Thanks for the great info, guys. Today, I added a page to my website with a description and checklist for C46.
Here's the link for anybody who'd like to see the finished product.
However, I'll copy the stuff I wrote about the set here:
Quote:
In Jefferson Burdick's American Card Catalog, the letter "C" was designated for Canadian tobacco issues, most of which were issued prior to World War One. Most of the sets included featured hockey players and general subjects, but C46 was the only major set of baseball players. The set was one of several of the era to feature minor league players. The players included in the set were in the International League, which -- as its name implies -- had teams in both the United States and Canada. Despite being a Canadian-issued set, only two of the league's eight teams were located north of the border. Teams in the league were located in Montreal and Toronto, Canada and Buffalo, Newark, Baltimore, Jersey City, Providence and Rochester. While about three-quarters of the players would make major league clubs, many are better known to collectors by virtue of appearing in the T206 and T205 sets as well.
Measuring 1 1/2" by 2 5/8" like most tobacco issues of the day, C46 cards are a little more elaborately designed than better-known sets. Resembling a plaque, the black-and-white player picture is displayed in a oval shape framed by a wooden slab complete with graphic "edges." The photo has a baseball bat designed to look as if it runs diagonally beneath the photo, with a fielder's glove at the top right and a baseball to the lower right. Below the photo is an oval-shaped "nameplate" with his last name.
Card backs are very basic compared to other tobacco issues. The player's last name appears at the top, followed by a short write-up of his accomplishments. At the very bottom of the card are the words "Baseball Stars" and the card number. One of the biggest differences from almost every other tobacco card set is the lack of any advertising for the company that issued them; this lack of identity not only gives newer collectors trouble trying to figure out what they are but also has caused some collectors to ask whether they were actually issued by Imperial Tobacco.
There are ninety cards in the set. While none of the cards is all that scarce relative to other cards in the set, there are some factors that affect completion. First, two of the players ("Iron Joe" McGinnity and Joe Kelley) are Hall of Famers. Chick Gandil would eventually become involved in the 1919 Black Sox scandal and is widely collected because of that. Other notables include Luther "Dummy" Taylor, who is often pointed out as a player whose deafness led to the practice of umpires using hand signals and Jack Dunn, who was instrumental in bringing Babe Ruth to Baltimore as a rookie a couple years later. William O'Hara and Ray Demmitt are remembered for their having difficult T206 cards. In addition to competition from specialty collectors, there is a combination that makes a C46 set a little more difficult than expected: between the age of these cards, their foreign origin and the fact that some don't often identify them correctly due to the lack of a back advertisement, they sometimes take time to show up in the marketplace. Working on the set takes a little bit of patience.
|
You'll notice there's no real talk about what cards are worth. That's because I don't bother to keep up with them. The site is meant to pass along information about the set, but there are plenty of great sites out there that can give ideas of value.
If I've goofed around and gotten something wrong, just let me know and I'll get the correction made.