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#1
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According to "The Early Image of Black Base Ball" by James Brunson, Frank Hart played briefly with the Bridgewater Black Stockings. I would not however consider that card to be a baseball card.
http://books.google.com/books?id=hGD...raphed&f=false |
#2
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I think the question was "Is this the first card depicting a black baseball player", not "Is this a baseball card".
It's certainly a tobacco card. While I have no idea the answer, I think it's a pretty valid question if he indeed did have a history of playing baseball. |
#3
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Thanks for all of your comments / thoughts on this. Yes, I think the question should be reframed to ask if this is the first card to depict an African American baseball player.
Here is the description that accompanied the Mile High Auction from November: Frank "Black Dan" Hart was an international endurance racing superstar in the 1870s and 1880s, when ultramarathons called "six day, go as you please" races occupied and obsessed the sporting worlds on both sides of the Atlantic, much like today's NFL. The rules were simple. Participants, called "pedestrians," were free to run, walk, crawl, and scratch their way around an oval track as many times as possible in the course of six days, sleeping on cots within the oval, and usually for less than four hours per day. Fans attended and followed these races with the enthusiasm of modern day college football tailgaters, coming and going as they pleased, and often betting on their favorite racers. In 1880, Frank Hart shattered the world pedestrian record by covering 565 miles when he claimed the O'Leary Belt in New York City, famously waving the American flag to thousands upon thousands of cheering (and no doubt jeering) fans packed into Madison Square Garden as he completed his final laps. His significance as an early black American athlete is hard to qualify. After national interest in six day racing fizzled, Hart played baseball for a Chicago Negro League team before passing away in 1908, his racing accomplishments nearly as forgotten as his baseball statistics, but for those who saw him, and for those who cheered for him, Frank Hart gave hope to untold thousands of fans of all races that is was possible for blacks and whites to compete on the same playing fields. Offered in this lot is a phenomenally scarce 1880 Between the Acts & Bravo example depicting Hart at the height of his racing career. Manufactured by New York's Thomas H. Hall, and subsequently catalogued by Jefferson Burdick as N344 in the American Card Catalog, the issue is well-known if not somewhat mythical among advanced 19th century non-sport collectors, somewhat like Gypsy Queens among baseball collectors. Both PSA and SGC report just a single example on record for most of the 12-card set, but neither company has graded all 12, and the lone Hart example on both company's records, our consignor assures us, is one and the same. Offered here in an SGC 20 holder, the card shows paper loss on back but is in otherwise exceptional EX to EX/MT condition, and is one of the only known examples in the entire hobby, raw or graded. An intriguing acquisition for the 19th century tobacco and Negro League collector alike, and one of the only instances in the hobby where these two separate worlds cross paths. |
#4
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If you read his biography in the Old Judge book, George Treadway might be the first black baseball player depicted on his own card.
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#5
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Thought these might be of historical interest, though neither is African-American (Jackson was West Indian/Australian, Godfrey Canadian), as they are very early depictions of black athletes:
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__________________
Read my blog; it will make all your dreams come true. https://adamstevenwarshaw.substack.com/ Or not... |
#6
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Should the question really be - Who is the first black player to be depicted on a "baseball" card that was widely distributed as a major issue?
The Old Judge book mentions Treadway. The next issue I'm aware of is Zeenut (1916 Claxton). Prior to Treadway the Claxton card seemed to be the widely accepted "first black player" depicted in a major issue. The price of the Claxton reflects that it is a very special card. By the way Kevin, who wrote that beautiful Treadway biography for "The Book"? That is an interesting piece of information that most people don't realize because they haven't read all of the biographies. There's just so much that people don't realize about "The Book".
__________________
fr3d c0wl3s - always looking for OJs and other 19th century stuff. PM or email me if you have something cool you're looking to find a new home for. Last edited by Fred; 12-27-2010 at 05:38 PM. |
#7
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I've always been interested in the story of Moses Fleetwood Walker. Some historians say he was the first Black to play in the major league in 1884. I've seen his photograph, is there a card or postcard that features Walker that could be considered a baseball card?
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#8
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the Claxton card is on e-bay right now as a buy it now or best offer.
-john- |
#9
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George Godfrey was from my hometown, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. I always thought it was interesting trivia that he was the first black man to appear on a card.
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Tags |
baseball, frank hart, negro league, tobacco card |
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