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#1
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....The best gift is the one Santa gives you....
Looking to trade this Cap Anson for T206 HOF Protraits..... Willing to sell on net54 for $1200....Listed on eBay at $1500.... N162 Cap Anson (SGC 20).jpg N162 Cap Anson (SGC 20) Back.jpg Send me an eMail if interested... Regards John.... Last edited by Herpolsheimer; 12-01-2013 at 01:06 PM. Reason: Update |
#2
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I will sell the card for $1200.... PayPal / Check you pay fees and I will pay for shipped insurance....For sale on eBay for $1500 / OBO....
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#3
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Bump - Still available for Trade / Sale
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#4
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Bump....
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#5
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Email sent
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#6
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Longest bump of a for sale item I have ever seen on the board.
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__________________
Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
#7
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Cap Anson passed the magical total base total of 4500 and finished with 4592 good for 43rd of all time...i heard there was a massive countdown to that magical 4500, and people all knew what they did the day he broke that magical number..
..yeah he was 7th in all time hits but lets celebrate the total base accomplishment given the era he was in.. |
#8
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Let's not celebrate him too much -- he was singlehandedly responsible for helping to keep African-Americans out of organized professional baseball...
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#9
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Man we could also not celebrate many of the U.S. Presidents and founding fathers if want to go that route
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#10
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I don't really want to hijack this seller's thread, but there were several blacks in pro baseball until Anson personally saw fit to end it.
I would rather have an Oscar Charleston or John Heny Lloyd card in poor condition than an Anson card in gem mint. But good luck to the seller on this undeniably aesthetically beautiful card! |
#11
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#12
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I agree that there is a lot of blame to be spread, but Anson was the most respected player of his time and he set the precedent for all who followed until Rickey and Robinson.
But the N162 is still one of the nicest looking baseball cards ever produced.... |
#13
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I do celebrate him for being the ballplayer that he was. This is just PC nonsense. Thanks for the hijack! Last edited by cammb; 08-10-2016 at 06:00 AM. |
#14
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So, the notion that he had 'coattails' in persuading players and officials on other teams to do as he did is rather spurious." A lengthy 2016 essay by the same author focused on claims of Anson’s alleged influence on the most noted vote in 19th-century professional baseball in favor of segregation: a July 14, 1887 one by the high-minor International League to ban the signing of new contracts with black players; the essay showed a range of authors as not having observed the line between fact and speculation on that alleged influence.[7]
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#15
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Orlando, would you mind translating? I'm not sure if you are helping or hurting my argument....
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#16
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Its a cut and paste from wiki. I think it is pretty clear. Like many things in history, some stories become exaggerated or are wholly made up. There is no historical proof of the degree, if any, of influence Cap had on the vote. What IS undisputed is that he was a racist jerk. It is sad, but he was a product of his day. So was Ty Cobb, but I wont be getting rid of my Ty Cobb cards any time soon. I collect the images of guys who were great at baseball. I even own an OJ Simpson rookie!!!
Last edited by orly57; 08-13-2016 at 08:03 PM. |
#17
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BTW, has this card been sold yet?
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#18
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+1 |
#19
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#20
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Again, last time I'll say this: of course team owners and Landis all saw fit to maintain their "gentlemen's agreement" from the late 19th century through the mid-twentieth century. My point is that Anson, as the most powerful, respected, and visible professional baseball figure of his era, set the whole pendulum in motion and no one until Chandler, Rickey, and Robinson was willing to stop it.
Adrian Anson saying that my Chicago baseball club -- and any and all professional baseball clubs -- will not not play against any team that has an African-American player on it simply held much more weight than if some generic racist player had said the same thing. And as far as that earlier "PC nonsense" comment goes: consider yourself lucky that you were born a white male when you were, and consider yourself existentially lucky had you been born a white male a hundred years ago. Because if you weren't, and you had all the talent and skill of Ruth, Wagner, and Johnson, you would have toiled in near obscurity in the Negro Leagues. That's not political correctness -- that's reality. Perhaps it is unfair to blame one individual for institutional racism, but in my opinion, Anson used the power and privilege of his own skin color to exclude multiple generations of very deserving and gifted athletes from playing the game at the highest level, the game they loved just as much as he did. Scott |
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