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#1
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Posted By: J. McMurry
I have mostly collected autographs,but thanks to this board I recently purchased my first t206, A Mike Donlin (seated), I love the story behind Turkey Mike and it got me to wondering how common/rare is his signature? |
#2
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Posted By: sean
Hi There, |
#3
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Posted By: CS Bolay
Donlin died pretty young, if I'm thinking right...tough on any item. People didn't do signed cards much in those days. |
#4
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Posted By: Rhys
I personally know of 4 total Mike Donlin signatures in the hobby. I am sure there are a few more but that would give a rough idea of the rarity. I am sure there are several more in scrapbooks or yet to be uncovered finds and maybe evena few tucked into collection of movie actor autographs, but the rarity is probably on par with a the top 3% of all players who appear in the T206 set. |
#5
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Posted By: Tom Hufford
Here's my Mike Donlin autographed (slightly less than) 8x10, from his movie days. The T206 isn't signed - just for scale. |
#6
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
Yes, Donlin is extremely tough. I have personally never owned one. Despite his early death, I really would have thought we would have seen more of his signature out there due to his career in Hollywood and Vaudeville. He was such a headline maker in his day that the rarity of his signature actually boggles my mind. Then again, Charlie Faust apparently went on the Vaudeville circuit, and I know of nothing that survives on him, but he died nearly 20 years prior to Turkey Mike and his fame was obviously of the fleeting variety. |
#7
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Posted By: J. McMurry
thanks for all the replies, Tom that is a N-I-C-E picture! |
#8
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
Jody, |
#9
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Posted By: T206Collector
My website hosts a scan of every signed T206 card I've ever seen, including a PSA/DNA Bresnahan (d. 1944), as well as the 31 I own. I also list the names of those that I have reliably heard tale have appeared on T206 cards. |
#10
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Posted By: J. McMurry
Great site! |
#11
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
Outside of an odd T-type on very rare occasions, you only really see Goudey issues signed in fountain pen. I should amend one of my previous posts to discuss signed Goudeys. The 1933-34 sets were actually the earliest instance where I have seen evidence of signed set collecting. I'm fairly certain that many of these vintage-signed Goudeys were autographed in-person at the time (I have found more evidence of this being the case rather than these being sent through the mail, although both methods were certainly used). Some of these Goudeys were certainly signed while the players were still active, as I have seen examples of players like Johnny Welch and Earl Clark, who died only a few years following their retirements. |
#12
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Posted By: J. McMurry
Dude, |
#13
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
I should have made mention that 1938, as opposed to 1939, may be the earliest player death I recall seeing on a signed gum card ('33 Goudey Earl Clark). I've spent some time contemplating this, and am fairly certain that this is the case. I have on occasion encountered "signed" N-types, but certainly nothing genuine. Paul M. and I were discussing this some time ago. |
#14
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
Jodi, do you know how prevalent autograph collecting was in the nineteenth century? How common (or uncommon) was it for players to sign at games and such? Who was the granddaddy of baseball autograph collecting? |
#15
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
Baseball autograph collecting was nonexistent in the 1800's. Players like King Kelly who achieved living legend status hardly exist in holographic form outside of one or two examples. This is even the case for a player like Willie Keeler, who lived into the 1920's. The earliest signed items (that were collected by fans, as opposed to documents or petitions) seem to be team-signed balls and multi-signed banquet programs dating from late in the first decade of the last century. Team-signed balls from that era are of course incredibly rare. It's funny to compare the infancy of team-signed major league balls to their later Negro League counterparts. From the 1900 decade to the 1910's you will encounter many players printing their name rather than signing (many only writing their surname). I believe this to be due to the fact that these men were not accustomed to writing on a rounded surface and were approaching the task with some trepidation. You have to also take into account the value placed in legible penmanship in that era--they wanted their contributions to display presentably. Moving into the mid-late 1920's we still see a few hand-printed sigs on team balls, but the familiarity of signing these items has become such that mostly cursive signatures are featured. Fittingly, it took minor league teams a few extra years to make the same transition (likely because the players were just starting to be asked to sign baseballs and were going through the same thing as the players of the past). By the early 1930's practically everyone in the majors were signing baseballs in cursive. You'll still see examples of hand-printed signatures on minor league balls into the early 1950's, but that's where that old custom appears to have ceased. In the case of Negro League team-signed balls, the players' signatures were haphazardly strewn all over the various panels at all angles. Printing and unsteady penmanship were common. Negro League fans didn't seem to have the collecting bug, as is fully evidenced by the extreme shortage of most players' autographs. On a typical Negro League team ball, you would more often than not see a shaky signature actually following the curves of the stitching, making for an arc-shaped, convex autograph! Examples of these traits still appear on modern-day Negro League reunion balls. |
#16
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#17
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
The same person was responsible for all of the writing that is seen on your ball. I recall that you bought that item from Howard's estate or somesuch. I have only seen Howard's cursive signature, so can be of no use to you on the characteristics of his printing. |
#18
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Posted By: JC
"while the other had to have been from Cincinnati." |
#19
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Posted By: Rhys
Jodi |
#20
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
I can't say that I recall hearing Shigley's name associated with signed Goudeys, but the Cincinnati connection would certainly make sense, seeing as he was from Ohio, I believe. What strikes me as odd about that statement is that, in the 1933-34 period, Shigley was in his thirties. It would have been considered extremely odd for a grown man to ask a player to sign a gum card or autograph book in those days. Those were considered the playthings of children. 3X5s, GPCs, or baseballs would be the more "adult" items to have signed. That's what throws me off. |
#21
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
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#22
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Posted By: JC
"Those were considered the playthings of children." |
#23
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
There were very few adult collectors at that time. An adult publicly collecting autographs on gum cards in 1933 would likely have been snickered at far more so than today. |
#24
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Posted By: Anonymous
Very interesting points Jodi. I can tell you that I've all but stopped my public autograph collecting because of social perceptions. That combined with the assumption that everything ends up on ebay, and it's just not fun anymore. I still enjoy the pursuit of vintage signatures and will attend a public signing at a show. I can only imagine what the atmosphere must have been like in the thirties. |
#25
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Posted By: J. McMurry
What about the classic, "would you sign this for my kid"!? |
#26
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Posted By: CS Bolay
Interesting point, William...that's part of the reason why I've largely lost interest in pro sports in general, as well as the current-day autograph biz. |
#27
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Posted By: william
Don't even get me going on what has become of my beloved Red Sox. The constant barrage of "official" merchandise is out of control. Those of you in New England have probably seen the commercials for Wise potato chips, makers of the "Official Cheez Doodle of the Boston Red Sox". WTF??? Consider me "Officially checked out". |
#28
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
I have to agree. Outside of visits to oldtimers' homes (where the interview process was the top priority), I don't think I've requested a baseball autograph in-person for more than 10 years, perhaps longer. |
#29
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Posted By: David Atkatz
Couldn't agree more. |
#30
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Posted By: David Atkatz
Oops. Double post. |
#31
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
This is just one guy's opinion, but, unless you are a completest or die-hard fan, why on earth would you even desire a modern-day autograph? Besides being indecipherable, it's not like any player these days will ever be rare. Look at a guy like Steve Bechler, who passed away less than a year after his debut, or Dernell Stenson, for that matter, who was tragically killed the very same year in which he first set foot on the hallowed grasses of Fenway. Before their untimely deaths, these young men signed literally hundreds (if not thousands) of insert cards which can still be obtained at a nominal fee. Sure, a 3X5 will go for far more given the rarity of a modern-day player to grant a 3X5 request, but the point is that the signature itself will never be rare. The last "rare" players due to early death (prior to the advent of signed insert cards) have to be Cliff Young and Williams Suero. Despite toiling in the minors for nearly a decade, Suero is the toughest of the two, and it doesn't help that he is of Dominican heritage. Just as the future has no more room for 300-win pitchers, the term "rare modern-day autograph" has also gone the way of eight track tapes and Clara Bow's career once "talkies" became en vogue. The player who is the dividing line between the old and new schools appears to be John LeRoy, who only pitched one game for the '97 Braves and died on an operating table less than four years later at the age of 26. There exist some signed minor league insert cards, although the amount of these issued was not as great as those featuring the autographs of guys like Bechler and Stenson. |
#32
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Posted By: William
Up until a few years ago, simply being a fan was reason enough for me. Though your point is well taken. Numerous factors have ultimately led to my self-removal from the autograph scene. Not the least of which are the skyrocketing prices. Jacoby Ellsbury and Clay Buchholz killed it for me. Two players, who last winter had a combined 37 games of MLB experience, each charging more than most Hall of Fame members. Rare or not, that business smells a lot like the baseball card market in 1990. |
#33
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Posted By: J. McMurry
Amazing how this thread's subject has morphed,but I do agree about the modern autographs lack of appeal. I remember the hullabalu greg Jeffries started in 1988 by charging $10 an autograph, and today I doubt many people could tell you who greg Jeffries was. I know Mr. mint is considered a joke on this board,but he wrote the best bit of advice I've ever read in regards to collecting, "Avoid the feeding frenzy". |
#34
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Posted By: J. McMurry
Jodi, |
#35
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
Jody, |
#36
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
What about collecting for the sake of enjoyment? I still obtain autographs in person of the local minor league team...I try to get as many autographs as I can on an official American Association baseball and for the "Star" players I try to get single signed baseballs. |
#37
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
By all means, do what makes you happy! Collecting rare signatures is what always did it for me. More power to you if obtaining modern-day players can still bring you joy. |
#38
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Posted By: J. McMurry
oh I still love to snag some autographs at the minor league ball park, and I landed some players years ago that are making a name for themselves in the ML now, such as Josh hamilton, carl crawford,corey patterson, c.c. sabathia. That is fun. |
#39
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
I should note that I don't pay to get any player's autograph nor would I ever again...I have only payed to get a players autograph once and that was Don Sutton's and he was such an ass that it made the autograph virtually worthless to me. I have obtained autographs from major leaguers who were giving them for free and each time it was pleasant. Jim Palmer, Ozzie Smith, Bret Saberhagen, and Tom Gordon all showed up locally at one point or another to signings and were not charging. And of course the former major leaguers who have played or managed for Lincoln always sign for free and all have been pleasant..including Tim Johnson, Pete LaCock, and Felix Jose just to name a few that were with Lincoln this year. |
#40
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
That's surprising about Sutton. I had always heard good things. At the last report I was given, he was one of only a few HOFers who signed through the mail without asking for compensation (although this may have changed). |
#41
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Posted By: J. McMurry
I too am surprised about Sutton. I also met him at a show(about 15 years back)and he was great,answered my questions in detail and was funny. I know it's a crap shoot as to what you're gonna get when you meet these guys on any given day. my buddy told me the story of when he met Willie Stargell at the local minor league ball park, willie signed for him, then rudely blew off a little kid just a few feet away. My friend ripped up his card right there and threw it away. ( I know, he shoulda gave it to the kid,but he probably didnt want it either after that episode) |
#42
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
This was at a show in Lincoln probably about 20 years ago now...I paid something like $10 for two autographs and I got a single signed baseball and I had an 8X10...I made the mistake of asking for a personalization on the photo for my brother-in-law. He uttered a swear word and looked at the guy next to him (Handler?, agent? bodyguard?) asked me what I wanted on it then signed and slid it across the table without looking at me. |
#43
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Posted By: DJ
I as well have grown tired of the greed of the current ball player, but they are most certainly not to blame and in most instances, treat the fans outside the ballpark awaiting a signature for a future star in the same manner as they would in the pre-Steiner days. There are some differences of course. Phil Hughes signed up a storm following a Scranton game, but told me that due to an agreement with a memorabilia company, he wasn't allowed to sign on the sweet spot. Of course when people like Hughes (or $100+ for Kershaw with Steiner) sign on the side for big dollars, are we to blame them? Especially when they become the next Ruben Mateo or Alex Escobar. How many games did Phil Hughes win this year? I believe as many as I won. |
#44
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
Let me get this straight DJ...you don't think ANY autographed T206's are authentic? |
#45
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Posted By: DJ
Dan, |
#46
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
I think DJ is reiterating what I had expressed earlier. If so, then he is also correct. |
#47
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
"...Parent, Livingstone, Flick..." |
#48
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Posted By: DJ
Yeah, totally lame Jodi. |
#49
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
The player's name is Allen Sothoron (sometimes spelled "Allan"). Actually, I indirectly referred to that card earlier on in this very thread. |
#50
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Posted By: Rhys
Jodi |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Question for Jodi re: PSA/DNA Stickers, etc | Archive | Net54baseball Sports (Primarily) Vintage Memorabilia Forum incl. Game Used | 16 | 09-09-2008 10:31 AM |
SGC grading question (possible dumb question) | Archive | Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions | 6 | 09-08-2006 12:36 AM |
Player question & a set question | Archive | Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions | 4 | 11-13-2004 06:41 PM |