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#1
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Bobby - thank you for your reply
Martin |
#2
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To us, pre WWII is anything prior to 7 Dec 1941.
To the British, it would be anything prior to 3rd Sept. 1939. Welcome aboard Martin. |
#3
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There is a 1941 MP & Co. set. You can make a fair argument either way, Pre or during WWII. American trading cards were effected by US entering the war (paper stock shortages and very few during WWII baseball card sets), which is in part why the cutoff is when the US entered the war. Baseball cards history is about stages related to US history, such as US tobacco monopoly and breakup (rise and fall of tobacco cards), WWII, etc-- which is why the cards are in part categorized by American history. American collectors know the war started in 1939 Europe, and I'm sure some call it as a 'during war' set.
Also, there are so few WWII baseball cards that they are often dropped in the Pre-War category out of convenience anyway. Last edited by drc; 10-09-2009 at 12:53 AM. |
#4
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![]() Last edited by Doug; 10-09-2009 at 08:43 AM. |
#5
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We entered in 1917.
Europe was at it since Sarajevo 1914. When we say pre war: There are a couple that post like if it means pre Desert Storm. ![]() Historically, the originating back bone of this pre war community was about Tobacco cards, and "E" cards. When we say pre war ... shouldn't it be pre Sarajevo 1914? JMVHO ..... |
#6
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Thank you all for the information - it is very interesting and is filling the gaps in my collecting knowledge. I'm kind of quite isloated on this side of the Atlantic and wish to learn more but not do so in a way thats makes me seem ignorant.
Martin |
#7
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It was a legitimate question. Consider "Pre War" as a standard general category, partly a product convenience, with the exact cut off dates being blurry and a matter of opinion. The hobby generally goes by 1941, but that date is mostly about the production of baseball cards as anything else. When the US entered the war in 1941, baseball card production almost ceased until after the war. 1941 is a clear cutoff date in baseball card history if not WWII. In 1946, US baseball card production started up again, starting the 'Post War' baseball card era. So the cutoff dates were mostly defined by the cards themselves rather any battle or declaration of war.
Last edited by drc; 10-09-2009 at 01:34 PM. |
#8
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It's also interesting to consider what was the "Golden Age of Baseball." I have heard this term used to describe 1906-1919 (deadball era) and also Ruth and the 20's and early 30's and even 1952-60. For New York fans the Golden Age was definitely the 50's, but always wondered what others think. ![]() |
#9
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I once read somewhere about the effect of the War before 1917 on cardmakers. I do know that when the European crisis broke into a full-blown conflict with England, France and Russia on one side and Germany, Austria-Hungary and Turkey on the other there was an immediate effect. Some of the dyes used to make the brightly-colored cards were German in origin and a lot of the trendy tobacco of the era was Turkish. Perhaps others here know more about the effect, but there had to be a good reason the card quality fell off after about 1913 (CJs excepted) besides just the demise of the ATC trust.
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#10
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In my case...Desert Storm was a war I was involved in (I was in the Army then) so it's actually a logical point of demarcation for me. That said...I don't intend to post here about '86 Topps anytime soon. And as a student of history...there was no WW2 until 1941. Before Pearl Harbor, there were two large-scale conflicts going on: one that encompassed Europe, Northern Africa and the Middle East and another between China and Japan. Once the U.S. was brought into the conflict, the war became global. In the case of our British allies, they definitely began a war against Germany and Italy in 1939 but really weren't counting the Japanese as a belligerent party until they took sides with the U.S. Not that it was a hard decision for them, as the Japanese were beginning to threaten British territory from India to Australia and likely needed the excuse to expand their way as well as into U.S. possessions like the Philippines, Guam and Midway. But I'm sure we're splitting hairs here. In the baseball card hobby, the fact that sets stopped almost cold after 1941 makes the distinction easy for us. |
#11
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Splitting what hairs? Your facts are 90 % correct! 14 % 0f the time. ![]() |
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