![]() |
How rare would a stack of 1921 Herpolsheimer's be? Including Babe. Just wondering :)
1 Attachment(s)
October 2023:
Hi again, everyone. It's been a few years, here's my post on the status update for these awesome cards: https://www.net54baseball.com/showpo...6&postcount=63 Old thread from 2019 below.... It took me awhile to find you guys, but this seems like the best spot to ask. https://i.ibb.co/3C3tnYf/herps.png https://i.ibb.co/sHKvzXC/herp-proof.png https://i.ibb.co/qmLpW27/herp-ruth-back.png https://i.ibb.co/CzvqGWw/herp-list.png In their "Ultra-Rare 1921 E121 Herpolsheimer Fred Toney sale" Love of the Game Auctions says: Quote:
The cards have lived in a metal Band-Aid box probably since the mid 1930s. Planning to grade and sell them soon but trying to get an idea of what you guys think the Babe Ruth may be worth. I've searched everywhere, but I've never seen a Herpolsheimer backed Babe Ruth before. 1 of 1? :) |
Welcome to the board. Way to make a splash. No back picture? Checklist? New names? Or team/position variations?
|
Unclear why you wouldn't show the card backs - as the E121/W575-1's are not hard as a general issue, just difficult with the Herpolsheimer's advertising reverse.
The known cards were all found at the same time, and up until that point, only a single example of each card was identified. There is some controversy/debate on the erasure of the back writing on some of the cards - I'm sure you can find more here on Net54 on that topic. Putting a price tag on a unique or near-unique card is quite difficult. I'd say get the cards authenticated and graded - The Ruth that sold in 2004 went for just under $8k IIRC |
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:
Ok, here you go. Since you were first to reply :) https://i.ibb.co/CzvqGWw/herp-list.png |
Nice find!
Here is a 2012 sale of a Ruth: https://www.robertedwardauctions.com...okie-sgc-vgex/ And a 2010 sale of a really nice one: https://www.robertedwardauctions.com...th-rookie-psa/ Yours isn't quite as nice as the 2012 sale (depending on what the back of yours looks like), BUT Ruth cards have gone way up in value since 2012. So I would say that yours will definitely bring more than the 2012 sale and to find out how much more you will need to grade it and send it to auction. |
Jobu-
1921, not 1916. Different issue, different team, RC vs. non-RC It's a very different issue altogether :) |
Quote:
|
Can you post a picture of the backs? There are a lot of different E121 backs:
http://www.oldcardboard.com/e/e2/e12...y-of-backs.asp Reasoning: slow-rolling people like this makes people think you're a scammer. |
The very infamous pencil is finally shown!!
|
Quote:
https://i.ibb.co/sHKvzXC/herp-proof.png This is the back of the Babe Ruth. Not perfect, but pretty good?: https://i.ibb.co/qmLpW27/herp-ruth-back.png roll a die.com |
Quote:
|
These were supposed to be issued by a Grand Rapids, Michigan department store. Did your Uncle live in that area ?
|
Quote:
EDIT: Yes appears original owner was from Kent, Michigan. Just a few miles outside of Grand Rapids, MI. |
Herpolsheimers
Congrats on the find! I’ve been collect these for the last 5 years or so and own several. Good luck with whatever you decide to do with them.
In its day Herpolsheimers was the preeminent department store in Grand Rapids. Can you share any details on the find/history of these cards? Mike |
Ah, my bad guys. Did that on my phone and wasn't paying enough attention.
Quote:
|
Grading
I am going to reach out to PSA, SGC, BGS next week to see if any of them are interested in grading the lot. Do you think one of them would do it free of charge? I'd think the bragging (and marketing) rights to be the first registry to see, grade, and list these is worth something?
|
Great cards. That Ruth will sell for a lot.
|
$2 card
BTW, that funny "found $2 card in the pawn shop - possibly worth millions!" story that hit recently is what brought these out (same card front). So that pawn shop owner didn't know what it was? That's not like any pawn shop owner I've ever known.
Not sure about the other guy and the $2 shotwell, but these definitely the real deal. Since they've probably been living in the can for 90 years, these cards in this collection has that nice old paper smell :) |
So much for one of ones
Big selling point of these has been they were all one of ones. Does that cut the value in half at least the commons?
|
Ahhh, no. They will all be happy to grade them for you, but PSA is going to charge you between $3,000 (card value $25,000-$100,000) to $5,000 (value $100,000+) for just the Ruth.
Quote:
|
Quote:
Which of the 3 major services can currently issue a press release with nicely edited youtube video of them grading this lot? Would you watch that video? |
You're the kind of guy who calls the bet in a poker game, let's everyone else reveal their cards, and says: "Damn. I only have two pair. Sixes and sixes." GLWS.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Definitely a large find will cut the value overall. If they all sell at once I think it’ll saturate the market, like some of the other finds have done over last ten years with other issues. Abd guess we will see, but I’d say value on this Ruth is more like $20k-25k. It’s not the 1916 issue. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Congrats and good luck! |
Very cool, Atari, thanks for sharing the additional scans.
Huge find. Definitely get the Ruth and a few other(s) graded. There will be multiple ways to consider monetizing this find. Definitely adds a new storyline to the 1921 issue, which was controversial/debated ±15 years ago. All the best- m |
I'd be surprised if Ruth went for less than $25k.
|
The ruth...assumimg authentic will sell for significantly more than 25k.
|
Quote:
|
How rare would a stack of 1921 Herpolsheimer's be? Including Babe. Just wondering :)
I have the Holsum Ruth 1/1 from 1920. I paid 84k 4-5 yrs ago. It’s estimated to be in the 125k-140k+ area presently. E121’s have easily doubled the past five years, and with that iconic pose, I think your card will bring a haul, congrats!
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...a766299128.jpghttps://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...d7e5fef444.jpg Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
Awesome find! Which other HOFers are in there? I see Maranville and Sisler. I would think this card would top $100k easily and $200k wouldn't surprise me.
|
Herpil Haul
Whoa! Congrats::::
I guess my 1/1 Stengel(thanks Leon!) is now a 1/2...all good though. Hope these cards are found to be authentic, and helps put the doubts about the legitimacy of the original find to rest. Do these cards also have pencil marks on the back? Was the pencil in the band-aid box too? |
Quote:
Brian |
Quote:
No pencil marks on the backs of these herps that I can see. |
Quote:
The list I was initially reluctant to include in the first post as I said because there is some value in the "mystery" in not knowing which previous 1-of-1's have become 1-of-2's, which new 1-of-1's are out there, etc. Something I was considering to save for an auction house catalog to reveal. At the end of the day, only one company will get to do that anyway, so not that big of a loss, and better to get the list out there early so people can consider what may be coming to market soon/eventually. I guess we'll save the rest of that mystery for the conditions of each card -- which can eventually be seen exclusively on the graders registry of whoever we wind up working with. Sadly, the Ruth isn't the best card in the deck, but thankfully far from the worst. Cheers! :) |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Hi Pete! I think that the card will go for a lot less than $100,000. Although there are now only two copies, there are many ad back Ruth rookies with only a few copies known and in this condition they would sell for between $150,000 and $200,000. This is from the post Red Sox period and is a lot less desirable than a rookie card. I would value it at $40,000 to $60,000.
|
Hi Jay! Didn't realize there were two, and in its condition, I agree on price and on your assessment of the value of the rarer Ruth RC ad backs. The E121/E122's have continued to climb though in price on their popularity and being undervalued for too long. Super card/find nonetheless.
|
The cards have lived in a metal Band-Aid box probably since the mid 1930s
[/QUOTE]I Amazing find! That style Band-Aid box was used in the 1940's and '50's. The '30's version had a sliding lid. Just something to know when you pitch the AH's. https://www.kilmerhouse.com/2013/04/...-bandages-tins |
Damn. I just checked all my Band-Aid boxes and all I found were Band-Aids.
|
Quote:
It's good that you have the real thing, with a back story, and are going to help your uncle derive the best resale value for the collection. Maybe you're not used to posting on collecting message boards, but you set off a bunch of the flags, maybe not meaning to, maybe because you were relishing the reveal too much. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
Thanks. Yes, I was planning to figure out the date range of the can. I just assumed it would have been from when the original owner became a mature adult. Which as we all know is 18 years old on the nose. :p |
Quote:
Maybe you're right... instead of 1700 views over 5 pages of threads in just 8 hours we could have done better. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Too bad about the other one. I've wasn't able to find it. Is it one of those from the lot where they all had the pencil marks on them? If so, I guess this 1921 Herpolsheimer Ruth has the fact that it has never been altered going for it - even if it winds up in slightly lower condition. |
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 01:11 AM. |