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  #1  
Old 08-29-2025, 09:10 PM
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Originally Posted by Vintagedeputy View Post
Back in 1960/61, a young man named Brad Rasmussen set out to write a homemade book about baseball. He made several page entries about the history of the game. Maybe he did this for himself, or a school project.

I love the way Brad wrote in cursive! It's a dying skill.

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Last edited by Balticfox; 08-29-2025 at 09:11 PM.
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  #2  
Old 08-29-2025, 09:25 PM
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We must have had the same cursive teacher, mine looked exactly like this as a kid.
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  #3  
Old 08-30-2025, 11:33 AM
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Originally Posted by swarmee View Post
We must have had the same cursive teacher, mine looked exactly like this as a kid.
Writing English in cursive form is a dying art.
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  #4  
Old 08-30-2025, 12:03 PM
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Originally Posted by swarmee View Post
We must have had the same cursive teacher, mine looked exactly like this as a kid.
Many years ago on Ebay I purchased some cards from a gentleman who lived in the somewhat smaller town where my mother grew up. When I received the handwritten addressed envelope I was shocked, because the cursive writing looked EXACTLY like my mom's. I contacted him and found out that, though he did not know my mother, he did remember my mother's younger sister from school.

The point of this story is...schools should still teach cursive, because if it is allowed to completely fall by the wayside, a poignant situation like I experienced would never happen.

Brian (of course I kept the envelope)
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  #5  
Old 08-30-2025, 03:12 PM
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Much to the horror of generations older than me, I never learned to ride a horse/mule and managed to transport myself just fine all my life, even during visits to rural areas and hiking remote parts of Arizona.

I'm pushing 50, but I work with the public and have noticed that except for the very young and some teens, most people in their teens and 20s can read cursive enough to navigate the world even if they were never formally taught it.

Also, in my particular industry it's nice to not have as many "translation mistakes" from the 8289327497492 different styles of submitted cursive scrawling that led to data entry mistakes because "Is that a A or Q or etc?" isn't in play as much.

There's pros and cons...maybe we're at the end of the line for doctor prescription pad jokes...

I'm more than happy living in a print + typed world.
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  #6  
Old 08-30-2025, 03:17 PM
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Hi, Jim. I want to thank you for taking the time and trouble to load up Brad Rasmussen's likely school project. What a profoundly beautiful 1960 Post Cereal Mickey Mantle. I can really understand the urges you've gotten to allow the artifact to remain intact. It is so poignant to that period of time. Well I remember Miss Kaplan at Fairview Elementary School teaching me how to print. A few years later, I was indeed taught to write cursive precisely as Brad did.

Jim, your desire to remove it from its paper is also very understandable. I imagine it was attached with either Elmer's Glue or Lepage's Glue, which was really a white paste. In my opinion, the 1960 Post Cereal Mantle is truly one of Mick's most underrated, undervalued, and desirable cards. It is simply breathtaking. Its monumental size compared to most other Mantle cards puts it in a class by itself, or a cornerstone from which to build a display of outstanding Mickey Mantle cards and coins.

When I wrote my book about post-war regional / food issues, NEVER CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN, I devoted chapter 2 to this set, anchored by my SGC-Authenticated specimen. Like yours, it's only missing perhaps 2 - 3% of the card due to wayward cutting by a lad doing his best, with tongue half outside of his mouth. I gave this Mickey Mantle an appropos name.

THE MAJESTIC GIANT SEQUOIA MANTLE

One small correction. The cereal Post placed its Sports Stars was not Grape Nuts; rather, it was GRAPE NUTS FLAKES. A geriatrtic cereal, it helped to keep people my age on the "go-go".

One small gold nugget of information is found on the title page of Brad Rasmussen's project----the date of Nov. 14, 1960. There has been a teenzie bit of discussion as to when these gorgeous Post Sports Stars were issued. I believed they debuted shortly after the 1960 World Series. Brad's dated document confirms my belief, and goes right along with a multi-sport set---mostly baseball, with a pair of football and a pair of basketball stars.

Whatever you do, Jim, you best choose a path leading to no regrets. If you choose to have it professionally removed, make them understand the precious card must survive completely intact. As it is now, it is quaint, nostalgic, and satuated with ambience-----PLUS VERY VALUABLE.

Wishing you wisdom and the very best. --- Brian Powell

Last edited by brian1961; 08-30-2025 at 05:36 PM.
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  #7  
Old 08-30-2025, 03:39 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by brian1961 View Post
One small gold nugget of information is found on the title page of Brad Rasmussen's project----the date of Nov. 14, 1960. There has been a teenzie bit of discussion as to when these gorgeous Post Sports Stars were issued. I believed they debuted shortly after the 1960 World Series. Brad's dated document confirms my belief, and goes right along with a multi-sport set---mostly baseball, with a football and a pair of basketball stars.
This makes some of the seemingly random stuff uploaded here so important to the community at large.

I benefited greatly from a mystery I was trying to figure out about 1930 Baguer Chocolate cards for a very long time by one of Rolando Sánchez's (Roland 49) various Cuban card posts. It was the first actually legible digital photo of a rare collector's album that I could read the name/checklist properly. It helped me make a decently strong ID of the mis-identified player in question.
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  #8  
Old 08-30-2025, 10:55 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by brian1961 View Post
One small gold nugget of information is found on the title page of Brad Rasmussen's project----the date of Nov. 14, 1960. There has been a teenzie bit of discussion as to when these gorgeous Post Sports Stars were issued. I believed they debuted shortly after the 1960 World Series. Brad's dated document confirms my belief, and goes right along with a multi-sport set---mostly baseball, with a pair of football and a pair of basketball stars.
Brian - thank you for your outstanding post. There are a number of dated entries in the book; 1960, 1961. Do you think that perhaps young Brad received the Mantle in let’s say January of 1960 , and kept it intact until he decided to write the book in November….meaning that he had it before the World Series?




Quote:
Originally Posted by brian1961 View Post
Whatever you do, Jim, you best choose a path leading to no regrets. If you choose to have it professionally removed, make them understand the precious card must survive completely intact. As it is now, it is quaint, nostalgic, and satuated with ambience-----PLUS VERY VALUABLE.
I plan without hesitation to send it to SGC, once I remove the paper and glue. That way it will be preserved forever in that gorgeous black tuxedo.

Regarding being valuable, I was very pleasantly surprised to see some listed for sale in the 2K to 4K range, a huge jump from my small investment.

Jim
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  #9  
Old 08-31-2025, 03:14 AM
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I know that with 1962 Post Cereal cards, the printing was done on paper which was then glued to the cardboard. So if you soak this, you might end up with the Mantles separating from the cereal box cardboard, and your Mantles will be thin pieces of paper.
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  #10  
Old 08-31-2025, 06:35 AM
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That's what I would be worried about as well. Soaking on pre-war cards is different because the composition of the item itself is different.
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PWCC: The Fish Stinks From the Head
PSA: Regularly Get Cheated
BGS: Can't detect trimming on modern
SGC: Closed auto authentication business
JSA: Approved same T206 Autos before SGC
Oh, what a difference a year makes.
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