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#1
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Posted By: Jason W
Just wanted to share with you what I think is an exciting new baseball card discovery representing one of the two or three earliest baseball cards known to exist. This 1866 CDV baseball card, the only known specimen, features a photographic image of the famous Currier & Ives American National Game of Base Ball lithograph on the front. The reverse features an advertisement for George Gratton's "Baltimore Base Ball Emporium" on the reverse. This establishment was one of the first in the country to specialize in all products relating to baseball, including "bases, batts (sic), spikes, scores, shoes, shirts, caps, books" etc. and predates A. G Spalding & Bros. by 12 years. The Baltimore Base Ball Emporium, located on Baltimore Street east of Calvert, had its grand opening in 1866. Based on the style of the card, the year of the grand opening of the store, and the year of issue of the Currier & Ives print featured on the front, it is a virtual certainty that this advertising card dates from 1866. PSA agree with my assessment and have encapsulated & authenticated it as 1866. |
#2
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Why are you so certain that this trade card dates from 1866? I see no reason why it just as easily couldn't be from 1875 for example. The fact that PSA calls this an 1866 card should mean zero to any vintage card collector. As for the Hoboken grand match piece, I personally believe it is a ticket and not a card (nice purchase Keith |
#3
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Posted By: barrysloate
I can say many things about this, but since I am closing an auction today, I will be brief. The 1863 Harry Wright is not a baseball card and never was; it's a CdV that was used as an admission ticket to a game, and because it contained a photograph of a popular athlete (wearing his cricket garb, by the way) makes it a form of keepsake. The date of 1865 for the Jim Creighton P&S is just an estimate. And the Baltimore card, which was on ebay and didn't meet the reserve, is very exciting as it introduces a new sporting goods establishment that we had not seen before on the reverse. However, it is simply a photograph of the Currier & Ives lithograph, not a photo of any actual players or game scene. It is an interesting baseball artifact but even less a baseball card than the previous two. I know someone is going to ultimately buy this new find as a new baseball card and pay way too much for it, but people are free to do with their money as they wish. |
#4
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Posted By: leon
is still the 1868 Peck and Snyder Atlantics card. There will probably never be a definitive answer to this debate. regards all |
#5
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Posted By: Jason W
Hi Jay, |
#6
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Posted By: ramram
This kind of brings back the debate we had earlier about the business location, etc. of Peck & Snyder. I have just noticed that the advertisement in the back of the 1867 Beadle's Dime Guide is for "Andrew Peck & Co., 105 Nassau Street, N.Y.". If the Creighton CDV is attributed to "Peck & Snyder" then this would tend to place the Creighton CDV closer to the 1868 Atlantics team CDV. This would also make more logical since to me. Do we know when Snyder teamed up with Peck? |
#7
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Posted By: Jay Miller
We've already seen Bob Lemke's authentication skills with the American Memorabilia pieces. It's a pretty big leap of faith to assume that if the store was open from 1866 to 1870 that this trade card would have come from 1866. Of course, if I were the owner I would make the same arguement that you are making. BTW, wasn't Rob the person who argued that the Wright ticket was the first baseball card. As Keith Olbermann would say---"Lets play oddball". |
#8
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Posted By: ramram
Not this Rob. |
#9
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Sorry--Rob Lifson was the Rob I was referring to |
#10
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Posted By: Julie
but it is, rather, the photo FROM WHICH the Currier and Ives was taken, isn't it? |
#11
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Posted By: Jason
Jay, of course you are right and no one will ever know for sure the CDV's exact date. If you go by percentages and circumstantial evidence though, the card is more likely to be 1866 than 1870. |
#12
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Posted By: Julie
? |
#13
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Posted By: Jason
The original was painted by one of the Currier & Ives artists while attending the 1865 Grand Match for the Championship watched by over 20,000 and played between the Atlantics of Brooklyn and the Mutuals of New York, which was played on August 3, 1865. The Atlantics won, 13-12, in a five-inning rain-shortened contest. Though this is one of baseball's most famous early images, it is often misidentified as featuring what is generally recognized as the first organized baseball game played between the Knickerbockers and the New York Nine at Elysian Fields in June of 1846. |
#14
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Posted By: Jay Miller
No, Jason I don't agree. This trade card could have been produced any time. You need more proof before you call it the first baseball card. Besides, it is only by the loosest of definitions that anyone would consider this a baseball card. |
#15
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Posted By: Jason
If you can find an original currier & Ives print (at the time they called it The American National Game of Base Ball in their catalog), you have something very rare (only 3 known). One just went up for auction the other month and sold for over $80,000. |
#16
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Posted By: Jason
Jay, I am not calling this the earliest card, just one of the earliest. |
#17
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Posted By: runscott
<<A) BBBE Had it's grand opening in 1866 (card released to publicise opening?).>> |
#18
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Posted By: Jay Miller
This trade card has a photograph of a lithograph on its obverse. It just happens that the lithograph is of a baseball scene. It is really stretching things to call this a baseball card. However, this is not an exact science and you can call it whatever you like. I assume if it goes to auction it will be described as a baseball card, but then again so was the Wright ticket. Maybe Olbermann will buy this one so he can have the two first baseball cards. |
#19
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Posted By: petecld
Jason, |
#20
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Posted By: Jason
Hi Petecld, Thanks for your comments. |
#21
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Posted By: Kevin Meares
and even moreso given the claim. Thanks for sharing |
#22
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Posted By: New or Old
1) If I own the card that is being debated as one of the first baseball cards then it is "one of the first baseball cards." |
#23
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Posted By: Darren J. Duet
Good points made by most. |
#24
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Posted By: Bob VT
Darren, |
#25
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Posted By: John
I’m with Leon on the Peck & Snyder card being the first true card. However if any of the other cards were mine and up for sale in an upcoming auction, than I disagree with all of you and my cards are ultra rare proof variations and one-of-a-kind items. And I better not hear a peep out of any of you until the auction is over. |
#26
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Where is the documentation regarding the issuance of this card, other than the presence of a name on it? Before I feel comfortable with someone labeling something as the first card, I'd like to see more. |
#27
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Posted By: leon
As for it being a baseball "card" I believe the answer is "yes". I believe it is a baseball "trade" card to be more exact. And by it's own merit it is a "cdv"-trade-baseball-card, or H-unc, as I would call it. I would date it to mid 1860's to early 1870's from what I know about cards....stretching the description to anything else is well...stretching it.........my opine only.....later |
#28
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Posted By: Jason
Hi warshawlaw, please find the further info requested. |
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