Here is an early Real Photo Postcard that has intrigued me.
Ragan-PC-front-web.jpg Ragan-PC-back-web.jpg
Obviously, it has nice silvering, an undivided back that establishes a possible date range of 1901-1907, great clarity, is in great condition and states "Pat" Ragon as the player depicted.
But what is not so obvious is the backstory on the PPPC and the player. A little digging and I quickly found that Don Carlos Patrick Ragan was a ML pitcher who was born in Iowa and pitched in the Majors from 1909 to 1919.
Here are a few of his pictures and cards.
Pat Ragan - Baseball reference.jpg Ragan - Clement card.jpg
Ragan-m101-4-web.jpg Ragan T207.jpg
Ragan photo older.jpg
So a dead ringer it is, but what does the RPPC depict? Well, it is a 1905 postcard showing him a member of the Cornell College (in Iowa) baseball team. How do I know, because I found a copy of Cornell College Royal Purple yearbook and lo and behold what did I find. A story about "Pat" Ragan debuting on the 1906 squad and a team photo of him in same uniform. The previous and the next year's annuals doesn't depict of mention so the 1905 us definitive and coincides with the undivided back timeline.
Cornell-College---Royal-Purple-Yearbook-Ragan-web.jpg Cornell-College---Royal-Purple-Yearbook-web.jpg
So this a 1905 pre-rookie RPPC of the 19 year old future ML pitcher Pat Ragan at Cornell College. His claim to fame is he was the third pitcher in ML history to throw an Immaculate Inning (a 9 pitch three strikeout inning). Ragan did it in theatrical style and bat never met ball as described below in a humorous Boston Globe article.
Ragan-Immaculate.jpg
I don't know how many 1905 individual real photo postcards of future major leaguers exist, but it can't be that many. Do any of you have similar examples?