![]() |
Tharp's vs. Harrington's vs. Yeungling's vs. York...
I'm pondering doing a back-run of Tharp's and Harrington's and Yeungling's and E210s and (did I miss any???)
Are they traded/sold often enough that I will FIND whomever I decide to do the run of? I am VERY patient, but I would like to accomplish this before my friends & family throw dirt on me... How would you rank them in order of difficulty??? Am I nuts to try??? Enough questions for now! I welcome your thoughts & opinions, as always! |
There are also Sweetman's and W502's with blank backs and those with plays on back. Of all of them the Sweetman's are the toughest from my experience.
Also keep in mind there are two versions of the Yorks and also although less spoken about there are two versions of the Yeunglings as well. |
1 Attachment(s)
Sets of any of them are doable from what I've seen, without being too tough if you can be patient.
The toughest card you'll likely encounter is the Harrington's Earl Smith, which was a very short print chase card, to limit people from completing a set to redeem a prize. Like mine here, all known Smiths are all green tinted, unlike the typical black and white ones.... |
Yorks among the Run
As mentioned above about Yorks, there is a second series, called Type 2, (E210-2) printed actually in 1928, which replaces several of the Type 1 players from 1927.
These 1928 E210 Type 2 poses and player selection match the Harrington, Yuengling, Tharp , w502 and Sweetman sets. Because of the replacement players I mentioned, you would have to pick a player that appears in both E210-1 and E210-2 to get a true back run. Luckily, about 50 of the 60 players are in both. I can give you details on which players are different as well as which backs are different when I get home from this business trip I am slogging through. York caramels are sorta my "thing".:rolleyes: The Sweetmans 1928 are certainly the hardest to find *any* player from, but there are E210-2 that will elude you as well. Besides Earl Smith, you can generally find Harrington players. If you just want a run of a single player, I might suggest Frisch, Speaker, Bob Meusel or maybe Ray Schalk. I think I have seen these players available in all those sets at one point or another but I wasn't monitoring for a run of these " similar"cards...it's just by memory mostly. This run would be challenging but I think achievable with some patience. I think it's a great idea! Please share your progress! |
MORE Questions
Thanks for the info!
Ask a question here and I am NEVER disappointed by the intelligent responses! I think that I will consider a back-run of Tris Speaker and will need most of them right out of the box - if anyone has one that they would consider selling, please PM me! I am NOT looking for beaters, nor am I looking for HIGH grade, either. A nice presentable VG (or better or perhaps lesser, IF it looks nice) will work. What MIGHT I expect to pay? Say a decent E210 York Type 1 Speaker costs ~$200 - what kind of premium/multiplier would I expect to pay for Tharps vs. Harrington's vs, Sweetman's, W502, etc.? (No, I do not have a VCP subscription...) I will keep all informed as to my likely S-L-O-W progress! Thanks |
I thought we did this exercise before and a Tharp's back was the least common? I think we had a very good thread or poll about it in the past. But it was probably Sweetman's and am mistaking. From my seat of the pants it seems both Tharps and Sweetman are very close in scarcity.
Quote:
|
Quote:
One nobody has mentioned is the super rare Griener's Bread cards. Obviously, hands down the rarest back! |
I was mistaking in my thinking. In some board searches all of our discussions had said it was York-2, Sweetman's, Tharp's......in that order from scarcest to less scarce. And yes, later Greiners entered the picture too....and is the toughest of the bread/bakery back series.
Quote:
|
Sweetman's are almost impossible compared to the other 3 ice cream issues. A legit Tharp Babe Ruth is tough and much tougher than a Yuengling. Kids used to skin the backs off the Yuenglings and paste a Tharp back on it to get the free gallon of ice cream.
I posted this before (somewhere), but for those who didn't see it, check this out at about the 5:30 mark. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qNuYko_Odt8 Card doctors of the 1920s. :) |
Pricing...
So I will be looking for Greiner’s, Sweetman’s , Tharp’s (2 variations), Harrington’s (2 variations), Yeungling’s (2 variations), York (Type 1 & Type 2), and W502 (4 different backs).
Did I miss anything?!?!?! That’s 14 different cards, assuming that they all exist! Anyone care to opine on price rations? For example, if a York Type 1 costs X dollars, how many times X might I expect to pay for a York Type 2 or a Tharp’s or a Sweetman’s, etc…. {I’m hoping that you guys are having as much fun spending my money as I eventually hope to have!} Thanks!:) |
I don't mean to be "that guy" but it drives me nuts to see so many posters write "Yeungling." The company is the oldest brewery in America; it is spelled "Yuengling." :)
|
Quote:
My last name was ALWAYS spelled incorrectly, and I HATED that!!!! I vow to never spell Yuengling incorrectly EVER again - at least I will try! :):) |
4 Attachment(s)
Would this be the variation for Harrington's front and back
|
Quote:
|
Start running!
Greg...
There is a nice Speaker from 1928 Harrington's on BST today if you want to start your run:p |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I was a tad slow on the draw and missed out! |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 03:17 AM. |