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#1
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Posted By: Bruce Babcock
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#2
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Posted By: Mark Macrae
Bruce.... You are correct on Buck Barker's notations. They refer to the collector he acquired them from & the year it was acquired in. I've owned a few thousand of 'his' cards over the years. From what I understand, Buck used to do most of his player research at the Sporting News archive in St Louis. It is standard practice in doing archival research that "pencil" be used over pen, primarily to prevent permanent ink damage to the paper. Looking at the backs of many of Buck's cards, you'll also find his 'shorthand' which indicates the teams / years the player was active and statistics in many cases. It is very likely that Buck took the actual cards with him into the research room (normally only a notebook & single pencil are permitted) and copied this info directly onto the cards.... While some modern collectors may cringe at the thought, Barker was among the most active baseball card researchers in his day, establishing the data that virtually everyone takes for granted in modern checklists (First names particularly). From my experience in handling his cards, more than 75% of his notations were done in pencil. |
#3
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Posted By: Scot York
A different back. |
#4
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Posted By: Bruce Babcock
Thanks, Mark. How it cool to have handled so many cards owned by Buck. |
#5
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Posted By: Bob
Mark- Buck seemed to have done a lot of "notating" on the backs of his Obaks in pen. I "upgraded" several of these before I realized what I was doing and so kept a few. On the Obaks he sometimes used every available free space and really hen-scratched them. |
#6
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Posted By: brian p
I have a couple of favorite Barker cards. The first is a mid 20's Zeenut whose reverse has a very colorful 'wet-transfer' strip card-like image of James Cagney. There is about 1/4" border surrounding this image on all sides, and this is where Mr. Barker filled completely with notes on the player on the front of the card. |
#7
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Posted By: Jay
Bruce--I have an Old Judge with the handstamp that Scot has on the M101 |
#8
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Posted By: brian p
To follow up on my previous post, I checked out Becketts Almanac which lists full names of players in the Zeenut sets. In the 1925 Zeenut set, there are three cards that are only identified by the last name (as shown on the card). And sure enough, Haughy is one of them. Just shows you that in many sets, especially minor league issues such as the Zeenuts, if Buck wasn't able to find out a player's name, the player has still not been officially identified. |
#9
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Posted By: Rich Klein
Just as an FYI, no one with that last name every played in the PCL; (That is according to Carlos Bauer's PCL Encyclopedia. |
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