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1921-22 . E220 National Caramel
There aren't enough card threads currently so here is an E220 one. Picked this up not long ago from a board member.
https://luckeycards.com/e220cobb.jpg |
I've always been oddly drawn to miscuts, probably why I love E220's. I still can't believe that I own this card, I just love the image!
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...5ba16b6d_z.jpg |
No miscut on this onehttps://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...eedbef84d9.jpg
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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I have Shawkey.I guess it is trimmed but not sure (and not sure why!)
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Below is some info on the three E220 back variations that I have sporadically gathered over the years, along with the help of other Net54 members, and scans to help identify those three backs.
Left cards of scans - Type 1 backs ('B' of "Ball" in 2nd line under 'P' of "Pictures', and printing top right down): All 120 cards have been verified for Type 1. Center cards of scans - Type 2 backs ('B' of "Ball" in 2nd line under 'I' of "Pictures', and printing top right down - 46 currently verified): G.C. Alexander Turner Barber George Burns (Cincinnati) Joe Bush Wilbur Cooper Wm. Cunningham George Cutshaw Jimmy Dykes (batting) "Red" Faber Chick Fewster Wilson Fewster Walter Gerber Hank Gowdy Charles Grimm Sam Harris Harry Heilman Chas. Hollocher Wilbert Hubbell Walter Johnson Jimmy Johnston Dick Kerr Pete Kilduff (bending) Pete Kilduff (leaping) Larry Kopf Walter "Buster" Mails Walter "Rabbit" Maranville Bob Meusel Ivan Olson Steve O'Neill Geo. Paskert Roger Peckinpaugh V.J. Picinich Wally Pipp Jimmy Ring Raymond Schmandt Everett Scott Maurice Shannon Bob Shawkey Urban Shocker John Smith Frank Snyder (crouching) Frank Snyder (standing) James Vaughan Robert Veach George Whitted (batting) Arthur Wilson Right cards of scans - Type 3 backs ('B' of "Ball" in 2nd line under 'I' of "Pictures', and printing bottom left up...these are basically reversed Type 2 backs - 93 currently verified): Babe Adams James Austin Franklin "Home Run" Baker Dave Bancroft Turner Barber George Burns (Cincinnati) George Burns (Cleveland) Joe Bush Leon Cadore Max Carey Eddie Collins John Collins S. Covaleskie Walton Cruise Wm. Cunningham George Cutshaw Jake Daubert Chas. A Deal Bill Doak Joe Dugan Jimmy Dykes (fielding) Chick Fewster Ira Flagstead Arthur Fletcher Frank Frisch Larry Gardner Walter Gerber Charles Glazner J.C. Graney Tommy Griffith Heinie Groh Byron Harris Sam Harris Harry Heilman Claude Hendrix Walter Henline Chas. Hollocher Harry Hooper Rogers Hornsby Waite Hoyt Wilbert Hubbell William Jacobsen Walter Johnson Joe Judge Geo. "Bingo" Kelly Larry Kopf Harry Leibold H.B. Leonard Walter "Buster" Mails Carl Mays Lee Meadows Emil Meusel J.C. Milan Earl Neale Robert Nehf Bernie Neis Joe Oeschger Robert O'Farrell Ivan Olson George Paskert Ralph "Cy" Perkins Scott Perry Jeff Pfeffer Wally Pipp Derrill Pratt Goldie Rapp Edgar Rice Eddie Rousch Babe Ruth Raymond Schmandt Everett Scott Joe Sewell Maurice Shannon Urban Shocker George Sisler Earl Smith John Smith Sherrod Smith Frank Snyder (crouching) Frank Snyder (standing) Vernon Spencer Chas. "Casey" Stengle Milton Stock (batting) Milton Stock (fielding) Wm. Wambsgauss Aaron Ward Zach Wheat George Whitted (fielding) Fred C. Williams Arthur Wilson Lawton Witt "Pep" Young Ross Young Subjects that have been seen with all three back types, which are any that are noted in both lists above...but to make it easier (25 total): Turner Barber George Burns (Cincinnati) Joe Bush Wm. Cunningham George Cutshaw Chick Fewster Walter Gerber Sam Harris Harry Heilman Chas. Hollocher Wilbert Hubbell Walter Johnson Larry Kopf Walter "Buster" Mails Ivan Olson George Paskert Wally Pipp Raymond Schmandt Everett Scott Maurice Shannon Urban Shocker John Smith Frank Snyder (crouching) Frank Snyder (standing) Arthur Wilson Brian |
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Here are some fun size variations and odd cuts that the E220 cards are known for.
Brian |
some nice looking cards.
looks like I have to start looking for that e220 Ruth |
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I was always getting the E220's mixed up with the E121's. I found an old thread on Net54 where several people had even gotten cards graded by PSA that had mistaken one for the other. Here's the thread:
https://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=148662 The quickest and easiest way to tell by looking at the front of the card is that the E220's have the player name inside the frame of the picture and the E121's have the name outside of the frame. |
Great info Brian!!
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My first E220. Just got it this month from a fellow member.
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...ecf54d8dcb.jpg Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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Besides the 'National Caramel' on E220 backs versus 'American Caramel seen on E122 backs, the E122 American card fronts have a coarse, cross hatch image (that I personally dislike in comparison to the clear photos seen in the E220 National Caramel set).
Here are a couple of E122 American cards as examples to compare with the previously shown E220 National Caramels (cards not mine). Brian |
1921 E220 Clyde Milan
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J. Clyde "Deerfoot" Milan. Outfielder for the Washington Senators in 1907-1922. 2,100 hits and 495 stolen bases in 16 MLB seasons. 1912 and 1913 AL stolen base leader, including a then record 88 in 1912. His career OBP was .353. Managed the Washington Senators in 1922. His best season may have been 1911 for the Washington Senators as he posted a .395 OBP with 58 stolen bases and 109 runs scored in 705 plate appearances.
From Milan's SABR biography: He was a left-handed hitter who batted .285 over the course of 16 seasons, and Clark Griffith called him Washington’s greatest centerfielder, claiming that he played the position more shallow than any man in baseball. Yet Clyde “Deerfoot” Milan achieved his greatest fame as a base stealer. After Milan supplanted Ty Cobb as the American League’s stolen-base leader by pilfering 88 bases in 1912 and 75 in 1913, F. C. Lane of Baseball Magazine called him “Milan the Marvel, the Flying Mercury of the diamond, the man who shattered the American League record, and the greatest base runner of the decade.” It was hyperbole, of course; Cobb re-claimed the AL record in 1915 by stealing 96 bases and went on to swipe far more bases over the decade than Milan, but Deerfoot stole a total of 481 during the Deadball Era, ranking third in the AL behind only Cobb (765) and Eddie Collins (564). https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1632819879 |
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Attachment 480651 Hi Brian--Excellent research on the E220 set and its variations. Ive attached scans of Type 3 variations for Turner Barber and Art Wilson. I think you can add those to your database. It's interesting that the Type 3's are relatively scarce. Only 14% of my set (30 of 211) Regards, Chris Sullivan |
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Here are some of my E122s for comparison. Despite the obviously crappy condition, they are some of my favorites because I got the entire lot for a quarter at one of my first card shows in the mid-'70s when I was about ten years old.
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Here is an e122 I used to own...I always look for the darkened, captioned area on the front bottom AND the back to determine if it's these or E220s.... https://luckeycards.com/pe122americancaramel.jpg |
Oops. I meant e121. Somebody posted the e122s above, and it got stuck in my head. Sorry for the mistake. Getting older sucks.
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Type 2 and Type 3 are definitely the less commonly seen backs on these. Because of this, my brain wants to come up with a likely printing scenario for them. I think it possible that since 93 cards have been verified, that all 120 cards are available as Type 3. And since only 46 have been verified having Type 2 backs, that perhaps 60 is a nice logical amount to have been printed. Of course with vintage card production, things are rarely straightforward, but my logical brain wants them to be, so I predict (and decree) that the E220 National Caramel set is likely the rare exception. Brian |
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Brian, thanks for providing all this info re the 3 different backs backs that are found on the E220 cards, which I never knew. I'm trying to achieve a master set of Sam Rice's cards, and the only E220 card of Rice (shown below) I have is the more common Type 1. If anyone has a Type 2 or Type 3 card they are willing to part with, I'll be most appreciative. It is interesting that this card says Rice is a 3rd baseman - I don't believe he ever played this position.
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Nice info guys!
E220s from my last collection.. (scans are messed up, cards are the same size ) https://luckeycards.com/pe220.jpg |
The E220 Jim Bagby card has my all-time favorite misspelling of a player's name.
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1921-22 . E220 National Caramel
Great thread with good info, thanks for putting it out there. Love the image and rarity of the issue.
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I decided to break down the total number of backs of the E220 Babe Ruth's using VCP as a my resource. This was very easy to do since the card has very few compiled previous sales due to its scarcity. Only the cards where the back images could be confirmed were used in the totals.
Breakdown by Back Type for the E220 Babe Ruth: Type 1-SGC 7, PSA 5=12 total Type 2-zero (which is inline with the list provided above) Type 3-SGC 3, PSA 3=6 total The type 3 back vs the type 1 back for the Ruth card shows the Type 3 back is 50% rarer than the Type 1 back. Further validates that the Type 3 cards are much rarer, especially in the case of Ruth. |
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I'll add this one I just picked up today.
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Great set! Here's my best 2:
This is actually the 3rd different Ruth I've owned from the set, I've had an Auth and a Grade 1 that weren't nearly as nice as this one! It's an awfully tough card to find in any type of halfway decent shape!! |
1921-22 . E220 National Caramel
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I noticed that as well when I was looking at all the vcp images of this card that have sold in the past. Most are not very nice and almost all are badly off centered or have other issues. That being said the image is vintage Ruth at his finest and not seen on a lot of other cards like the throwing pose, making it that much more special and helps make up for the condition issues. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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This is one of my favorite cards. I love the pose and it is special because it once belonged to my good friend John Esch.
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OMG that's a nice E220 Ruth. Nearly impossible to find like that
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About 10 years ago I got an email from a garbage man who found a bunch of E121s in a notebook that someone threw out in the trash. I guess he got my email from the OBC site. I bought the cards from him and they all soaked off easy peasy. Turns out some where E220's which I then started.
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Back upside down as you hold the card horizontally on the front.
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Wow
Looking back on this thread I put a post from Sept 2021 that I should start looking and get me one Thanks to National I was able to ( as you saw on the National update post) almost a year later but mission accomplished |
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One of my favs!
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Not quite sure why I bought this one, but here's mine.
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My type card, a centered Earl
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