![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
#1
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
In the wake of the autographed T206 scandal uncovered by our own Net54 investigative team, I have spent a good two months researching the sources of authentic autographed pre-war cards back as far as possible. There is good reason to be suspicious with any autograph you did not get in person. I do think it is up to every autograph collector to do what he can to educate himself before collecting autographs. Forgeries have always been part of the autograph hobby, at least from the first time someone witnessed a collector spending money on an autograph he didn’t get in person. It is why so many do not collect autographs of deceased folks and do not understand why anyone in their right mind would.
This March 1968 Article by Mike Bondarenko in the Sports Collectors News shows that baseball autograph collectors have been very concerned about forgery in our hobby for at least the past 50 years: ![]() ![]() A lot of suspicion with respect to the current signed pre-ward scandal is driven by the experience of hobbyists, most or whom never even heard of or saw authentic signed pre-war cards being discussed in any public hobby magazine or forum until the last 10 or 15 years. So, with a lot of help from Net54 Hobby Historian David Kathman (Net54: trdcrdkid), I have been reviewing a number of old hobby publications from the 1950s and 60s to try to uncover some evidence of their existence. A large part of my collection comes either directly or indirectly from Jeff Morey. I was able to interview Jeff in 2007 (you can listen to that interview on my website), and he and I have been hobby friends ever since. In this respect, I was very happy to find a summary of Jeff’s collection in the March 1968 Sports Collectors Journal, in which Jeff stated that among his “most valuable items” were “some 1910 old baseball cards autographed by such men as Sam Crawford, Tris Speaker, Ty Cobb, and Napolian Lajoie.” ![]() Somehow more exciting was finding Jeff attempting to sell autographed tobacco cards as early as 1968. In the January 1968 issue of Sports Trader, you can see Jeff offering “1910 era cig cards – Carrigan – signed on back” and “wahoo Sam Crawford – 2 diff, each $2.00 – signed on picture”: ![]() And then again, in the July 1969 Sports Trader, Jeff offered "1910 T205 White Border Cigarette Cards signed" by Sam Crawford, Bill Carrigan, Eddie Cicotte, Lefty Leifield, and Fred Snodgrass: ![]() I recently asked Jeff whether he recalled selling these signed tobacco cards, and he said “no- think they stayed with me a bit – even back then many did not understand The fun of signed BB cards.” I actually think they remained unsold until Jeff sold his entire collection through Mastro in 2001. As hard as it is to imagine, but while there may not have been much of a supply of signed pre-war cards prior to 10 or 15 years ago, interest in them was not particularly high either. So many of the first group of signed T206 cards I began picking up in 2004 were available for about $100, some for under that. It was not until about 2008 or later that prices started to pick up, and more surfaced – some due to forgery in response to the exorbitant prices being realized. As an aside, where did Jeff get all of these old baseball cards to get autographed? From fellow collectors, of course. In fact, in the April/May 1957 issue of Sport Hobbyist, Jeff placed a classified ad seeking T202 and T205s, among other cards, both kinds of which he was able to get signed. ![]() But Jeff was not even close to the only collector who thought that getting pre-war cards signed was a good idea. Mark Jordan, currently Consignment Director, Sports, at Heritage Auctions, also was a collector of signed pre-war cards. Mark wrote an article called “News and Views on Collecting” in the August 1971 issue of Sports Trader. As you can see below, Mark wrote: “Incidentally, I have 1,000 autographed baseball cards, including Glendale Meats of Sullivan and some coupon cigarettes with blue lettering.” ![]() That’s right, Mark was talking about autographed T213-2s! I’ve never seen a signed T213-2 before, and while Jordan recently confirmed for me that he did indeed write this article, he was not able to confirm what he had in his collection over 45 years ago, or where they might be today. And if you were lucky enough to carefully read page 29 of the February 1976 issue of The Trader Speaks, you could have walked away with an autographed Fred Snodgrass T206 card -- WITH A HINDU BACK -- for $3.00!! I have emailed Dan Dischley to see if he still has it available, and I would pay 3,000 times that today. ![]() One thing I have definitely learned from all of this is to preserve the provenance. For years, once the TPA put the signed card in the case, the value of provenance was significantly diminished. The card once entombed was supposedly forever authentic just because a TPA said so. Who needs the letter from Fred Snodgrass to hobby legend John D. Wagner enclosing a “cigarette photo card with my autograph”: ![]() Or Doc Steen’s correspondence with Bill Carrigan asking to have his M101-2 Sporting News Supplement signed: ![]() Auction houses have been separating letters from cards, and throwing the envelopes into even another lot because they can sell the envelope as a separate autograph since the player wrote his last name in the return address. The 2018 Steiner "Spring Fever" Auction (May 6, 2018) had four signed T206 cards in it from a wonderfully large through the mail collection. Steiner broke the entire collection up and failed to share the evidence of where the cards were obtained, by whom, and how. Did you know, for example, that the baseball address list that the collector used to find his ballplayers was also included deep in the auction, as just a random, soulless vintage baseball player address list? http://auction.steinersports.com/lot-104975.aspx There was space for a “description” like “This is how our consignor of hundreds of TTM autographs found his players” but instead it was left appallingly blank. With the help of some additional information Steiner provided to me, I spent several hours combing through two different Steiner Auctions to piece back together the fabric and soul of this collection, which by the way happened to include four signed T206 cards: Lot 17 (Doc White T206) https://auction.steinersports.com/19...LOT104527.aspx Lot 18 (Sam Crawford T206): https://auction.steinersports.com/19...lot104524.aspx Lot 19 (Flick T206) https://auction.steinersports.com/19...lot104525.aspx Lot 20 (Snodgrass T206) https://auction.steinersports.com/19...lot104526.aspx The Lot #17, Doc White, Lot 18 Sam Crawford, Lot 19 Elmer Flick and Lot 20 Fred Snodgrass in this auction all came from a same private collection of a retired attorney in his mid-70s named Tom Marsilio. How do I know that? Because the owner of these cards was primarily a 3x5" index card collector, and the auction sold several of his cards where the players wrote "To/Dear Tom Marsilio". In fact, Steiner sold a collection of over 200 signed index cards that he collected from the mid-1950s to early 1960s. The signed T206 cards were probably gotten around 1966, which is when Crawford dated his. A majority of the lower end 3x5” index cards form this collection were also sold in lot 237 of the 2018 Spring Fever Auction: https://auction.steinersports.com/Lo...LOT104747.aspx Additional signed items from this collection that also sold in the Spring Fever Auction were lots: 276 (“Marquard Letter”) https://auction.steinersports.com/Ru...LOT104783.aspx 294 (“Hubbell Grove Plaque”) https://auction.steinersports.com/Ca...LOT104802.aspx 295 (“Lajoie 3x5”) https://auction.steinersports.com/La...LOT104803.aspx 296 (“Stengel”) https://auction.steinersports.com/La...LOT104803.aspx 299 (“Robinson”) https://auction.steinersports.com/Ja...LOT104807.aspx The consigner additionally had an index card signed by Fred Snodgrass that was sold in Steiner's April 29, 2018 Auction in lot 310 https://auction.steinersports.com/Lo...ntoryid=106756 ...and Elmer Flick (again with the date 1966 - perhaps it was included with the Flick T206) in lot 320 https://auction.steinersports.com/El...lot106766.aspx Lots 286-326 in the April 29 auction all came from this collection as well, including: 286 (Peckinpaugh 3x5) https://auction.steinersports.com/Ro...lot106732.aspx 313 & 323 (Roush 3x5) https://auction.steinersports.com/Ed...lot106759.aspx https://auction.steinersports.com/Ed...lot106769.aspx 315 & 326 (Marquard 3x5) https://auction.steinersports.com/Ru...lot106761.aspx https://auction.steinersports.com/Ru...lot106772.aspx When the TPAs cannot to be trusted – and frankly, even if they’re doing their level best – it is information like this which provides the corroborative or circumstantial evidence of authenticity -- the "provenance" we crave when taking that leap of faith and purchasing a wonderful little autographed piece of cardboard.
__________________
Galleries and Articles about T206 Player Autographs www.SignedT206.com www.instagram.com/signedT206/ @SignedT206 Last edited by T206Collector; 02-11-2019 at 10:49 AM. |
#2
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
Great stuff, Paul! I'm glad I could help you out by sending the articles, but you've been able to put together a lot of pieces that I never would have been able to do.
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
A long-time friend of mine, Michael Mangasarian, used to travel around the country, back in the 1970's, getting autographs on T206 cards. Michael (who organized this past weekend's Cranston Sports Collectors show), loved baseball books and I'm blanking on the name of it, but one of the famous books at the time was one that gathered oldtime player's playing day recollections.
Michael also loved oldtime baseball and decided he was going to write a similar book featuring lesser known players who had played in the deadball era and were still alive. So, he would travel all over the country with his T206 collection and a tape recorder and interview any old player who would talk to him. At the same time, he would get the player to autograph his card. Back in the late '70's, Michael probably had 300 or so autographed T206s, all autographed right in front of him while he was interviewing the player. Sometime around 1980, Michael was checking into a hotel in New York City, I believe, on the way to see more players, and someone broke into his car and stole his entire collection of autographed and unautographed T206s. That kind of ripped his heart out and he gave up on his project. None of the cards were ever recovered. I sometimes wonder if some of the autographed T206s out there are remnants from Michael's collection... |
#4
|
||||
|
||||
![]() Quote:
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
YES! That was it.
|
#6
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
Solid background. Nice article.
__________________
-- PWCC: The Fish Stinks From the Head PSA: Regularly Get Cheated BGS: Can't detect trimming on modern SGC: Closed auto authentication business JSA: Approved same T206 Autos before SGC Oh, what a difference a year makes. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Excellent work Paul, that was great to read.
...and I'm still waiting for a thank you for sending you that Gutierrez Morey catalog ![]() I'm only kidding. I hope its been helpful for you. |
#8
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
This was a great read. Great work Paul and all who helped you with putting this together.
__________________
I'm always looking for t206's with purple numbers stamped on the back like the one in my avatar. The Great T206 Back Stamp Project: Click Here My Online Trading Site: Click Here Member of OBC (Old Baseball Cards), the longest running on-line collecting club www.oldbaseball.com My Humble Blog: Click Here |
#9
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
Interesting write up, thanks!!
__________________
Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
![]() |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Old newspaper sources? | Mountaineer1999 | Watercooler Talk- ALL sports talk | 4 | 04-22-2018 11:46 AM |
Letter documenting Penn State vs. Michigan St. | Filthy | Football Cards Forum | 6 | 03-21-2016 09:39 PM |
Minnie Minoso....documenting time and place | kmac32 | Autograph Forum- Primarily Sports | 4 | 02-02-2013 09:32 PM |
Question regarding OLD JUDGE & GOODWIN cards' sources ? | tedzan | Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions | 17 | 05-22-2010 03:42 PM |
Looking for sources | Archive | Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions | 1 | 09-20-2008 06:17 PM |