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Small but notable stash of 1916 Ferguson Bakery pennants uncovered
Not large in quantity but a nice little quality find of these took place recently in downstate IL: http://www.sportscollectorsdaily.com...pennant-stash/
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WOW, cool little find right there. The premium is in AMAZING shape.
Thanks for the link! |
Beautiful Alexander! I have only seen one other before, which has sold 3 times in the past few years...which our very own Peerless Leader, Leon, has now :D
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Great find and nice write up. A few of the facts need to be tweaked a little but overall it's a fantastic story. I am not sure we have any direct evidence of the small BF2s being issued by Ferguson but with groups being found, like this one, it sure points that way. Love the pennants and the large premium pennants...
http://luckeycards.com/pbf2premiumalexander.jpeg |
That was fast.
In the article there was a tab you could use to go to his eBay page to see what he had listed for sale. I went there and saw the Alexander premium as just having been listed. The Buy It Now price was $4,500 or best offer. That was a couple of hours ago. I just went back to that page and the Alexander has been sold. Too bad I didn't have the cash..... David |
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http://www.legendaryauctions.com/Lot...ntoryid=125331 Edited to add: this one might be Mr. Luckey's. |
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Not so fast
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Also, we know the large premiums were distributed by Ferguson because the blotter specifically mentions the large pennants. How did a Ferguson premium end up in the location of the find? |
Still dubious
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here they are together...for comparisons sake...actually all three are different. This reminds me of Fulton Press Co and AWH E222 with their myriad backs on few examples. My guess is all of them are Fergusons. This blotter belongs to another board member, I hope he doesn't mind :).
http://luckeycards.com/pbfpillowtop.jpeg http://luckeycards.com/pbf2premiumalexander.jpeg |
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Thanks. Chris |
"puzzle" card
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definitely NOT the blotter, but Leon's post (showing the blotter / pillow top) reminded me of these two advertising trade cards showing pennants
in a similar configuration as the Peerless Bread piece and pillow top... DS |
Agree to disagree
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Pennant experts?
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As for the fact that no large pennant matching the style shown on the Ferguson blotter has surfaced, the scarcity of the pillow tops (far fewer than 10 have been found) suggests extreme rarity, while their size and utility might have given them a better chance of survival. By the way, although I collect the D381 Ferguson set, I have no real interest in the BF2s or larger pennants. My skepticism about their origin is purely the result of never encountering them in original holdings over a lifetime of collecting in the Boston area, nor having seen any advertising for them during many hours of microfilm research of Boston newspapers of the period. |
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Bf2 premium
SPEC, as I understand you, you are saying that the large bf2 pennants shown here are not the pennants advertised on the blotter because the picture on the blotter does not match the large pennants. Also that the pillow top is a Ferguson premium because it does match.
On the blotter there is also mention of movie star premiums. I have owned a movie star pillow top premium which matches exactly the style of the baseball pillow top. I have also seen several of the large movie star pennants which again match in style the baseball pennants in this thread. That both the baseball and movie star pennants do exist and that your hypothetical pennants matching the picture on the blotter have never been discovered seems to make your argument extremely difficult to accept. |
Call me a contrarian, but I do not find it hard to accept at all. I think it strange that Ferguson would tie its cards, its blotter and its pillowtop to images taken from Underwood & Underwood and then use the Mendelsohn photos for this large 9x24 pennant.
Now if the BF2s are actually the "pennant tickets" referenced in the blotter, then it would be a natural progression to offer a King-Size version of those tickets as a premium. Have we ever seen anything else purporting to be or construed as such a ticket? Has it been confirmed that BF2s were in fact placed in Ferguson loaves? If not, then it seems to me an open question. |
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Definitely an open question, Todd. And after looking at them and thinking about it some more, it is probably further from 100 than I was previously thinking. I hadn't really even thought about the picture of the pennant, on the blotter, being one of the small pennants on the pillow top. I just assumed it is what the large ones looked like. In that case it still seems plausible, if not more plausible, the bigger ones seen today were put out by Ferguson's. Now, the smaller, "BF2" are another story. No, I have never heard of any proof they were found in loaves of bread. It is assumed. They might have been, but that is about all we are sure of. |
All of that is great, but it still suggests that no real Ferguson 9x24s have been found to date and the known 9x24s have an unknown genesis. That seems impossible to me.
Keep in mind that these premiums were not mass-produced like cards were. The blotter may have even been printed BEFORE the actual large pennants went into "production." You needed a whopping 50 tickets to redeem a premium. It would take quite a while to accumulate that many. I can't imagine many of these were redeemed. I even wonder if the consumer was given the choice of which player they wanted. |
BF2 pennant
Todd, I don't think anyone is trying to prove that the small BF2s were distributed by Ferguson. On the contrary, in an article I wrote for Old Cardboard several years ago I stated that these little pennants could well have been distributed by many different companies and there is to date no real proof of a relationship with Ferguson bakery.
The substance of this thread was to show the relationship of the large pennants to the blotter and hence to Ferguson. That we have discovered large pennants both of the movie stars and the baseball players that fit the description on the blotter seems to be an open and shut case as to that connection. To say that these large pennants are not those indicated on the blotter and there are other still undiscovered large movie star and baseball pennants out there seems rather preposterous. |
Very cool items guys.
I've never seen the blotter, it seems that the d381s came with Peerless, and the BF2s came with Honey Bread? |
Preposterous though it may be
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Meanwhile, this latest group of small pennants plus the large premium suggests the two sizes are connected. I am not an Internet expert, but I just poked around a bit on Google and discovered that 9x24 is not an unusual size for a pennant, whether vintage or modern, so the size match seems a bit less than compelling. Furthermore, I found an ad in the June 1917 issue of Motion Picture Classic magazine offering both small and large (9x24) movie star pennants for sale by a mail order firm (D.A. Dobie) in Long Island, NY. The illustrations match the movie star pennants we've seen in recent auctions (Legendary, Hake's, etc.). So, I'm hoping someone runs across an ad offering baseball player pennants, large or small. Another possibility is that the pennants (either baseball players or movie stars, or both) were a national promotion. Ferguson Bakery became affiliated with, I believe, Continental Baking about this time after many years as a locally owned entity. While all this may seem preposterous to some, I think there's still a lot to learn about these pennants. |
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I just searched ebay for movie star pennants and found a variety of circa 1916 examples with different lengths. Are they attributed to Ferguson Bakery and if not, is it preposterous to think that whoever made these might also have made larger pennants? Quote:
I do not reach any conclusions with regard to these, and remain hopeful that further evidence will surface. Until then, I'll just enjoy looking at them and not try to classify/catalogue them one way or another. |
This has become comical to me. The blotter provides proof enough for me. I guess if it hasn't for a few people, that is fine by me. All I can add is that Ferguson issued the large pennants, they didn't produce them. The manufacturer(s) could easily have had access and rights to use a variety of photos. Since the large pennants could have been made well after the blotter was printed or if the large pennants were produced in small batches over time, it wouldn't be a shock that access or choice of photos could have changed. At this point, this is more of an issue of who manufactured the pennants, not who issued them. Maybe someday, somebody will find a print ad showing that somebody else in addition to Ferguson had also issued large 9x24 pennants, but we certainly have proof that Ferguson did.
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