My
Brothers Baseball Cards
by Sam Person (samperson@mindspring.com)
During the 1920s and
into the period just before World War II, my family lived in various apartments
in the Bronx, New York. In those depression years, it was cheaper to move
than pay the rent, and so they did.
Those were also the
years before television, and, indeed, before the times when baseball salaries
became rather high. I am not complaining about what major league players
earn; as far as I am concerned, this is America and there is free enterprise,
after all.
The point, however,
is that major league players did not do much in those days that took them
away from the hotels that they stayed in when they were visiting other
cities.
Somewhere in the late
1920s, my family rented an apartment situated in a building on the Grand
Concourse in the Bronx. Said apartment house was located not far from
the Yankee Stadium, the Polo Grounds (the now demolished home of the former
New York Giants of the baseball variety), and the Concourse Plaza Hotel.
My late brother Joe,
who loved baseball as much as I do, and probably was the impetus for my
interest, began to spend time at the three venues above mentioned. He
did it from the time he was nine or so years old, and continued into his
teens. There was a mission connected with these visits; acquiring autographs
of baseball players.
Understand, now, that
back then the players congregated in hotel lobbies when they had time
off. They were therefore rather easy to find. Getting them to sign autographs
was not difficult since the players had yet to discover that they could
earn money by selling their signatures. Because he lived close to the
Concourse Plaza Hotel, which became the gathering place when teams came
to play either at the Yankee Stadium (American League teams) or Polo Grounds
(National League teams), my brother found that the players were there
for the "pickings," so to speak.
And did my brother
pick! He would head for the Concourse Plaza Hotel whenever he was not
otherwise engaged playing baseball himself, running errands for my father's
business, and/or doing school work. Tangentially, in later years, my brother
was to become an outstanding "sandlot" player who played on
Army Air Corps all-star teams during World War II.
My brother had autographs
of almost every player from both leagues who stayed at that hotel, and
his collection grew to include signatures on baseballs, pictures, scorecards,
newspapers, scrap paper, and, of course, baseball cards. Eventually, his
collection included signatures of major leaguers that were said to be
reluctant to sign; but he got them somehow.
Many are the treasures
that were in his collection. Closing my eyes, I can recall a rare baseball
with two signatures; those of Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig. Other examples
of rarities that were included in the collection of items he amassed in
his youth included a newspaper picture signed by five pitchers who would
go on to become Hall of Famers, among them Walter Johnson and Christy
Mathewson. Quite a group to be included in one picture indeed!
Obviously, his collection
grew to include baseball cards. All his cards bore actual autographs of
the players. Again, it was a singular collection, and in my mind's eye
I can see some of the classics he had. Always a rather meticulous individual,
my brother took exceptional care of the cards, and no doubt intended to
preserve them. Speculation on what they might have been worth in the period
that the value of baseball cards skyrocketed would be difficult.
Shortly before World
War II (in 1940, to be exact), my brother departed New York, never to
return as a resident. He left to follow his girlfriend (who had moved
with her family) to Florida. Shortly thereafter, they were married, and
in 1941 my brother enlisted as an Aviation Cadet in the United States
Army Air Corps.
From the standpoint
of his baseball card collection, leaving New York was his undoing. You
see, his move was rather quick and unexpected since he did not want my
parents to know that he was scurrying off to Florida. Among his last minute
preparations was turning this seemingly priceless collection of autographed
baseball cards and other memorabilia over to me for safekeeping.
At the time, I was
eight years old, and not possessed of the insight to see that baseball
cards (particularly those that he had) were to become collector's fodder.
To me, they were sort of toys; no more, no less.
As I best recall now,
somewhere around 1942 or so, at the age of eleven, I was bedridden with
some childhood ailment. Looking for things to pass the time, I pulled
out my brother's collection of autographed baseball cards. What I did
with them was sinful!
Deciding that the
cards would look better if the players' pictures were separated and stood
on their own, so to speak, I took a pair of scissors and cut around the
images, so what I considered "extraneous matter" would fall
away. Thus, for example, consider the card of the immortal Mickey Cochrane,
the Hall of Fame Detroit Tiger catcher (for whom Mickey Mantle was to
be named, by the way). Putting my pair of scissors to work, I cut around
the image of Cochrane's body in the typical pose of a catcher; squatting
with his right arm cocked as if to throw.
And so, a one of a
kind baseball card collection was destroyed by the whim of a feverish
(literally) eleven year old. Arguably, my destructive behavior decreased
the supply of available collectible cards and thus added to their ultimate
value.
Upon returning to
New York on a furlough in 1944, my brother inquired as to his collection.
Needless to say, by then I knew that a crime had been perpetrated, and
my brother was rather disappointed and upset. It may well be that this
is the reason that I was never interested in collecting baseball cards.
Forthwith, I ceased
to be the "curator" of his baseball memorabilia.
Eventually my brother
stopped being annoyed with me. Also, over the next fifty or so years,
he would go on to amass a collection of autographed baseballs and baseball
bats, and assorted other baseball items. When he passed away a few years
ago, he left his children an outstanding collection of rare baseball items
that were displayed in the living room of his home. The only thing missing
were his cards, which never could be duplicated, of course.
There was one baseball
collectible that he did not leave to his children. For years, a statuette
of Babe Ruth that he had acquired in some manner sat on a credenza behind
my brother's desk. It was a beautiful plaster piece, about twenty-four
inches high, and I always admired it, as my brother knew. Shortly after
his death I received a package. Inside, very carefully wrapped, was the
Babe Ruth statuette. Seems the instructions that he left his wife were
that I was to receive it.
These days, "Babe
Ruth" sits on top of a bookcase in my study, ruling the roost, as
it were, and serving as a reminder of my brother, as well as our love
of baseball.
» Sam Person is a retired CPA and university professor of accounting
who has been a baseball fan for sixty years. He enjoys writing on baseball
history.
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Copyright © 2001 by Sam Person. Posted
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