After returning from Europe, Batchelor went into the advertising business. And in 1920, he formed his own advertising firm, Batchelor, Mason & Brown. He later worked for the advertising department at
Chrysler Corporation. Throughout his various advertising jobs, Batchelor was able to keep his membership in the BBWAA active by writing a monthly sports column for the
Detroit Athletic Club News. In the 1930s, he also served as the publicity director for the
University of Detroit football team. In 1939,
The Sporting News published a lengthy feature story on Batchelor's 30 years of covering baseball in Detroit. In July 1958, the Detroit Tigers held a Hall of Fame Day at
Briggs Stadium honoring the team's inductees into the
Baseball Hall of Fame and also honoring Detroit's two surviving charter members of the BBWAA. Batchelor appeared in person to accept a plaque from Baseball Commissioner
Ford Frick. By 1962, Batchelor was the oldest active member of the BBWAA and held membership card No. 1 with that organization. In 1965, the Tigers celebrated their 10,000th game in the
American League. The team honored Batchelor on the occasion by presenting him with a television set and driving him around the field at
Tiger Stadium in a 1915
Ford Model T along with Davy Jones, a member of the outfield with Ty Cobb and the first player to face Walter Johnson in a major League game. For many years, Batchelor resided in
Grosse Pointe, Michigan. In his final months, Batchelor lived in a nursing home in Detroit. Sportswriter
Joe Falls remained close to Batchelor in his later years. After Batchelor died, Falls described a visit to Batchelor at the nursing home:"Batch couldn't have weighed more than 60 pounds at the end, but his mind was nimble. He'd drift between fantasy and fact. ... But before you could feel pangs of sadness at his deterioration, he'd pull you close to the bed and whisper: 'I think it's great the Lions got
Munson from the Rams. They couldn't win with
Plum and Munson has the poise to be a good quarterback. Pour me a drink' Batch went out the way he would have wanted, with his lifelong friend and companion,
Jack Daniels, at his side. He couldn't eat at the end, and water repulsed him, so they let him sip his favorite liquid." Batchelor was married to Frida Isabella Stirling in 1913. Their son, E.A. Batchelor Jr., was a sportswriter in Detroit from the 1950s to the 1960s. ==Selected articles by Batchelor==