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LincolnVT 11-21-2021 02:36 PM

Cabinet Photos
 
I would love to see other people's baseball cabinet photos if folks have them to share. Lots of interesting images out there I am sure.

swarmee 11-21-2021 03:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LincolnVT (Post 2166693)
I would love to see other people's baseball cabinet photos if folks have them to share. Lots of interesting images out there I am sure.

Try the pre-war board.

LincolnVT 11-21-2021 05:33 PM

Yeah.
 
My mistake. Hopefully Leon can move this over to the pre-war board.

paul 11-21-2021 10:41 PM

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Here's my recently acquired Joseph Hall cabinet of Amos Rusie. I'm thrilled to have it.

h2oya311 11-22-2021 09:14 AM

Cabinet Photos
 
also my avatar. HOFer Hughie Jennings:

https://photos.imageevent.com/derekg...20Jennings.jpg

and Paul, that cabinet of Rusie is simply spectacular! Hoping to see more cabs from other members!

Rhotchkiss 11-22-2021 11:27 AM

Derek, that Jennings is awesome. He is so young

mrreality68 11-22-2021 11:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by paul (Post 2166826)
Here's my recently acquired Joseph Hall cabinet of Amos Rusie. I'm thrilled to have it.

very nice card and great eye appeal

Congrats on it

triwak 11-22-2021 12:39 PM

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Some HOFers

paul 11-22-2021 01:44 PM

I did not realize there were any cabinets of Henry Chadwick.

GeoPoto 11-22-2021 02:08 PM

Rowdy Bill
 
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Washington? Detroit? What's the difference?

William P. "Bill" Coughlin. "Scranton Bill". "Rowdy Bill". Third baseman with the Washington Nationals in 1899 (NL) and Senators in 1901-1904 (AL). 972 hits and 159 stolen bases in 9 MLB seasons. He was known as a master of the hidden-ball trick. He was a key figure on the Detroit Tiger team that won AL pennants in 1907 and 1908. But, his most productive season was 1902 with Washington as he posted an OBP of .348 with 84 runs scored and 71 RBI's in 506 plate appearances. His final seasons were with Detroit in 1904-1908.

The Detroit Tigers teams of 1906–1908, on which Coughlin played, were among the most colorful groups in baseball history, with the flying spikes of Ty Cobb, on-field antics from Germany Schaefer and Charley O'Leary (who toured as a vaudeville act in the off-season), fisticuffs from catcher Boss Schmidt, and the shouts, gyrations, and jigs of Hughie "Ee-Yah" Jennings from the third base coaching box.

Coughlin's role in this colorful bunch was as the maestro of the hidden ball trick. The hidden ball trick is a play in which the runner is deceived about the location of the ball, in an effort to tag him out. Although no known comprehensive list is known to exist of all times when the hidden ball trick has worked, Coughlin reportedly pulled it off seven times (and at three different positions) -- more than any other player in MLB history. He pulled it off on May 12, 1905, against Hobe Ferris of the Boston Red Sox. He did it again on September 3, 1906, catching George Stone in the first inning. In Game 2 of the 1907 World Series, Coughlin caught Jimmy Slagle with a hidden ball trick, the only one in World Series history.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1637615088

sb1 11-22-2021 02:24 PM

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Might at well post the Detroit version...

Also a 1903 Spring Training photo of Emmet Heidrick with the St. Louis Browns, who only appears on very few issues...

Vintagecatcher 11-22-2021 03:04 PM

Claude Berry Cabinets
 
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Here is my T4 Obak Cabinet of Claude Berry.

In addition, I have been able to acquire 4 cabinets that originated from Claude Berry's estate. One which was used as the basis for his 1912 Home Run Kisses card.

Patrick

molenick 11-22-2021 04:07 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Adding Ward to the Hall of Famers.

jingram058 11-22-2021 04:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by paul (Post 2166826)
Here's my recently acquired Joseph Hall cabinet of Amos Rusie. I'm thrilled to have it.

Most of these fellows look like the era they are from. This Amos Rusie is different. He looks like he could have been photographed 5 minutes ago.

RCMcKenzie 11-22-2021 04:21 PM

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Nice cards, all. That framed Berry of his HRK card is large.


Here's Bill Annis, not a HOFer unless he is in the Maine HOF or something like that. A .177 lifetime average in the Majors, he would start right away in today's MLB.

LincolnVT 11-22-2021 04:21 PM

Cab
 
That Ward is amazing!!

x2drich2000 11-22-2021 04:23 PM

I've really starting appreciating cabinets for their great eye appeal, even generic, no-name players. I know I've shown this before. I believe it is Fred Rehse who pitched 2 games for the Millers in 1888 going 1-1. Despite such a short career, he somehow managed to have 6? different N172 poses. If anyone has any of the other poses I would be interested.


https://live.staticflickr.com/4381/3...ce64e274_b.jpg

https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...3a8bdf3000.jpghttps://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...418df66894.jpg

Kzoo 11-22-2021 04:33 PM

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I don't think this fella is anyone special, but I love the pose and photographer info at the bottom. I bought this at the Baltimore National in 2012 (?), I believe.

molenick 11-22-2021 04:35 PM

Love that one (and "generic" cabinets in general). I will look through my collection later for some poses I particularly like.

Jobu 11-22-2021 05:19 PM

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Here's a cool Cobb and Barney Oldfield used to make the Silent Six postcards that is at REA:

https://bid.robertedwardauctions.com...e?itemid=95136

Jobu 11-22-2021 05:23 PM

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I like production art and was happy to get this one of Walter Johnson's million-dollar arm (if you know the publication where this was used I'd love to see it!).

bn2cardz 11-22-2021 05:53 PM

The studio and corresponding N173https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...e8329dfc40.jpg

molenick 11-22-2021 06:04 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Action pose 1.

bn2cardz 11-22-2021 06:06 PM

Studio and corresponding t204https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...d845dc888c.jpg

molenick 11-22-2021 06:07 PM

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Action pose 2.

Jobu 11-22-2021 06:24 PM

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Nice! I'll add the full Monte (and toss in a Fan Craze too).

Attachment 488995

Attachment 488996

Attachment 488997

Quote:

Originally Posted by bn2cardz (Post 2167118)


G1911 11-22-2021 06:24 PM

Love these action poses of generic players. Great stuff

LincolnVT 11-22-2021 06:50 PM

+1...SO, very cool!

Quote:

Originally Posted by G1911 (Post 2167125)
Love these action poses of generic players. Great stuff


h2oya311 11-22-2021 09:17 PM

I’ll add this Hugh Duffy to the mix:

https://photos.imageevent.com/derekg...%20Studios.jpg

Will need to add the matching N172 and N173 of this pose some day…but for now, this’ll do!

Fred 11-22-2021 11:15 PM

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Some pretty nice cabinets so far.


Attachment 489028

GeoPoto 11-23-2021 05:58 AM

Lafayette Cross
 
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[QUOTE=Jobu;2167123]Nice! I'll add the full Monte (and toss in a Fan Craze too).

(Sorry, no cabinet, but) This Cross played with Monte, although they are not related -- his Cross family had better hair!

Lafayette N. "Lave" Cross. Third baseman/catcher with the Washington Senators in 1906-1907. 2,651 hits, 47 home runs, and 303 stolen bases in 21 MLB seasons. He debuted with the Louisville Colonels in 1887-1888. In 1894 with the Philadelphia Phillies he had one of his most productive seasons as he posted a .424 OBP with 128 runs scored and 132 RBI's in 593 plate appearances. At retirement in 1907, he ranked fifth in MLB history in hits and runs batted in. He captained the Philadelphia Athletics teams which captured two of the first five AL pennants.

An excerpt from Lave Cross' SABR biography surfaces his role in fixing position player glove options: Yet nothing distinguished Cross, as he transitioned to third base, more than the catcher’s mitt he brought with him. A moment from a July 7 (1894) match at Pittsburgh is illustrative: “Cross saw [a liner off the bat of Jake Stenzel] coming and threw up his hand, which was protected by a catcher’s glove. The ball struck the pillow with so much force that Cross was knocked down, but he recovered himself in time to throw [Jake] Beckley out at second.” Cross was not the only repositioned catcher using a mitt in the infield — Boston’s Frank Connaughton and Pittsburgh’s Joe Sugden did as well — but he was easily the most prominent.

Critics called this usage “unscientific and unsightly.” NL magnates met in February 1895 and modified existing rules to permit catchers and first basemen to “wear a glove or mitt of any size, shape or weight” yet other players were “restricted to the use of a glove or mitt weighing not over ten ounces, and measuring in circumference around the palm of the hand not over fourteen inches.” Cross found a mitt within these specifications and continued to comfortably snag flies and knock down liners.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1637671827

GeoPoto 11-23-2021 06:09 AM

The Curveless Wonder
 
1 Attachment(s)
Back to Cabinets -- Al Orth

Albert L. "Al" Orth. Pitcher with the Washington Senators in 1902-1904. 204 wins and 6 saves in 15 MLB seasons. He was the MLB wins leader in 1906. He was known as "The Curveless Wonder" relying on control and differing speed. His best season may have been 1901 with Philadelphia as he posted a 20-12 record with a 2.27 ERA in 281.2 innings pitched.

He umpired when necessary as a player and in one game umpired and pinch-hit in the same game. He debuted with the Philadelphia Phillies in 1895-1901. He finished his career with the New York Highlanders in 1904-1909. He debuted as an umpire in the NL in 1912 and in 1917 was the umpire when Toney and Vaughn each pitched 9 innings of no-hit baseball, the only time it has happened.

Orth was an early example of the art of "pitching to contact". From Orth's SABR biography: A typical Al Orth pitch was once described in a poem by W.A. Phelon as a “glistening ball… but little speed, and scarce a curve at all.” During his 15-year major league career, “The Curveless Wonder” won 204 games, yet struck out just 948 batters in more than 3,300 innings pitched. The burly six foot, 200-pound right-hander threw with a seemingly-effortless delivery, and relied on pinpoint control to overcome batters. “To the spectators Orth pitched a ball that it seemed must be easy to hit,” J.E. Wray observed in 1928, “yet year after year he kept on ‘fooling’ the batsmen.”

Though some reports indicate he had a good fastball early in his career, and once even tinkered with a curve, by the late 1890s his success on the mound was the result of his “slow ball.” During the Deadball Era, Fred Lieb later related, Osee Schrecongost of the Philadelphia Athletics once caught one of Orth’s pitches barehanded while batting against him. Nonetheless, Orth remained an effective pitcher during the early years of the new century, and posted career highs in wins (27) and strikeouts (133) for the New York Highlanders in 1906.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1637672553

Directly 11-23-2021 07:03 AM

Small Iowa town Baseball team 150 miles south of Field of Dreams--the Acrobats.

molenick 11-23-2021 07:11 AM

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Love the Acrobats. Here's another generic.

Rhotchkiss 11-23-2021 08:51 AM

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Here are a couple mounted photos, which I guess could have been displayed like cabinets. The Jack Johnson is not baseball, but the OP did not limit to baseball and its pre war (any war after Civil War)

molenick 11-23-2021 09:15 AM

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According to the back of the card, this is the Golden Baseball Team.

scooter729 11-23-2021 10:31 AM

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I've always liked this simple one - from 1911, outside of Boston's Huntington Ave. Grounds. A billboard advertising Turkish Trophies can be seen in the background too....

LincolnVT 11-23-2021 11:07 AM

Cabinet
 
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This is currently my only cabinet. 12" by 14"...1908 Greenville Spinners team featuring Joe Jackson. I really like the cabinet photos that people have shared of unidentified players...I especially like the cabinets that have buildings and or trees / vegitation in the background. Very cool early images all.

jcmtiger 11-23-2021 04:38 PM

Tomlinson cabinets
 
2 Attachment(s)
My 2 Detroit Tomlinson Cabinets. If anyone has any of these Detroit Tomlinsons for sale pm me thanks joe

mrreality68 11-24-2021 05:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by molenick (Post 2167320)
According to the back of the card, this is the Golden Baseball Team.

Really like the pose of this picture

molenick 11-24-2021 07:53 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Thank you. Here is a dapper young man.

LincolnVT 11-24-2021 07:56 AM

Cabinet
 
So cool. Looks like he is pearched in a bird nest.

soxinseven 11-24-2021 08:19 AM

Carrigan high school cabinet
 
1 Attachment(s)
I chased this one for years before finally acquiring it.

Hankphenom 11-24-2021 08:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jobu (Post 2167110)
I like production art and was happy to get this one of Walter Johnson's million-dollar arm (if you know the publication where this was used I'd love to see it!).

No idea where that particular image was published, Bryan, but the arm shot looks very similar to the horizontal WaJo M113. And that photo was also used in a BB Magazine article or two, but I don't have the specific issues.

Pat R 11-24-2021 09:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jobu (Post 2167110)
I like production art and was happy to get this one of Walter Johnson's million-dollar arm (if you know the publication where this was used I'd love to see it!).

Bryan, is it possible that it originally could have been used for an ad for Martin's Liniment?

[IMG]https://photos.imageevent.com/patric..._18__1925_.jpg[/IMG]

sb1 11-24-2021 01:11 PM

5 Attachment(s)
Took the time to scan a group of White Sox players circa 1905/06. Walsh, Hahn, Donahue, Altrock and Patterson.

MVSNYC 11-24-2021 01:29 PM

What a kick-ass thread! I don't own any cabinets, but certainly appreciate them.

So many great ones posted already, but my favorite might just be Ryan's Jack Johnson. So cool.

GaryPassamonte 11-24-2021 03:26 PM

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Also my avatar. Maybe someone can enlarge my scan.

Bicem 11-24-2021 04:08 PM

Awesome Scott, have never seen those before.

Outstanding piece Gary.

esd10 11-24-2021 04:39 PM

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Not much value but comes with a letter from the hall of fame wanting this cabinet photo of the 1911 philadelphia athletics with the president.


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