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#1
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Posted By: Dave F
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#2
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
Old Judge = Dummy Hoy |
#3
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Posted By: Chris Counts
Lonny Frey started his career in 1933 (he's in the '34 Goudey set), and as far as I can tell, he started his career earlier than any living player, so that rules out anybody from the '33 set that's still alive. Milt Gaston lived to be 100, so he very well could have been the last guy alive from the '33 set ... |
#4
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Posted By: Anonymous
The last surviving member from the 1933 Goudey set was Gus Suhr, card # 206. He passed away in his home in California a few years ago. I met him at a Piratefest several years ago. A very nice gentleman. |
#5
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Posted By: Sean
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#6
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Posted By: barrysloate
Dan- I believe you are correct that Marquard was the last living member of T206. |
#7
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
Dan, |
#8
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Posted By: T206Collector
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#9
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Posted By: Sean
neat photo Paul! Kinda creepy in a way |
#10
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Posted By: Anthony S.
Not the most flattering picture of Paddy, but Rube looks cool. |
#11
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Posted By: Steve Murray
Both Paddy and Marquard were prolific signers and their longevity explains why so many autos are available. I am reminded that Paul has my autographed T206 of Paddy which is pretty neat. I did however keep this one: |
#12
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
Livingston had black & white copies of his T206 card printed up and would sign them and send them along with mail responses. |
#13
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
I would say Chester "Red" Hoff....pictured in the T207 set....he lived to be 107 years old |
#14
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
There was also a Negro Leaguer named Si Simmons who lived to be either 111 or 112. He debuted in 1909, I believe, and languished in obscurity until he was re-discovered less than a year before his death. |
#15
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Posted By: sean
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#16
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
Oddly, I have never seen a signed example of Hoff's T207 card. You'd think there would be a nice fistfull out there. |
#17
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Posted By: Marty Ogelvie
Ted or anyone for that matter.. Does Chet Hoff appear in another other sets besides the T207?? Marty |
#18
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
Marty, the brown border tobacco cards only... 'Red' Hoff is only in |
#19
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Posted By: sean
I tried super hard to get a t207 to get signed but they were insanely hard to get in the pre ebay days. That, and I was kind a cheap too |
#20
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Posted By: Mark
Gussie Suhr died in Arizona, not California. He'd lived in the Bay Area a long time, but moved in with a relative (son) the last few years of his life........... Chet Hoff is also featured in the 1917 Zeenut set |
#21
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Posted By: Andy Cook
Are there any players alive who were pictured on a Zeenut? |
#22
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Posted By: JDRUM
I concur, Paddy was a prince of a signer. |
#23
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Posted By: Anthony S.
Dom DiMaggio is still alive (1937 Zeenut). |
#24
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
How funny is it that, 50 years from now, people will be asking the same thing about the 1987 Topps set?! |
#25
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Posted By: Mark
With the passing of Nino Bongiovanni last month, I can think of 3 off the top of my head.... Dom Dimaggio, Eddie Joost, & Billy Raimondi. There may be one or two others, but I'm not going to review 1447 files...... |
#26
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Posted By: john/z28jd
Ted,Hoff faced Cobb in his 2nd game,his first game was a relief appearance vs the Senators a week prior(the date you noted above). I've seen that wrong a few places online as well as the fact he said striking him out was his greatest thrill when in fact he said he didn't know he was pitching to Cobb at the time,he found out the next day,then he was thrilled. I find that hard to believe that not only did he have no idea Cobb was batting,but no one mentioned it to him when they handed him the ball,or even after the inning ended? Who was gonna argue with a 100 year old guy retelling a story though from almost 80 years prior |
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