1906 Ticket Help
2 Attachment(s)
So I found this ticket recently in a 1906 scrapbook. I know for 100% certainty this dates to 1906, the high school senior whose book it was found in noted he was given the blank book for Christmas in 1905 and nothing was in there past Christmas 1906 save a few random things jammed into the back.
When I first saw the ticket I simply thought it was a cool 1906 White Sox ticket from their championship season. However, it gets better because the game number 1 on the stub indicates this was either from the World Series (first game) or opening day. I believe it is the World Series for a few reasons, the only other 1906 stub I have seen had a 50 cent price whereas the only known White Sox World Series stub had a similar $1.50 price. I am at a dead end and as far as I can tell, there is no other game one ticket known (at least none I could find) so perhaps someone on this board that knows tickets could help me determine absolutely if I have an opening day stub or a world series stub. Thanks in advance Rhys |
For comparison, here is the one from game number three that sold.
https://www.worthpoint.com/worthoped...orld-511363592 Also, the ticket has a break on the right side so I did not remove it from the holder when taking a picture which is why it looks stained and grainy. |
Quote:
How's it going? I hope to see you at the National... I'm in agreement that your ticket is not from a regular season game. The ticket price is certainly too high for 1906. Word Series, Game 1 at CWS? Very likely, IMHO |
My two cents from someone with almost 450 different World Series tickets who is tying to put together a guide of not only pricing, but understanding of the tickets themselves.
I don't think there is any definitive evidence anywhere that this is from a World Series game. I don't trust anything that has been sold previously by Legendary Auctions, so if that is the only previous image of this ticket, I would be skeptical based on this one previous sale alone. I would have to look at differences in tickets from that year, but wonder if this was a type of coupon used to exchange for a ticket? There is no indication of an opponent, a seat number or what this is for. It also has indication saying 'when in use good for any game this season'. It may very well have been used for a world series, but without definitive proof of this (maybe having it in a program or with a photo of the World Series) from a truly reliable source, this is all guesswork and speculation. Sorry to be so negative. Quote:
|
Ticket
I understand what you are saying. I have spoken to others on the phone with extensive knowledge and their opinion is the price is the key. Regular-season games were 50 cents and you can see where they added the $1 to the front of it in offset type to increase the price, which they would have not done for a regular season game, even opening day. I appreciate the input and opinion, this is just what I have been getting in private conversations about why all others I have spoken to believe it is indeed a World Series ticket.
No need to apologize for appearing negative, I appreciate all information and opinions, not just ones that fit what I hope it to be :) Your input is much appreciated. |
Quote:
I think the real answer may lie in research from old archives from the city of Chicago or older sports pages that may indicated what indeed this is. Super interesting find and I would love to hear what else you find out that may confirm or deny what it is. |
Ticket
One of the older collectors I spoke to that has been chronicling tickets from every team and every season for decades told me something interesting the other day which I had not heard before. He told me there is no evidence that teams charged more for specific games, including opening day, except for the World Series. He had opening day tickets on file for White Sox games since the advent of Comiskey Park and even those were all the same price. Bigger crowds, but the ticket prices were set for the regular season and did not change. According to several people that is key here, but I agree that perhaps a newspaper article that actually spoke about ticket prices would maybe be the key.
I appreciate the feedback. |
The price does seem high but perhaps it was for a box or better seat? Is there evidence from the collector that the '1' is a game number as opposed to a box or section number?
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 05:27 PM. |