Houston Baseball Tour, the Holding History Interactive Baseball Experience, our Out of the Ballpark Hybrid Virtual Field Trip, and the Portable Houston Baseball Museum which is currently open for public exhibition at Shady Oak through July 17th! 🇺🇸⚾️💫

Happy Birthday, America, from Audrey, Constellation Tours, and the Portable Houston Baseball Museum! 🇺🇸🥳
07/04/2022

Happy Birthday, America, from Audrey, Constellation Tours, and the Portable Houston Baseball Museum! 🇺🇸🥳

The Portable Houston Baseball Museum helps inspire young women by connecting them with the stories and accomplishments o...
07/02/2022

The Portable Houston Baseball Museum helps inspire young women by connecting them with the stories and accomplishments of some of the amazing women from Houston’s past. ⚾️💫

Only a couple of days away! ⚾️💫
06/29/2022

Only a couple of days away! ⚾️💫

Portable Houston Baseball Museum is coming to our school from July 1st-17th! Be sure to get your tickets now for this limited time exhibition! Constellation Tours, LLC

Public exhibition of the only baseball museum in the Houston area coming soon for a limited time to Richmond! July 1 - 1...
06/21/2022

Public exhibition of the only baseball museum in the Houston area coming soon for a limited time to Richmond! July 1 - 17 at Shady Oak Primary School. Purchase Tickets at https://constellation-tours.ticketleap.com/portable-houston-baseball-museum/

The Portable Houston Baseball Museum is a 400+ square-feet, interactive, pop-up museum created by Houston-area baseball expert and former Astros front office employee, Chris Rawls, who also developed the Astros Touch of History Tour which has been featured on television and newsstands*. The museum o...

Want to learn how submarines work? Interested in the secrets of the United States Navy’s “Silent Service”? Want to earn ...
06/02/2022

Want to learn how submarines work? Interested in the secrets of the United States Navy’s “Silent Service”? Want to earn the title of “Junior Submariner”? Then rig for dive and come on down to Shady Oak Primary School for “Going Deep Submarine Camp”. The camp will feature submarine history, technical, and tactical training presented by a retired Senior Chief and veteran of 20 years in the Navy’s sub force. Campers will also take a field trip to Seawolf Park in Galveston where they will go on a guided tour of a real World War II-era submarine. Admission to the submarine is included in the camp price.
🇺🇸 Join us Monday, July 25 – Friday, July 29 from 9am – 3pm
🇺🇸 Incoming 1st graders and up only. Please send your child with a refillable water bottle, snack, and a lunch.
🇺🇸 Camp Fee: $269.00/week
🇺🇸 email [email protected] to register.

THANK YOU JACKIE! 75 years ago, today, Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier when he appeared in his first regular sea...
04/15/2022

THANK YOU JACKIE! 75 years ago, today, Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier when he appeared in his first regular season game for the Brooklyn Dodgers and became the first African American player to play in what had been the “white Major Leagues” since the 1880s. The prejudice, harassment, and discrimination he faced is legendary as is his ability, style of play, and most of all, his fortitude, class, courage, restraint, and perseverance as he placed his entire race on his shoulders and not only demonstrated that black players could compete along side white players but that they could also excel and often times completely dominate.

Jackie opened the door for his people to cross the color line into the National and American Leagues, and fans across America were blessed by the likes of Larry Doby, Satchel Paige, Monte Irvin, and Don Newcombe, and later by Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Ernie Banks, and many, many more incredible baseball heroes.

Unfortunately, the success of blacks in the National and American Leagues led to the decline of the teams of the Negro Leagues and eventually the end of this black enterprise as the ball clubs’ talent and their fans left by the hundreds to follow their heroes to their new teams. The Newark Eagles had won the Negro World Series in 1946. In 1947, Jackie broke the barrier, and by 1948, the Eagles had been stripped of its core of star players. The team was sold, and the new ownership moved the team right here to Houston, Texas, where they played as the Houston Eagles from 1949-1950 before moving to New Orleans and then folding part way through the 1951 season. By 1955, the Negro Leagues were all but gone with just a few teams hanging on.

The Kansas City Monarchs were one of those teams, and the 1955 Monarchs produced one of the most important, yet often forgotten players in Houston history. Young J.C. Hartman played on that club alongside Satchel Paige and under the management of Buck O’Neill and was an East-West All Star that year. After the season, the Monarchs sold their remaining players to MLB clubs and their minor league counterparts, and Hartman ended up in the Cubs organization. By 1961, the local Houston Buffs were a Cubs affiliate, and Hartman found himself here. The Buffs had just been purchased by the Houston Sports Association (HSA) in order to gain territorial rights for the National League to be able to grant them a new, expansion franchise the following season. When the HSA established the C**t .45s for the 1962 season, the Buffs were moved to Oklahoma City where they became the 89ers, and some players’ contracts like Hartman’s and Pidge Brown’s were purchased by the HSA for their new team.

Hartman made it to the Majors as a C**t .45, but he new he wouldn’t be in baseball forever. He went to barber school to plan for a career after baseball, and he cut other players’ hair on the side including many of the C**t .45s and even the great Willie Mays! Hartman was right, and he wasn’t in baseball for very long. When he retired from playing, though, instead of pursuing barbering, Hartman joined the Houston Police Department where he broke his own color barrier by becoming the first black supervisor in HPD after his historic promotion to sergeant. J.C. Hartman is one of the few players in history to have played for both the Houston Buffs and Houston C**t .45s/Astros, and along with Walt Bond, he is one of two players in C**t .45s/Astros history to have played in the Negro Leagues.

Going back to Jackie, here are a couple more things you may not have known about his relationship to Houston. First, upon his discharge from the United States Army where he had been stationed in central Texas, Jackie stayed in Austin where he coached basketball for a university. A friend on the Kansas City Monarchs arranged a spring training tryout for Robinson who got in his car and drove to meet the team. As was common in those days, the Monarchs so happened to be utilizing Houston’s West End Park as their spring training home in 1945, and as legend has it, Jackie tried out for and signed his first professional baseball contract with the Monarchs right here in Houston before he was scouted by the Dodgers later that year and signed to a minor league contract for the 1946 season.

The second item relates to his impact on our community. By breaking the color barrier, he opened the door for blacks to play in the National League, and with the addition of the C**t .45s to the National League in 1962, that meant that immortal players such as Aaron, Mays, and Banks would be coming through Houston routinely to play against the C**ts. The only problem was that Houston was still segregated under the era’s Jim Crow laws which meant that every time Willie Mays and others came to town, they would have to sleep at separate hotels, eat in separate restaurants, and ride in separate taxis from their white teammates. The HSA believed that not only was this unjust but that it would surely make the news giving the city and its new ball club a bad reputation in the eyes of America and baseball fans. The HSA also knew that it needed the votes of Houston’s African American community to achieve the county bonds it needed for its domed stadium project which would become the Astrodome. Using its incredible leverage and power the HSA decided to hold private negotiations with the area’s hospitality businesses and was able to persuade them to desegregate their facilities. Just like that, without even being covered in the newspapers, Houston began its road to integration, when on April 1, 1962, nine days before the first MLB Opening Day in the city, Houston’s hotels and restaurants officially integrated. The 1960s saw a lot of violence and turmoil across the country as the civil rights movement worked for racial equality in America, but here in Houston, the impact was nowhere near as violent or catastrophic as even some places in the North such as Detroit had been; this was due to the baseball team and, ultimately, it was due to Jackie Robinson who endured so much for so many. Had he not bore the burdens that he did, these great players may not have been in the National League in 1962, and the HSA would not have had a platform from which to preach the integration of the city. Ultimately, the Astrodome opened as a completely integrated facility in 1965, a year that saw the complete integration of the city of Houston, and Jackie Robinson was eventually inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame. His iconic number 42 was retired across all of Major League Baseball 25 years ago today, on the 50th anniversary of his first Dodgers game, and now the number is worn by every MLB player on April 15 in Jackie’s honor. But it is not only what he did for baseball that we remember and honor Jackie Robinson; it is for what he did for cities like Houston, which, if not for Jackie could have seen a much different fate.

One more little nugget for those of you still reading: you may or may not know that Astros Hall of Famer Bob Aspromonte was the last active Brooklyn Dodgers player in the Majors having begun his career with that team after being discovered playing as a kid on the sandlots of Brooklyn, New York. At just 18 years old, Aspromonte was summoned to Ebbets Field by legendary Dodgers manager Walt Alston and told to grab his glove and take infield practice at third base. An eager and nervous Aspromonte took his glove and ran out of the dugout to his position while scattered across the diamond were the heroes whose baseball cards he collected and whom he had just been worshiping from the other side of the fence: P*e Wee Reese, Gil Hodges, and yes, the great Jackie Robinson. Imagine that! That would be like a high school kid right here in Houston getting called up to take infield at shortstop with Altuve, Yuli, and Bregman; unbelievable! So, you can imagine how nervous Aspro had to have been, and not only that: his glove, the glove he had used on those sandlots, really wasn’t an infielders’ glove. It was much too big, and poor Bob was making a mess of his debut in practice in front of his heroes. Alas, the veterans paused the practice, and an incredibly humble and caring Jackie Robinson explained to young Aspromonte that his glove was too big. Upon learning that it was Bob’s only glove, Jackie’s response was “here, take mine.” Aspromonte’s performance improved significantly with Robinson’s glove, and afterwards Jackie let Bob keep it. Bob Aspromonte cherished that glove the rest of his life only recently passing it to a family member for safe keeping as he is beginning to “get up there in age”.

Thank you Jackie for being the man, the baseball player, and the human being that you were and for what you did for this country. ⚾️🇺🇸💙

04/12/2022

Our ticket looks good up there! 😊

The Houston Astros have unveiled a new mural which just happens to enshrine some of the artifacts we have on display in ...
04/11/2022

The Houston Astros have unveiled a new mural which just happens to enshrine some of the artifacts we have on display in the Portable Houston Baseball Museum, most notably of which is the EXACT FIRST GAME TICKET STUB FROM OUR COLLECTION (check out the seat number 👀)!! As a matter of fact, this ticket and many other of our artifacts were scanned by the team to be used throughout the ballpark for displays such as their Suite Level history cases, one of which features a blow-up of this same ticket. Check out this ticket, our genuine 2017 World Series ring, and much, much more in the Portable Houston Baseball Museum. ⚾️⚾️⚾️⚾️⚾️

Hey, that’s OUR ticket!  😊 Y’all can see the actual ticket and much, much, MUCH more in the Portable Houston Baseball Mu...
04/11/2022

Hey, that’s OUR ticket! 😊 Y’all can see the actual ticket and much, much, MUCH more in the Portable Houston Baseball Museum. ⚾️

Audrey and Constellation Tours would like to wish a Happy 122nd Birthday to the men and women of the United States Subma...
04/11/2022

Audrey and Constellation Tours would like to wish a Happy 122nd Birthday to the men and women of the United States Submarine Force which was born on April 11, 1900. Thank you for your sacrifice, dedication, loyal devotion to duty, and all you do for this great nation. ❤️🤍💙🇺🇸

04/10/2022

Happy Birthday to the Houston Astros! 60 years ago, today, on April 10, 1962, the team played their 1st franchise game as the C**t .45s. 💫⚾️

Happy “birthday” to the Eighth Wonder of the World! The Astrodome opened her doors to the public for the first time as t...
04/09/2022

Happy “birthday” to the Eighth Wonder of the World! The Astrodome opened her doors to the public for the first time as the Astros took on the Yankees 57 years ago, tonight, on April 9, 1965. 💫⚾️🥳🎂🎉

Constellation Tours is proud to partner with Shady Oak Primary School to offer the Diamond Minds Baseball Summer Enrichm...
04/08/2022

Constellation Tours is proud to partner with Shady Oak Primary School to offer the Diamond Minds Baseball Summer Enrichment Camp!

Diamond Minds allows campers to experience the perfect combo of academics and baseball! Unlike most baseball camps, this camp is not focused on coaching and playing the game, but instead, we will go in-depth into the Science, Technology, Engineering, Math, Language Arts, and Social Sciences that combine to provide us with the National Pastime we all know and love. Classroom lessons include General Baseball (Baseball 101), Baseball Math, Baseball Geography, Health and Nutrition, Informative Writing/Sports Journalism, Physics of Baseball, Ballpark Engineering and Technology of Baseball, Civil Rights in Baseball History, and Baseball in Pop Culture. Activities will include a virtual tour of Minute Maid Park, mock press conferences, play-by-play broadcasting, and a tour of the Portable Houston Baseball Museum which will be set-up on campus to teach the history of baseball in Houston. A baseball-food-themed lunch will be provided each day and be sure to pack your glove! Diamond Minds will be led each day by Constellation Tours owner and former Astros Front Office member, Chris Rawls. Chris has been featured on AT&T SportsNet and in Houstonia Magazine, and he has assisted in the development of the baseball experience with the Astros and many other teams across Major League Baseball. This camp is available in both June and August!

Incoming 3rd graders and up

Monday, June 27 - Thursday, June 30 from 9am - 2pm

and also available

Monday, August 29 - Thursday, September 1 from 9am - 2pm

$249.00 per camper.

To register, email Brandy at [email protected], and be sure to ask her about Shady Oak’s other summer camps which include:

7/11-7/28 Summer Success Summit
8/01-8/04 Art Studio Camp
8/08-8/12 Culinary Delights
8/15-8/19 Construction Camp
8/16-8/25 Study Skills and Learning Strategies
8/22-8/26 Construction Camp

NO ASTROS PLAYER HAS EVER WORN THE UNIFORM NUMBER 32!  The only wearer of the number in franchise history was superb rel...
04/08/2022

NO ASTROS PLAYER HAS EVER WORN THE UNIFORM NUMBER 32! The only wearer of the number in franchise history was superb relief pitcher and fan favorite Jim Umbricht who pitched for the team in 1962 and 1963 when they were the C**t .45s. Sadly, Jim lost his battle with melanoma 58 years ago, today, on April 8, 1964. He was mourned by the city and his teammates, and his ashes were scattered on the Astrodome construction site. Number 32 was unofficially retired following Umbricht’s passing, and in 1965, it was formally retired becoming the first retired number for the young ball club. Jim Umbricht was inducted into the Astros Hall of Fame with the inaugural class in 2019. RIP to the only number 32, Jim Umbricht, and be sure sure to check out his amazing story in SABR’s BioProject: https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/jim-umbricht/ 💫⚾️

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Houston, TX

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