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#51
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Posted By: Jon Canfield
Henry, |
#52
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Posted By: Dave Hornish
Found an obit for Penn's son here: http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-153163047.html |
#53
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Posted By: Shawn
Men, I think we may have a match here... Though its not real clear, the spacing and everything is almost the same. I am posting now so perhaps someone can find a better side shot. |
#54
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Posted By: Shawn
I have also found this notation, for what its worth... |
#55
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
Great research JON, DAVE, and SHAWN......very informative. |
#56
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Posted By: Scott M.
Ted, |
#57
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Posted By: Scot Reader
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#58
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Posted By: J Hull
Scott, great find. |
#59
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Posted By: Dave Hornish
Wow, eagle eyes on those press clippings! |
#60
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Posted By: Shawn
Is this a coincidence or what??? F.R. PENN Tobacco Co. "Georgia Cracker" Tag! |
#61
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
Fantastic stuff, guy. You have proven to to be our Net54 resident detective when it comes researching archival stuff |
#62
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Posted By: JimB
Scott, |
#63
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
JIM B |
#64
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Posted By: JimB
Hi Ted, |
#65
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Posted By: J Hull
Here are the front and back pictures from the tin sold by REA a couple years ago. Putting together the two images, the side of the tin says "For Pipe and Cigarette". |
#66
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Posted By: Shawn
The Penn's tin that I listed above states "Pipe & Cigarette" and it "Chews Good Too"..... |
#67
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Posted By: Dave Hornish
That Penn button says Reidsville, SC but there is also a Reidsville, Georgia. May not mean anything but the Georgia connection is intriguing. |
#68
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Posted By: Brian Weisner
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#69
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Posted By: Dave Hornish
er, yes that is an "n" after careful scrutiny..... |
#70
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Posted By: fkw
Cobb Back is NOT a T206.... it has a glossy surface, and we all know T206 cards are not glossy. Thats enough right there. |
#71
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
In my searching, I had considered the F. R. Penn Tobacco Co. as possibly being the mysterious |
#72
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Posted By: Mike Dalton
This board is great! I am what I believe is usually referred to as a lurker and am just going to chime in here.I did a google book search and found some links that have more info on F.R. Penn. |
#73
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Posted By: Mr. Moses
managed to take the tobacco leaf and manufacture many different products - from plug to snuff. Typically a factory provided ONE type of product but it could be processed and sold in many forms. You couldn't smoke snuff in a pipe or roll it - you couldn't chew tobacco that was processed for cigarettes. With time the factories were looking to reach greater markets and utilze all of the plant and excesses. Plug was a form of chewing tobacco - most often combined with ingredients to sweeten or enhance the taste like fruits, honey, and other flavoring. Plug was about the cheapest form of tobacco other than "clippings". People with "armpit" money would alternatively smoke the chew so to speak. The companies then packaged "cut plug" which could be smoked. "Granulated" cut plug was a natural extension and offered to the public so as to fill their pipe OR roll into cigarettes. This is off the top of my little head - I have doccumentation and better identification somewhere for the terms if they are actually needed - but I think not. Penn tobacco was a widely marketed brand and offered in MANY different style containers. |
#74
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Posted By: Shawn
Mr Moses, |
#75
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Posted By: Anonymous
The Ty/Ty that I had was from an original circa 1910-1911 collection acquired by my wife's grandfather when he was about 10 years old working in his father's hardware/dry goods store in south Alabama. I don't believe he got the card from a VIP party in Georgia. |
#76
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Posted By: Shawn
Below is an excerpt and a link that is just slammed full of "Penn" and "Durham" tobacco company info. I think if someone reads through the entire thing they may find some answers. |
#77
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Posted By: Mr. Moses
and most of their other containers are common enuff and don't get big money. The Penn 1 pocket (pocket tin collectors are well established as is the supply demand equation) is extremely tuff and sells in rarified air - it's circa 1900. Of note however is an entry I found: |
#78
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Posted By: Mr. Moses
That appears to come from an American Tobacco Company edition I have on the shelves. I'll glance thru it this weekend.... |
#79
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
I think at last count there are only 13 (or perhaps 14) Ty Cobb/Ty Cobb cards. My understanding is that some |
#80
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Posted By: leon
I thought this was pretty cool... Notice the factory # on the front of the building. I post this in part, because it could provide a lead to someone? Who knows... |
#81
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Posted By: Dave Hornish
Paging thru my copy of Sold American!....F.R. Penn is described as a "plugmaking subsidiary" that made Penn's Natural, Red J, and Gold Crumbs. Penn's No. 1 also seems to have been produced as plug and smoking tobacco and there is a railcar pictures describing Gold Crumbs as smoking tobacco as well. There were four primary subsidiaries in the plug group (chewing tobacco)and Penn seems to have been the smallest. |
#82
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Posted By: Anonymous
Double post |
#83
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
Let us see what we have learned here. Early in 1910 national newspaper's were reporting of |
#84
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Posted By: E, Daniel
I'm starting to believe.... |
#85
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Posted By: 1880nonsports
Snuff, plug, and other minor tobacco manufacturers were slowly being bought up by the ATC up until the breakup. Cards had already been proven a successful marketing tool. Most of their production was in cigarettes but they were diversifying as they grew, They decided to name a brand after a southern superstar baseball player. It was a relatively new (and short lived) "granulated plug tobacco" that could be smoked in a pipe (least popular mode after snuff of ingesting tobacco in the period) or rolled in a cigarette. They designed a tin showing him with a bat on pose and so a portrait image was suggested for the card to differentiate it from the image on the tin - or as the manufacture and sale of these minor types of tobacco products came with small margins - perhaps there were extra sheets laying around and they just used them. I personally would have switched the two images |
#86
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
I'm curious as to why you are saying this ?........ |
#87
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Posted By: 1880nonsports
a dangerous undertaking - that if it were closer to the dissolution of the trust - then it would be more credible perhaps that the factory 33 became a part of the ATC later into the distribution of the cards (perhaps already declining) - the idea came about for the cards - and then with the dissolution - the Adams company gets taken over by different owners/management or sumptin and aborted the idea of the brand. It may even have happened that in 1910 they were already part of the ATC - sold before the breakup and just as the brand was about to go into production - the idea is aborted for legal or other reasons. |
#88
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
JIM B |
#89
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Posted By: Shawn
I am not sure what the article below is about, because I do not have a subscription to the site... I sure would like to read it though! I have noticed that the "Ty Cobb" brand advertisements are prodominately in the "Macon Weekly Telegraph" paper in Ga. The months seem to be Feb. and Mar. of 1910. If someone has a subscription to genealogybank.com, it would be nice to see some of the full adds. (there seems to be some full page adds) |
#90
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Posted By: packs
Here's my opinion: |
#91
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
Nice stuff.....thanks for posting. |
#92
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
SHAWN |
#93
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
Hey JIM B |
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