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#1
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Posted By: jay behrens
Figured this topic hasn't seen the light of day in a long time. With all the new people on the board, it's good way for them to get to know everyone better and meshes nicely with the cards from when you were a kid thread. |
#2
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Posted By: Chad
a neighbor gave to me when I was a kid growing up in Hayward, CA. Just have always been fascinated with the cards, the way they look, and the fabric of the game's history they represent. The first vintage cards I bought was the Tinker-Evers-Chance infield with Steinfeldt thrown in as a sweetener. Got 'em when I was 13 or so. Still love those cards along with teh Mathewson T206 I got for Christmas that year. I'm getting back into it now after years away from the hobby with a focus on T206's and cards of Negro Leaguers issued in Latin America. Recently won a Martin Dihigo Felices card at Ryan Cristoff's auction and I'm still giddy about it. |
#3
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Posted By: john/z28jd
As far back as i can remember i was always into baseball history.My dad and grandfather being big baseball fans i heard alot about the past players.I went to the hall of fame when i was 6 and on the ride home i read the yearbook from cover to cover,and there were pictures of vintage cards in it.When i was 9 the card i wanted most was the Ewing/Mascot card.I was a big fan of catchers,loved Carlton Fisk,hated any other catcher who did good(Lance Parrish,Gary Carter,etc),and read about the old catchers,so Ewing was a favorite far back.I was also a big fan of Wee Willie Keeler and Home Run Baker when i was a kid but probably because of their nicknames.I had a made-up baseball team from when i was 7 but i used both of their names on the team eventho all the other names were originals |
#4
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
when I was 6 years old. Then, in the Second Grade, I checked out a couple of Baseball Card books in the school library and fell in love with the old T and E cards pictured in it. My other favorites from the pictures I can still remember - 1933 Goudey Ruth #181, 1938 DiMaggio #274 Heads Up with Cartoons and a 1933 Delong Pepper Martin Horizontal! |
#5
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Posted By: Rob
From realizing the fact that today's cards are all garbage. |
#6
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Posted By: ted
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#7
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Posted By: Adam J. Moraine
What got me into vintage cards were the fact that during the "vintage days" of our hobby, ballplayers played for the love of our game(i.e.Matty), and not multi-million dollar contracts (i.e. A-Rod). |
#8
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Posted By: leon
It was Smiling Dave |
#9
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Posted By: Bill Stone
In 1954 I was playing little league baseball in Burbank, California when I met Dale Long of the Hollywood Stars. The team was appearing at a little league ballpark and I got his autograph which I still have today. From that moment on he became my favorite player --I got his 1955 Topps card and was hooked. Years later we corresponded and he sent me a number of interesting items including a letter on Hollywood Stars stationary dated November 5, 1955 from Bobby Bragan to Dale Long saying how Bragan was looking forward to managing the Pirates in 1956. Dale Long added a note saying Bragan had been named manager and the letter was a response to one he sent Bragan. When Dale Long hit 8 homeruns in 8 games in May of 1956 I was the only little 10 year old boy who thought he was the next Babe Ruth.!! Years later I was moved to Kentucky and discovered the T210 Series 6 cards featuring the players of the Blue Grass League --my research has only increased my goal of acquiring all the Frankfort players ( or at least a scan of the cards in the meantime ) . As far as I am concerned 1955 and 1910 are the best years for baseball cards !!! |
#10
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Posted By: hrbaker
When I was 8 years old I began collecting by buying 1967 Topps in grocery tray packs (6 for .25). I bought them to find all of the Cardinals never acquiring the high number SP Mike Shannon until 1988 to finish the set. A client of my father noticed that I collected because I always had a stack with a rubber band around them when I stopped by his office on the way home from school for some ice cream money. One day the man told me that he had some cards from when he was a kid and if he could find them I could have them. Sometime later my dad came home from work with a cigar box full of 1954 and 55 Topps. I was hooked. I started asking kids at school if they had any cards I could buy or trade GI Joes and comic books for and that is how my collection started. My first card show was in Memphis in 1982. My first pre-war card bought was a 1939 Playball Gehringer bought out of SCD in 1989 from Kevin Savage. My favorite card is a PSA7 E95 Cobb. I have been collecting ever since. It took me appx. 20 years to complete the 54 and 55 Topps sets from the stake given to me. What a great hobby! |
#11
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Posted By: T206Collector
Although I had a couple of T206 cards circa 1997, and had owned an E-card of Bender once upon a time, and have owned a 1933 Lefty Grove since 1989, I became a really serious collector of T206 cards when I discovered I could find them easily and affordably on ebay in 1999. I never would be where I am (about 10 cards from completion) without eBay. |
#12
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Posted By: steve k
I've already got a nice 50s and 60s collection. Been working on the 52 Topps set - long way to go. Just simply wanted to go further back as of course these cards are quite interesting. If I ever want to go even further back, I'll start collecting Greek and Roman gladiator cards - LOL. |
#13
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Posted By: warshawlaw
What I do remember is seeing Topps cards of the early 1950s, which had to be when I was about 8 or 9 years old (so, 1973-74, when Topps was issuing a couple of the blandest sets ever), and thinking that there is no way cards could be that great looking. That hooked me. |
#14
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Posted By: quan
came over here in '87, started reading up about early baseball history (cobb, speaker, young, etc) when i was in jr. high in '89 '90. Started collecting modern stuff around that time. stopped collecting while i was in college. thanks to ebay got back into collecting and bought my first vintage card in 2001. From there I discovered Pete C's caramel website and has been hooked ever since. |
#15
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Posted By: Richard
I am a recent vintage collector. My first real vintage card was a 1957 Brooks Robinson - one of the most beautiful sets in my opinion. I bought it about 3 years ago and couldn't keep my eyes off of it. It is the sole reason why both my friend and I started collecting vintage (baseball, basketball and football). Prior to me getting the Robinson, it was all about the lowest numbered shiny card out of Upper Deck SP Authentic. |
#16
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Posted By: Wesley
It was BCD who got me hooked on prewar cards. Brian used to email me scan after scan of cards he would tell me I could never afford. The cards were so beautiful that I thought even if I could own lesser condition ones, I would be extremely happy. |
#17
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Posted By: Anonymous
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#18
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Posted By: brian p
I have been collecting bb cards since I were a wee lad--my mom would bribe me into making a grocery run for misc. food items by saying I could buy a pack of cards. My first vintage cards were the ones my oldest brother collected in the late 50's to early 60's and passed on to me and my other brother. Living in family that not only liked to collect just about everything, but was also into antiques probably early on gave me an appreciation for old things. Coupled with a passion for the sport of baseball and its history, I was destined to collect the old stuff. My first baseball card show that I went to, in 1981, I purchased my first Pre-WW2 cards (at the first table inside the door): a T206 Matty dark cap, a T206 W. Johnson pitching, a T205 Breshnahan, a T205 Wheat (Broadleaf), and a E98 Cy Young, all for $11.00. That was all the collecting money I had brought. They are in about F-G condition (still got them all), and that set the tone for my future low grade collecting... |
#19
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
When I was a kid I collected modern cards, but I didn't just collect, I hoarded them. It wasn't until my dad convinced me that I was wasting my money on the new stuff that I had a change of heart. My dad gave me three Old Judge cards that he had found in an old scrapbook album that he acquired at an auction. One of them was Dan Brouthers and when I looked him up in the price guide I noticed the HoF notation next to his name and it picqued my curiosity to learn more about him. I didn't really start to collect the cards at that point, but I started getting into stratomatic games with friends using the oldtime players which led to more research. I joined SABR and the rest is history. |
#20
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Posted By: pete
For me back in '85 my brother told me to look through my fairly big collection of modern baseball cards for an '84 Donruss of Don Mattingly, it was worth $5 at the time and I had 4 of them...he told me to hold onto them because he was going to be big some day and his cards would be worth big $....well, I got hooked on some of the '80s junk until one day I was at this place called "Boardwalk and Baseball" in Orlando, Fl (I think) I remember walking through a MINI-HALL OF FAME and watching a minor league KC Royals game, then I saw it...a Rookie of Mickey Mantle the '52 Topps I read so much about, I had to have it...It was priced in the Beckett at $5995.00 and it was worth every penny, probably an 8 or better...I immediately called my brother back here in California and told him to wire me $3000...he told me I was crazy, I was willing to sell my '85 Toyota MR2 to buy this card... |
#21
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Posted By: Damian
I have been a huge baseball fan since I was about 7 when my family moved to Atlanta and I became a Dale Murphy and Brave fanatic. I collected cards for fun until I bought a baseball card collecting kit at a book fair at school in 5th grade. In that kit was a price guide and I was hooked. I used this guide to price a couple of my friends father's 50's and 60's cards and was hooked. My first vintage acquisition was a Clemente rookie that I bought for .50 at an antique show. My step dad was visiting with a coin dealer while I was checking around for card dealers. I strolled up to them to tell my step dad I was ready to go, and the coin guy sees my card binder in hand and whips out the Clemente(no case, sleeve, or protection and in poor condition). Tells me its mine for fifty cents. I was estatic and have been a huge Clemente fan ever since. Needless to say I was now really hooked on vintage stuff. I have collected on and off until about 2 years ago, I really got hooked again through ebay. While having almost always collected 50's and 60's, I never really gave much thought to pre-war cards until about 3 or 4 months ago. I don't know, its like I caught a disease or something. Especially the more mainstream stuff T206, Goudeys, CJ's. There is just a magic in these little cards that make me appreciate the history and culture of the game I love so much. Mark Peavey told me about this forum and I love it. This is a great thread. Thanks Jay. Keep em coming folks. |
#22
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Posted By: JimB
I started collecting cards out of packs in 1975. When I got to junior high in 1979 I met some guys who collected older cards and went to shows with their fathers. I remember trading for a 1960 Yogi Berra around that time from one of them. It floored me to own a card that was that old. Then I started going to shows and spending all of my allowance on baseball cards. I was mostly collecting '50s and '60s cards then, but eventually came across T206s at a card shop in the San Fernando Valley. Like Quan I was reading a lot about the real old-timers and had heard about tobacco cards, but I will never forget the feeling when I saw an actual TY COBB tobacco card in person. I traded the show half my collection for that card which he was asking $90 for at the time. That was my first pre-War card and of course my first T206. I just completed the T206 set in December, so it only took about 25 years. |
#23
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Posted By: Julie Vognar
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#24
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Posted By: FatBoy
A hunting friend of my dad's who knew I collected baseball cards (this was in the late 60s) had around 50 T206s (including 2 Cobbs) that were his dad's in a desk drawer at home. He brought them with him and gave them to me on one of our hunting trips to the cabin when I was about 14. |
#25
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Posted By: Identify7
I guess it was mainly my father who got me interested in prewar players. When Id mention Musial, he'd counter with Speaker; Feller was "refuted" by the Big Train, etc. Although he had the initial advantage of being born in the teens, I tried to catch up. |
#26
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Posted By: Glenn
I read an article a few years ago about Hall of Famers who don't really belong in Cooperstown, and one of the players mentioned was somebody I'd never heard of before -- Rabbit Maranville. So I looked him up on ebay and found out, to my surprise, that one could buy a 1933 Goudey Hall of Famer for under $100. I was surprised, I think, because I had just plunked down about $100 for a '97 Bowman Chrome Kerry Wood on the chance that he might someday join the Hall. So I guess I have Rabbit Maranville to thank, and the Baseball Writers. |
#27
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Posted By: Josh K.
Glenn, |
#28
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Posted By: Richard Lloyd
Colledted cards as a kid and still have many(late 60's-early 70's) then in early 90's collected NEW cards!!! Hit my head against the wall and figured out I was buying NEW cards that looked OLD and finally said what the HELL am I doing!!!! THEN I figured out EBAY and have not looked back since!!!!! |
#29
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Posted By: will watson
from before i could ride a bike until 2002, i collected only modern cards. i had little interest in vintage. i started to get out of the hobby around summer of 02 for a few reasons: i was in college, drinking and womanizing way too much, and most importantly i was getting sick and tired of overproduced modern junk. its no fun buying a $100 box, and pulling a jersey card that i might get $10 for on ebay. i know collecting should be about having fun, but the idea of getting a 10% return on your investment if you ever did sell was disheartening. |
#30
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Posted By: Dave Williams
I love history, and bought an old scrapbook at an estate sale in the 70's with newspaper clippings, photos, etc... from the 30's and 40's about mainly baseball, but also Notre Dame football. I also got some old baseball registers from the 50's at that sale. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
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