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View Full Version : Ladies & Gentlemen, for your enjoyment, Mr. Marshall Barkman


martindl
05-05-2010, 11:46 AM
Sorry for the OT post and for bringing back so many bad memories, but I couldn't let this go without sharing. From the most recent issue of Antique Week and on the front page no less, albeit of the second section.



Chance find turns out to be one-of-a-kind
WASHINGTON, Va. – When veteran collector/dealer Marshall Barkman was flipping through the leaves of a recently purchased album of tobacco cards he found, in a very literal sense, a feather of a different bird.

“I was just poring through it when I saw this card with real feathers on it,” he says. “I looked at it closer, and noticed there was a watercolor in the background. I’ve been collecting old cards for over 20 years and had never seen, or heard, of anything like this … but here it was.”

The feather was that of a Ptarmigan, small chicken-type birds that normally live in northern climes. The card, printed in Austria, was marked La Marquise Cigarettes Nature Series. Little else, other than its designation as “No 3,” was made available.

Barkman went to his normal research sites; but, could learn very little. Finally, after striking out with all the major card dealers in the world (no one had ever heard of actual bird feathers affixed to a trading card), Barkman hit pay dirt with an expert from the non-sports side of the Sports Collector Digest.

The cards have been only recently discovered, he said.

“The set has a total of 30 or 35 cards and each card has a designated number and a bird on it,” according to Barkman. “The cards were going to be released in cigarette packs but never were. There have only been seven other cards found.”

Each one of those cards found has been a singular event; no two cards are alike. In 1997, an online auction house sold three of these cards – a Blue Backed Paroquet, a Red-Head Duck and a Trumpeter Swan (all with their representative feathers attached) – for $40 apiece. At the time of the transaction, however, next to nothing was known about the card series. It has only been within the past few years that the cards have received published recognition.

“My hunch is there is only one of each card that would make up the master set,” Barkman says. “I think, ultimately, that the cards were too expensive - or time consuming – to produce and the company scratched the idea.”

That would leave only the one “master set” – or prototype – of the cards in existence. And, how that one master card made it from Austria to an age-old album in Pennsylvania is anyone’s case.

“Who knows where these cards came from? Barkman asks. “They could have originally come from one of the workers at the plant; been passed down through the family of someone who found the set discarded … anything is possible … sometime I’d like to find out … that’s what makes the hunt so exciting.”

Barkman, who deals exclusively in baseball cards and art, is always out “beating the bushes,” he says, at shows, flea markets, auctions, wherever fresh material is apt to surface. He’s made some credible finds, he says, but it’s finding the “truly rare” that satisfies his collecting appetite.

“Even though I have found items that are worth $10,000 to $100,000, those are not one-of-a-kind finds,” Barkman says. “I don’t know what the value of something like this is – who can say, if it’s the only one? I’m not interested in selling it. I mean, it’s the rarest thing I’ve ever found … or probably ever will find.

“Just to think that in the past 100 years, I’ve found the only Ptarmigan card from this rare set … and I wasn’t even looking for it … it’s incredible. It just goes to show you the rare stuff is still out there … you never know where it is lurking.”

Eric C. Rodenberg

4/30/2010

Cat
05-05-2010, 12:00 PM
a feather of a different bird

I thought this was a description of Marshall.

ullmandds
05-05-2010, 12:02 PM
cool...it's nice to see Marshall is still bringing the NOIZE...elsewhere!

collectbaseball
05-05-2010, 12:06 PM
I'm amazed that he managed to come across as a relatively well-adjusted human being in that article.

Bicem
05-05-2010, 12:08 PM
"Bring the small-chicken type bird!!!" just doesn't have the same ring to it.

Anthony S.
05-05-2010, 12:16 PM
I've been duct-taping cat fur to 3 x 5 cards for years and have experienced similar difficulties in finding a cigarette manufacturer willing to distribute those cards with their product.

egbeachley
05-05-2010, 03:30 PM
He needs to do a little better research. Those are T90's so they were identified in the first ACC. I have 4 of them and hopefully a few more soon.

HRBAKER
05-05-2010, 03:40 PM
He needs to do a little better research. Those are T90's so they were identified in the first ACC. I have 4 of them and hopefully a few more soon.


Maybe if he would take off his sunglasses when looking it up he could have found them. :D

Leon
05-05-2010, 03:44 PM
He was bringing so much NOIZE he couldn't hear anything else, even when told they were listed.

andybecker
05-05-2010, 03:51 PM
i barely recall the noize, but i'll never forget the manor in which his noize brought out the very worst in others.

live and learn, but never forget.

slidekellyslide
05-05-2010, 04:17 PM
Heh.

Scan borrowed from the Net54 Non-sport gallery

rhettyeakley
05-05-2010, 04:19 PM
As Eric said (and I hope he gets his others too!) these are a known set (T90). They certainly are rare but there are at least a few known near sets of 30. The single thing that probably makes these much harder to find for tobacco card collectors is the fact that the cards themselves are not marked "La Marquise" anywhere except the glassine envelope (much like the B- and L- tobacco premiums are often not marked).
-Rhett

Kawika
05-05-2010, 04:33 PM
i barely recall the noize, but i'll never forget the manor in which his noize brought out the very worst in others.

live and learn, but never forget.
Brought out the very worst in others? Pardon me? Marshall came here like a one-man wrecking crew, a thousand times more disruptive than anyone else I can remember ever on this board including you-know-who. He got every benefit of the doubt and a lot of guys were very reasoned in their appeals to him. Leon let him stay too long and the natives got a little restless but Marshall was not the victim of any excessive commentary. He is owed no apologies.

Anthony S.
05-05-2010, 04:36 PM
Bring the noisome.

Rob D.
05-05-2010, 04:47 PM
Is it true that the cockfighting rooster was the chase card in that set?

NonSportDaniel
05-05-2010, 05:13 PM
There are 11 different cards pictured from T90 on the non-sports card side. Plus scans of the glassine envelope.

http://www1.coe.neu.edu/~dan/T90/go.html

andybecker
05-05-2010, 05:35 PM
Brought out the very worst in others? Pardon me? Marshall came here like a one-man wrecking crew, a thousand times more disruptive than anyone else I can remember ever on this board including you-know-who. He got every benefit of the doubt and a lot of guys were very reasoned in their appeals to him. Leon let him stay too long and the natives got a little restless but Marshall was not the victim of any excessive commentary. He is owed no apologies.


whoa....not defending marshall at all. i paid no attention to him whatsoever. consider the source. it's what he evoked others to say that i will never forget. they dropped down to and well below his level, imo. again consider the source. a cretin, like marshall, can be discarded for who he is. for a respected person to drop to (and again far below, imo) his level is unacceptable. consider the source. i couldn't think some of the things that were said in his farewell thread, let alone write them in a forum.

wonkaticket
05-05-2010, 06:15 PM
He needs to do a little better research. Those are T90's so they were identified in the first ACC. I have 4 of them and hopefully a few more soon.

So funny I was thinking the same thing I used to own a Turkey card from this set...I'll see if I have a scan.

John

Jewish-collector
05-05-2010, 07:16 PM
I actually met Marshall at the National last year in Cleveland and he was a really nice guy. I enjoyed talking to him a great deal. I have a lot of respect for him.

jmk59
05-05-2010, 07:24 PM
I've been duct-taping cat fur to 3 x 5 cards for years and have experienced similar difficulties in finding a cigarette manufacturer willing to distribute those cards with their product.

And this is a great example of why Anthony is consistently one of the funniest guys on this board.

HAH!

J

Rob D.
05-05-2010, 07:30 PM
And this is a great example of why Anthony is consistently one of the funniest guys on this board.

HAH!

J

Interesting observation, because Alan's post was the one that made me laugh out loud.

Peter_Spaeth
05-05-2010, 07:32 PM
I have a lot of respect for his attitude towards women. Seriously, how can anyone read the vile crap he wrote and say they have a lot of respect for him?

botn
05-05-2010, 07:48 PM
I have a lot of respect for his attitude towards women. Seriously, how can anyone read the vile crap he wrote and say they have a lot of respect for him?

http://www.yahoofreak.com/animated%20emoticons/Drinking%20Animated%20Emoticons/cheers.gifhttp://www.yahoofreak.com/animated%20emoticons/Drinking%20Animated%20Emoticons/cheers.gifhttp://www.yahoofreak.com/animated%20emoticons/Drinking%20Animated%20Emoticons/cheers.gifhttp://www.yahoofreak.com/animated%20emoticons/Drinking%20Animated%20Emoticons/cheers.gifhttp://www.yahoofreak.com/animated%20emoticons/Drinking%20Animated%20Emoticons/cheers.gifhttp://www.yahoofreak.com/animated%20emoticons/Drinking%20Animated%20Emoticons/cheers.gif

jmk59
05-05-2010, 08:37 PM
Good point Rob. Good point.

And Peter, Alan's respect for Marshall ---> my loss of respect for Alan, so does that mean it all nets out? :-)

autograf
05-05-2010, 08:43 PM
Yeah....definitely not one of a kind cards. Very tough though...typically type cards will sell for 200-300 each. A board member here apparently picked up a large lot of them recently.....

Peter_Spaeth
05-05-2010, 08:44 PM
LOL he is still a member....

Reginald Marsh
Member

slidekellyslide
05-05-2010, 09:36 PM
Good point Rob. Good point.

And Peter, Alan's respect for Marshall ---> my loss of respect for Alan, so does that mean it all nets out? :-)

Alan may be unaware of some of Mr Barkman's more misogynistic posts.

three25hits
05-05-2010, 10:29 PM
“Even though I have found items that are worth $10,000 to $100,000, those are not one-of-a-kind finds,” Barkman says. “I don’t know what the value of something like this is – who can say, if it’s the only one? I’m not interested in selling it. I mean, it’s the rarest thing I’ve ever found … or probably ever will find.

How can something be more rare than one-of-a-kind?

Is he going to find something that doesn't exist yet? A one-of-zero?

nolemmings
05-05-2010, 11:28 PM
A board member here apparently picked up a large lot of them recently.....

Uh-oh. I hope that doesn't mean he and Marshall are now birds of a feather.

drc
05-06-2010, 01:57 AM
Nothing is rarer that one-of-a-kind

Peter_Spaeth
05-06-2010, 06:53 AM
Alan may be unaware of some of Mr Barkman's more misogynistic posts.

Then again, perhaps he was. Here is Alan's post on a thread discussing precisely that.

#6 08-31-2009, 01:04 PM
Jewish-collector
Alan
Member Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 231



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Leave Marshall alone. He's a good man.

This one's for you, Marshall
(beer chug emoticon not copying)

botn
05-06-2010, 08:19 AM
So Peter, is it safe to assume that it will be a table for two at Alan's Baltimore National dinner?

Peter_Spaeth
05-06-2010, 08:27 AM
That would be more than at the last one, no? :D:D

slidekellyslide
05-06-2010, 08:40 AM
Then again, perhaps he was. Here is Alan's post on a thread discussing precisely that.

#6 08-31-2009, 01:04 PM
Jewish-collector
Alan
Member Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 231



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Leave Marshall alone. He's a good man.

This one's for you, Marshall
(beer chug emoticon not copying)

Heh. I guess he was aware of it. :(