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#1
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Posted By: barrysloate
There are certain hobby rarities that hold a particular curiosity for me. Two that fall under this category are Kalamazoo Bats Giants players and Tango Brand Eggs. |
#2
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Posted By: Brian C.
Barry, another example of your point in what I collect is the 1913 Cleveland Schedule postcard series. All the ones I've seen are addressed to someone at Sherwin Williams. Most unusual. (By the way, if anyone has any for sale, please contact me!) |
#3
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Posted By: David Smith
Barry, what about the 1928 Star Player Candy cards? |
#4
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Posted By: leon
I bought and sold a small group of about 11 SPC baseball cards at the last National. There were 3-4 HOF'ers in the lot.....They were sold to a board member that keeps sort of a low profile...My guess is there might be 100-200 known but at least that many not known about, to most internet savy collectors....that's just a swag guess though.......regards |
#5
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Posted By: Jerry
Althought all known were not found in one place, the find of S81 Mathewson's has made it quite abit more common than the other players in the set. |
#6
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Posted By: barrysloate
I recognize my two examples were just that, and not the only issues where an entire population came form one source. But getting back to the Tango Eggs, what set of circumstances led to all of them descending from one family, and why is it that nobody else had even a single example? I have no explanation for it. What if somewhere along the way that family threw out their hoard? Then the set would never have been known. |
#7
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Posted By: Dave Hornish
I always wondered about the Tango Egg cards and thought it strange how they popped up all at once. Presumably the cardboard dates properly etc. so it's a matter of how the hoard survived. I found Mr Mint's ad from 1992 in SCD in my vertical files and it mentions quantities of 5-12 cards each of 13 different players. Maybe it was a box of salesman's samples? Lew Lipset confirmed these quantities for the most part in TOJ #44 and notes Sotheby's might have bought many of them. My trail goes cold after that. Maybe David Kohler knows? |
#8
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
I'm fascinated with E121 Herpolsheimers for much the same reason, Barry. |
#9
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Posted By: Patrick McMenemy
Has anyone ever scene documentation that Tango Eggs even exists? Perhaps the Tango Eggs cards were nothing more than a salesman's sample of how one could advertise your company's product with these baseball player's images on the front. Another possible explanation on how all the cards could be found from as single source might be that the cards were created, and Tango Eggs never paid for the final product, so the printer simply kept the cards. |
#10
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Posted By: Bruce Babcock
Barry, I'm trying to remember the full Tango story. Brian Daniels is one of the experts on this issue. Doug Allen also. But as I recall the hoard was found in Louisiana, where the Tango Egg company was based. There have been a very few cards show up which were not part of the hoard, and they were all in "circulated" condition - vg-ish or worse. The cards from the hoard were mostly pristine uncirculated cards. Maybe the family that owed the company thought that the cards might be a good promotional idea but the company was already in such dire straits that they went out of business before most of the cards were distributed. Then a family member kept the remaining cards. Or, possibly Tango Eggs never existed and the cards we see are some kind of salesmen samples produced to show a prospective customer, using a company fictitious name. Or the Tango folks never paid the printer so the printing company kept the cards. I remember one of our NET 54 colleagues mentioning both of these possibilities in previous posts. But we will probably never know why there are so many Beschers and Jennings and so few of some of the others. 1-2 Cobbs and Wagners, 4 Bresnahans, etc. out of 700+ total cards. I think that all of the poses are also found in other candy and bread issues, although why Weaver and others are misidentified remains a mystery. |
#11
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
Nevermind....Bruce posted the story while I was typing. |
#12
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Posted By: barrysloate
Bruce- several of your theories are good, and to some extent speculation. One thing I will say is the cards are well made- every bit the same quality as standard E-cards, with likenesses that exactly duplicate other sets of the day. The appearance was awfully good, and if they were samples not meant for circulation they certainly didn't scrimp on the printing costs. |
#13
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Posted By: Bruce Babcock
I think I remember hearing that most of the SPC cards have been found in Michigan. I bought a group of 5-6 a few years ago from Superior in Michigan. I realize that just because the auction house was in Michigan doesn't mean the consigner found the cards in Michigan but it is interesting. Unlike the Tangos, the SPC cards are blank backed, so we have even less to go on. |
#14
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Posted By: barrysloate
I just got an interesting phone call and email from Rob Lifson. Rob has in his upcoming auction 16 of the 18 known Tango Eggs players, which is in fact the #1 set on the PSA registry. It also comes with letters from the family who owned the original cards. Apparently, over time there have been errors made regarding which cards actually exist, and Rob feels there are related errors in the checklist, so much so that he is offering a reward of $100,000 to anybody who can come up with the following: examples of Wagner and Tinker, and the other two known examples of Morgan and Felsch. Now, before anyone goes to collect the reward, I'm not sure if you have to produce all the examples or just one. But he is stating that none of these actually exist. He emailed the catalog description and it is quite compelling. |
#15
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Posted By: RobertEdwardAuctions
I just thought I should clarify that while Barry is correct that REA is offering a reward for these cards to be verified, we do not state that these cards do not exist. We do state that it is possible that they do exist. |
#16
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Posted By: barrysloate
Rob- my apologies, I was writing from memory without the text in front of me. I don't want you to have to pay out that reward due to my own error of transcription. |
#17
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Posted By: bruce Dorskind
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#18
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Posted By: barrysloate
For the record, it was 1998 and I had six examples. And the winner of five of them was from Florida, although that is immaterial. |
#19
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Posted By: Dylan
Likely that cards from only one group were produced and never distributed, so it makes me wonder what other sets were produced and never distributed and trashed that we'll never know about. |
#20
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Posted By: David Smith
So, the sets most talked about so far; Tango Eggs (Louisiana), Star Player Candy (Upper Miswest) and Just So (Cleveland) are Regional issues at best and possibly just test issues. |
#21
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Posted By: barrysloate
I would guess the N690 Giants were distributed in New York, and I agree Leon's T231 is one of the strangest cards in the hobby. It is so rare that I don't know what to make of it (other than it is very valuable). |
#22
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Posted By: Phil Garry
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#23
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Posted By: Joe D.
I think it is on-topic to ask the question here as well.... |
#24
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Posted By: barrysloate
Those are the mysteries we don't understand. Why did the Tango Egg find have one Cobb and a hundred Beschers? |
#25
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Posted By: Wesley
Has anyone here seen the Tango Egg Cobb or a photo of that card? |
#26
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Posted By: peter ullman
i'd gues a tango egg cobb would have the leaning on bat pose? I believe BCD has 1 or 2 of them? |
#27
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Posted By: barrysloate
He might have one, but he doesn't have two -it's unique. |
#28
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Posted By: Bruce Babcock
I imagine Brian Daniels will be joining this discussion soon. I think I remember him saying that there are two different Tango Cobbs. |
#29
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Posted By: Wesley
Has anyone here seen the Tango Cobb card? I am just curious whether it is the leaning on bat pose of the side E90-1 pose or some other pose. |
#30
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Posted By: peter ullman
aaaah...i erred...i might have remembered 2 poses...if that's true! |
#31
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Posted By: boxingcardman
A lot of card issues that were promos were issued in waves so that customers would come back. Others were event-driven; the card advertised or was given out at a special event. Perhaps some cards were issued as part of promotions like that and the remaining cards were leftovers, which creates a surplus of certain cards now. Or perhaps there was a redemption or prize associated with the issue and certain cards were shorted to prevent the prize from being won. |
#32
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
It is NOT Brian Daniels like he has stated and led others to believe. I guess that is why he NEVER responded to this thread - as he is really like the rest of us - has NO idea as to the exact numbers of each player in the find. Goes back to the old adage - "don't believe anything you hear and only half of what you see". |
#33
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Posted By: peter chao
Guys, |
#34
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Posted By: barrysloate
Peter- you know what they say: |
#35
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Posted By: Judson Hamlin
A Cobb in hand is worth 100 in Bescher? |
#36
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Posted By: Dylan
So all this time BCD was lying about being the original purchaser of the Tango eggs find... pretty low |
#37
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Posted By: Mark
On the one occassion I met BCD in person, he told me and Bill Cornell in great detail about buying the Tango Eggs horde in New Orleans. |
#38
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Posted By: Jon Canfield
I don't know BCD at all and not trying to defend him, but I did notice that the letter dicusses finding the cards in 1993, and then selling the majority to a major dealer (I assume Rosen) and then Doug Allen acted as agent for selling the rest. In fact, the letter is dated 1995. Isn't it possible that BCD purchased some cards sometime between 1993 and 1995, or even after Allen started acting as agent? Maybe I'm wrong, but it appears from the checks that the purchaser only bought the 16 now up for auction. The other thing I find interesting, too, is that the letter is written and dated January of 1995, yet the checks for the 16 cards are dated May of 1995. I wonder who actually requested the letter be written? Was it Allen, or was it a different purchaser, and then a copy was given with each subsequent sale of the cards? |
#39
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
They range from being in the UFC to owning a Drum Cobb and everything in between. |
#40
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Posted By: Steve M.
UFC? |
#41
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Posted By: Brad
croftscocoa, |
#42
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
There have been several lies written on here over the years by various parties! I would love to have that $10 Million to bid in REA and Mastro! |
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