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Muvico Rosemont 18 9701 Bryn Mawr Ave. Rosemont, IL 60018 Thursday, August 4 8:00 PM CT Lots 8000180103 Please note that space within the auction room is limited, with reservations granted on a first response basis. Attendance requires a $100 charitable donation to The Ronald McDonald House of Chicago. Dinner and cocktails will be served prior to the start of the auction.
Heritage Auctions, Dallas 17th Floor 3500 Maple Avenue Dallas, TX 75219 Monday, July 25 Thursday, July 28 9:00 AM 5:00 PM CT
LOT VIEWING
The 32nd National Sports Collectors Convention Rosemont, IL Wednesday, August 3 4:00 PM 8:00 PM CT Thursday, August 4 10:00 AM 5:00 PM CT View lots & auction results online at HA.com/7037
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Lots will be available for pick up at the Heritage Auctions corporate booth on the floor of the National Sports Collectors Convention. Lots will also be available for pick up: Friday, August 5 10:00 AM 5:00 PM CT Saturday, August 6 10:00 AM 5:00 PM CT Sunday, August 7 10:00 AM 12:00 PM CT After 12:00 PM CT on Sunday all lots will be returned to Dallas and will be available for pickup starting Wednesday, August 10th by appointment only.
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Lots are sold at an approximate rate of 50 lots per hour, but it is not uncommon to sell 35 lots or 75 lots in any given hour. This auction is subject to a 19.5% Buyers Premium. IL Auctioneer license: Robert Korver 441001421; Mike Sadler 441001478; Samuel Foose 441001482; Scott Peterson 441001659; Jacob Walker 441001677; Bob Merrill 441001683; Chris Dykstra 441001788; Heritage Numismatic Auctions, Inc. 444000370.
This Auction is presented and cataloged by Heritage Auctions 2011 Heritage Auctioneers & Galleries, Inc.
21813
Steve Ivy
Chris Ivy
Derek Grady
Vice President
Consignment Director
Mark Jordan
Consignment Director
Peter Calderon
Consignment Director
Mike Gutierrez
Greg Rohan
President
Consignment Director
Jonathan Scheier
Consignment Director
Chris Nerat
Consignment Director
Lee Iskowitz
Paul Minshull
Consignment Directors: Pete Calderon, Derek Grady, Mike Gutierrez, Lee Iskowitz, Chris Ivy, Mark Jordan, Chris Nerat, Jonathan Scheier Cataloged by: Peter Calderon, Chris Nerat, Jonathan Scheier
Todd Imhof
Dear Fellow Sports Collector, It was Heywood Broun, esteemed journalist and member of the famous Algonquin Round Table, who wrote, Sports do not build character. They reveal it. While we might take issue with the first half of the statement, the second is clearly true. Had Lou Gehrig instead been the captain of a fishing boat, surely no rough seas would have kept him at harbor. Bobby Jones, the ultimate sportsman on the links, was equally noble in the courtroom as one of Augustas leading attorneys. And poor Shoeless Joe, born with far more talent than good sense, may well have fallen in with a bad crowd on the streets of Greenville had he never left home for the Majors. Though each charted his own unique path to the pantheon of sport, it was their humanity that ultimately made them larger than life. Today each iconic athlete straddles the line between fact and folklore, and as the last few surviving eyewitnesses to their brilliance pass away, the equation will shift even further to the latter. The incredible artifacts of these lives youll encounter on the pages that follow become all the more important with each passing year, and we here at Heritage see it as a tremendous privilege to play a part in their history. There are lessons to be learned from each and every lot, whether as inspiration or cautionary tale, or something in between. It should quickly become apparent, as you page through this catalog, that this is no ordinary auction. Through a combination of hard work and the occasional blessing of good fortune, our staff here at Heritage has assembled an unprecedented assortment of the greatest treasures of American sports. These are not just mementos of our greatest athletic figures, but key relics from their definitive moments. Consider just the game used batswe have Joe Jacksons fabled Black Betsy. We have Jackie Robinsons lumber from the first integrated All-Star Game in 1949. We have Roberto Clementes bat from his first World Series victory in 1960. And we have one of the first twelve Louisville Sluggers issued to Derek Jeter as a member of the New York Yankees. Though the contents of this auction span a wide array of sports, collecting disciplines and estimate ranges, this is the theme we have aspired to maintain throughoutthe best, the first, the last, and the only. Bidding for this auction, as always, is possible by Internet, telephone, mail and fax. But we hope that well see many of you during Wednesday 8/3 and Thursday 8/4 previews at our corporate booth (number 814) at the National Sports Collectors Convention in Rosemont, and then for the Live Auction at the Muvico Theaters across the street from the convention center on Thursday night. As always, we close with a word of gratitude to the consignors who made this auction possible, and to the bidders who will give these treasures a new home. Thank you for putting your trust in us, and for helping to establish Heritage as the Worlds Largest Collectibles Auctioneer. Sincerely,
VIN TAGE SPORTS COLLEC TIBLES AUC TION NOVEMBER 11, 2011 | DALL AS | LIVE & ONLINE
1916 D381 Ferguson Bakery Walter Johnson SGC 30 - Newly Discovered and Only Copy Known
TX & NY Auctioneer license: Samuel Foose 11727 & 0952360. Heritage Auction Galleries CA Bond #RSB2004175; CA Auctioneer Bond: Leo Frese #RSB2004176. These auctions are subject to a 19.5% buyers premium.
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You have to get knocked down to realize how people really feel about you. Ive realized that more than ever lately. Lou Gehrig
he six lots that lead off this 2011 Platinum Night auction derive from what is unquestionably the most significant hobby find of the year, a small archive of mementos saved by the famed New York Yankees first baseman and left to our
80001
1926 New York Yankees Team Signed Baseball from The Lou Gehrig Collection, Finest Example Known
Though the 1925 campaign, by virtue of his 126 appearances, is considered Lou Gehrigs rookie season, the following year is recalled as the young infielders first great one. The native born New York slugger would almost double his run production for the 1926 season, beginning a remarkable streak of triple-digit RBI tallies that would only end with the year of his tragic farewell. The 1926 campaign would likewise provide Gehrig with his first taste of October baseball, the only Fall Classic which would conclude joylessly for him. Provided is a spectacular relic from that pivotal season of Lous storied career, likely signed during the Bombers World Series meeting with the St. Louis Cardinals, as indicated by the short panels American League Champions 1926 notation. This same faultlessly bold black fountain pen ink supplies twenty-seven autographs from the Bronx fourth pennant winners, notably Ruth, Gehrig, Lazzeri, Combs, Pennock, Hoyt, Shocker, Collins, Koenig, Dugan, Meusel, Jones and many more. Not a single signature suggests a hint of its advanced age, averaging a stunning 9/10. All stamping remains equally unscathed from times ravages, with the pale horsehides creamy tone the only variation from its original state. Unquestionably one of the finest 1926 Yankee balls by virtue of aesthetics alone, and the undisputed champ with the added provenancial appeal as Gehrigs personal model. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
80002
1927 New York Yankees Infield Signed Photograph from The Lou Gehrig Collection, PSA Mint 9.
Though this infield unit remained unchanged from second baseman Tony Lazzeris 1926 rookie season until Joe Dugans departure for the Boston Braves at the close of 1928 World Series, we are definitively able to peg this image to the center of that three-year span. Advanced baseball photography hobbyists will recognize the image as part of a famous Yankee Stadium photo shoot dating to the storied Murderers Row season of 1927, when the man at far left earned his first MVP Award and World Championship ring. Already a spectacular artifact free of any consideration of provenance, this 6.5x8.5 photograph is further enhanced by its status as the Iron Horses personal keepsake, one of the six featured lots within this Platinum Night auction from The Lou Gehrig Collection. Our catalog imagery tells no liesthe black fountain pen signatures of Lou Gehrig, Tony Lazzeri, Mark Koenig and Joe Dugan survive with the same 9/10 boldness with which they were originally applied, and the photo itself likewise presents flawlessly. An International Newsreel stamp appears on verso, as do the remnants of the paper caption. Unquestionably one of the finest and most desirable autographed pieces to derive from baseballs greatest team, and from its noblest servant, no less. Full Grading LOA from PSA/DNA, Mint 9. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
80003
If one were to imagine a hypothetical standardized test for institutions of higher baseball learning, the following question might appear within: Babe Ruth is to Lou Gehrig as the 1927 New York Yankees are to _________. The proper answer: the 1928 New York Yankees. Allow us to explain. Babe Ruth and the 27 Yanks effectively enjoy a mythical status among collectors and historians alike, representing the pinnacle of individual and team brilliance respectively. In the absence of either, the exploits of Lou Gehrig and the 1928 Yankees would assume that abandoned mantle, as each still stands head and shoulders above the remainder of the competition. As the Hall of Fame first baseman had done in the fabled 1927 campaign, Gehrig took the top rung of the American League ladder for RBIs again in 1928, a fact made the more astonishing when considering the frequency with which the Babe had cleared the bases immediately prior to Gehrigs plate appearances. Yet Gehrig remained shackled to his perception as the Babes sidekick. Lou put it best when he quipped, Im not a headline guy. I know that as long as I was following Ruth to the plate I could have stood on my head and no one would have known the difference. But as the Babe brought pure, unbridled joy to the Golden Age of the Yanks, Lou supplied the grace and nobility, so Heritage is humbled by the opportunity to present to the collecting community one of the most important Championship awards ever made available for sale, the wristwatch earned for Lou Gehrigs extraordinary service in capturing the New York Yankees third World Championship. A true masterpiece of art deco timepiece design, the presented Hamilton Yankee Piping Rock watch is intensely coveted for more than simply its relevance to baseballs greatest age/hero. The design is considered the crowning achievement of the periods leading manufacturer of timepieces, and has been widely reproduced in more recent decades. But advanced watch collectors are well aware that the original production was limited only to players and staff of the 1928 Yankees, signifying an original population of fewer than three dozen. Of this population, fewer than five have surfaced in the collecting hobby. Holy Grail terminology is bandied about far too often in the cataloging of collectibles, but is fully appropriate in this instance. Much like its original owner, the timepiece exudes a dignified and unassuming countenance, certainly a far cry from the gem-encrusted monstrosities of modern Championship jewelry. Roman numerals adorn the black circular bezel, set upon a fourteen karat white gold case still linked to its original leather bands. The wear on the band recalls the circumference of Gehrigs wrist to this day. Skillfully engraved on the left edge of the case is the owners identification: Henry L. Gehrig. But the aesthetic climax appears in the design engraved upon the verso of the case, an eagle clinging to a shield and crossed bats situated amidst text reading, Yankees, 1928 World Champions. The watch is not currently operational, but we have no reason to believe that its ticking pulse could not be revived by an expert in the field. For collectors in the watch field, we supply the following technical details as provided by our resident timepiece department head Jim Wolf: movement grade 979, nineteen jewels, serial number 2903640. The original records of the Hamilton Finishing Department indicate that 979 movements with serial numbers from 2903001 and 2904000 were delivered between 10/27/28 and 12/18/28, perfectly matching post-Series production. The condition is exactly as one would desireclearly worn and cherished by its presentee, but free of anything which could be characterized as damage. The extraordinary convergence of historical import to both baseball and timepiece collectibility seems perfectly appropriate here, mirroring the partnership between Ruth and Gehrig that set the Murderers Row-era Yankees in a league of its own.
80004
1934 Tour of Japan Team Signed Cigarette Lighter Baseball from The Lou Gehrig Collection
We all know that smoking is dangerous, but the true vintage baseball fan must still show the addiction some grudging gratitude. Without the sirens song of nicotine, the hobby would lack its greatest trading card era, and Honus Wagner wouldnt be its million dollar baby. But of course it was the Babes ubiquitous cigar that fueled his early demise from throat cancer, and wed bet his personal example of this unique Tour of Japan keepsake is the worse for wear because of his habit. The Iron Horse, on the other hand, was at most a casual smoker, and the evidence survives in the remarkable condition of the offered lot. This specially crafted keepsake from baseballs most noteworthy foreign excursion exhibits a stunning absence of handling, the lighter forgotten for decades within its original, included box. Its interesting to note that this is a baseball specially made for its service as a cigarette lighter, a fact made apparent when viewing the extra wide sweet spots of the sphere. One side sprouts the lighting mechanism, its wick still a virgin white. The bottom bears a tiny handwritten G, designating the lighter for Gehrig. The four panels bear spectacularly preserved signatures from the following: Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Jimmy Foxx, Connie Mack, Lefty Gomez, Earl Averill, Charles Gehringer, Moe Berg, Earl Whitehill, Joe Cascarella, Frank Hayes, Clint Brown, Bob Schroeder, Rabbit Warstler, John Quinn, Doc Ebling, Bing Miller. An unknown hand has penned 1934 Oriental Tour on one panel, and All American Baseball Team on the opposing side. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
80005
80006
Both literally and figuratively the crowning finale of the full Tour of Japan uniform listed in the preceding lot, this deep navy cap represents the first known survivor from the famed 1934 Tour. It joins just two other Gehrig hats, both Yankee models, to have been placed upon the hobbys auction block in the past dozen years, the scarcest of all Gehrig uniform components. While modern Major League caps are maddeningly indistinguishable from those available to the general populace, such was not the case in the pre-war era, and certainly not for this historic barnstorming excursion. As if the provenance of its pairing with Gehrigs jersey and pants from the Tour were not enough, the interior leather headband is artfully embroidered 7 1/8 L. Gehrig. A patriotic white and red embroidered US appears above the visor, with a red button at the peak. The cardboard interior of the brim has stiffened with age but remains unbroken, as could be reported of the interior headband. Only a small scattering of moth holes at front must be noted as liabilities, discounting the apparent light sweat staining of the interior. A truly marvelous relic from the final days of the Ruth/Gehrig age. LOA from Heritage Auctions.
80007
80008
1914 Boston Miracle Braves Team Signed Baseball from the George Tyler Estate
Arguably the most inspirational lot in this Platinum Night auction, the presented team signed sphere would serve well as a reminder to never give up, even if the odds seem hopelessly stacked against you. The 1914 Braves knew the feeling well, marking the nations anniversary on July 4th at the bottom of the National League rankings, a full fifteen games out of first place. Approaching the midpoint of the season, it appeared that merely repeating their fifth place finish in 1913 was an optimistic goal. But instead the Braves strode into the most torrid pace in professional baseball history, claiming victory in seventy of their final eighty-nine games to finish a full ten games ahead of the second place New York Giants in the National League pennant race. The utter domination would continue through the World Series, where the Braves swept the Philadelphia Athletics in four games, marking the unceremonious end (with some help from the rogue Federal League) to Connie Macks first great dynasty. Just a small handful of team signed baseballs from this remarkable chapter in baseball history have survived to see the dawn of the twenty-first century, and here we offer the finest yet encountered, consigned by the family of star pitcher George Tyler. The ONL (Tener) sphere is autographed by twenty-eight comeback kids, most boldly by Hall of Famer Rabbit Maranville, whose seventy-eight RBIs led the offense. Fellow legend Johnny Evers is here as well, along with the full starting line-up of Gowdy, Schmidt, Deal, Gilbert, Mann, Connolly, starting pitchers Rudolph, Strand, Tyler and manager George Stallings. All listed names are readily legible, with signature boldness ranging from 1.5/10 to 7/10. Any condition issues must be forgiven in light of the tremendous scarcity. A remarkable new hobby find makes its debut in this Platinum Night auction. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
80009
Circa 1915 Eddie Plank Single Signed Baseball, Only Example Known!
He learned his trade on the blood-soaked grounds of Americas most hallowed battlefield, fashioning his slab of baseball immortality with a sidearmed curveball that earned him 326 Major League victories. The third winningest southpaw of all time behind Warren Spahn and Steve Carlton, Gettysburg Eddie is best recalled for his fourteen seasons of service to the first great Philadelphia Athletics dynasty. Just eight and a half years after pitching his last game, Plank fell victim to a fatal stroke at age fifty, ensuring that his signature would remain one of the most challenging of all twentieth century stars. But while Plank is a rare sight in any autograph format, he has only been encountered one time in single signed baseball format. Youre looking at it. To be fair, the leather that comprises the skin of the baseball did not begin life in its current spherical format, but was instead a leather satchel once belonging to the star lefty, who wrote his name as a means of identification. This story was confirmed to us by Steve Grad at PSA/DNA, who saw the signature before its transformation soon after the collector purchased it from the Plank estate. The deeply toned leather competes with the black fountain pen ink for contrast, but the autograph would likely rate a 5/10 on a white ball. It is still instantly apparent and legible against the dark background, and quibbles over condition or the somewhat rudimentary stitching that binds the leather around the guts of a genuine baseball are silly considering the singular nature of the piece. The experts at PSA/DNA likewise confirm that they have never seen another Plank single, so this offering represents the definitive now or never moment. Bid accordingly. Full LOA from PSA/DNA.
The greatest pitcher I ever saw was Eddie Plank. He had everything. But most of all, he had brains. Ty Cobb
80010
80011
You can learn little from victory. You can learn everything from defeat. Christy Mathewson
80012
80013
Spectacularly preserved OAL (Harridge) sphere is consigned to this Platinum Night auction by the gentleman who acquired it personally from the Babe on August 5, 1947 in Indianapolis, where the faltering Ruth was attending an American Legion baseball game in which our consignor was a participant. Now eighty-one years old, the owner reports that the ball was placed in a box in a cedar chest and essentially forgotten for six decades, and we can find no physical evidence that would suggest otherwise. Ruths blue fountain pen sweet spot signature registers at a remarkable 9/10, placing the baseball in the top percentile of all known examples. The pale horsehide has mellowed perhaps half a shade from its original starkness to a creamy vanilla tone, and the factory stamping exhibits considerable fading but is still easily recognizable as official American League issue. The search for any spotting, scuffing or other signs of age proves futile. Babe Ruth single signed baseballs have been the hobbys most consistent performer for well over a decade, but the truly elite examples have seen their values expand exponentially. Every good baseball autograph collection begins with a Ruth single. A truly great one begins here. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication. Letter of provenance from consignor.
80014
1951 St. Louis Browns Team Signed Baseball with Eddie Gaedel, Bill Veeck
When Browns owner Bill Veeck got the impression that the diminutive Gaedel might be tempted to swing at a pitch, he warned the three-foot seven inch batter that he had taken out a million dollar insurance policy on his life, and that he would have a rifles crosshairs trained upon him from the stadium roof should the bat leave his shoulder. Little Eddie would take Veecks warning to heart, drawing the most famous four-pitch walk in Major League history, stopping twice on his jog to first base to bow to the crowds standing ovation. American League president Will Harridge was not quite so amused, accusing Veeck of making a mockery of the game and immediately voiding Gaedels contract. Veeck responded with a threat to demand a ruling on Yankees shortstop and MVP Phil Rizzuto, requiring a determination as to whether Scooter was a short ballplayer or a tall midget. Today Gaedels autograph is considered the most coveted rarity of all post-war Major Leaguers, with just a handful of examples surfacing in the hobby market. Here we find the only known team ball, autographed August 19, 1951, Gaedels single day of Browns service. His black fountain pen ink signature rates 7/10 on the side panel of the presented OAL (Harridge) sphere, joined by twenty other Browns including Veeck (later signature), Taylor (twice), Tobin, Long, Kennedy, Hogue, Garver and Young. Quality averages 7/10. Scuffing underneath the signatures strongly suggests this was a ball actually used in that famous game, ratcheting up the appeal of a ball with no lack thereof. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
80015
1952 New York Yankees Team Signed Baseball with Joe DiMaggio & Marilyn Monroe, Kissed by Marilyn!
The presented Official American League (Harridge) baseball lived a dream shared by countless millions of red-blooded American males, smooched by the definitive blonde bombshell at the height of her Hollywood fame. If the vintage horsehide is still weak at the knees from the experience, however, it doesnt show it, surviving with impressive strength to challenge for the title of most desirable post-war signed baseball on earth. We begin with the ideal sweet spot pairing of Joe DiMaggio and Marilyn Monroe, whose romance and brief 1954 marriage established the pair as American historys most famous couple. Joining the iconic lovebirds are twenty-six signatures from the World Champion 1952 Yankees, notably the rare rookieformat Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra, Phil Rizzuto, Johnny Mize, Billy Martin, Allie Reynolds, Gene Woodling and more. A pair of secretarial Casey Stengel signatures appear as well. Signature quality averages 7/10 with none dipping more than a point below. The Mick finds even more reason to enjoy the 1952 season, inheriting not just DiMaggios coveted center field position in the Bronx, but also the good fortune to appear on the spheres western panel, where Marilyns red lipstick kiss is instantly apparent. Exceptional provenance enhances the monumental appeal, as a pair of included photographs document the ceremony during which the baseball was presented. The ball was one of fifteen gifted to the victorious squad of a 20th Century Fox intramural softball league. Each team was represented by a studio star for its mascot, and it was the Marilyn team that took home the 1952 Championship. One photo finds the team posing with Ms. Monroe, each holding his baseball. A second pictures the wives, one of whom is the consignor of this lot. Also here is a February 1953 issue of Movies Magazine, which features the latter photo with the caption, Guests at the only party Marilyn has given in her new home were the wives of the fteen 20th Century lm cutters. They won the studios softball championship and were on Marilyns team. Experienced Heritage clientele will recall the May 2006 Signature Auction in which the World Record for autographed baseballs was crushed with a $191,000 result for a baseball autographed by Joe and Marilyn. Adding joint sweet spot placement, a lipstick kiss from the prettier half of the couple, and the World Champion 1952 Yankees as well, this baseball should separate the men from the boys when the bidding war begins. Photographic documentation. Letter of provenance from consignor. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
It was better than rooming with Joe Page. Joe DiMaggio, on the topic of his marriage to Marilyn Monroe
80016
1961 New York Yankees Team Signed Baseball, PSA NM-MT+ 8.5
Featuring a hard-slugging duo as sweet as the candy that shared its nickname, the 1961 Yankees and their fabled M&M boys stand in baseball history among the greatest of pinstriped editions. The Mick himself put it best when he told a reporter, The best team I ever saw, and I really mean this, was the 61 Yankees. I never got to see the 27 Yankees. Everyone says that was the greatest team ever, but I think it wouldve been a great series if wed have had the chance to play them. If Murderers Row would have presented a formidable challenge for the Kennedy-era crew, there could be few if any 1961 team signed spheres that could compete with the listed representation. The experts at PSA/DNA clearly agree, assigning matching grades of 8/10 on their painfully strict scale for both the autographs and the baseball itself, the ideal OAL (Cronin) variety. Their half point addition for visual appeal completes the scoring. Twenty-six bold blue ballpoint autographs adorn the pale, blemish-free horsehide, with not a single instance of the clubhouse signatures which plague most Yankee balls from the era. Mantle and Berra share sweet spot duties, giving way to a World Championship cast of Maris, Ford, Howard, Richardson, Lopez, Terry, Blanchard, Skowron, Kubek, Boyer and more on the adjoining panels. Unquestionably one of the finest autographed pieces of any format to derive from this hair-raising (and, for Maris, hair-losing) chapter of Yankee history, the presented baseball makes its first hobby appearance on the Golden Anniversary of its birth. Full Grading LOA from PSA/DNA, NM-MT+ 8.5. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
80017
A sibling squabble erupted earlier this year within the Reagan clan as the family and the nation recognized what would have been the hundredth birthday of the former President and towering icon of the modern American conservative movement. Biological son and namesake Ron Reagan wrote in his biographical My Father at 100 of his concerns that his fathers mental faculties had begun to betray him years before the news of his Alzheimers diagnosis had been made public. Of the elder Reagans October 1984 Presidential debate with Walter Mondale, Ron wrote, My heart sank as he oundered his way through his responses, fumbling with his notes, uncharacteristically lost for words. He looked tired and bewildered. Adopted son Michael Reagan took to the Internet with his response, Ron, my brother, was an embarrassment to his father when he was alive and today he became an embarrassment to his mother. With this utterly unique offering, Heritage presents an artifact which could be considered supporting evidence in Rons case. It is one of twelve baseballs delivered to our consignor by the White House, a favor for a Republican Party donor who was involved with a youth baseball league. Eleven of the baseballs came back to our consignor properly signed, but this one stood out from the pack. In black ink far too bold to be denied, the President had mistakenly signed Reagan Reagan. The allegation that our Commander in Chief may have been battling dementia in the midst of his Presidency is a serious one, and let there be no mistake that Heritage makes no judgment in the matter. But even as a mere curiosity, absent any troubling context, its a thoroughly unique Presidential artifact worthy of attention. Reagan single signed baseballs are rare and desirable in any format, and this oddest of variations provides the boldest sweet spot signature weve ever encountered. An unknown hand has adorned the northern and southern panels of the non-official sphere USA Sunbelt Champions 1984, the baseball team for which the dozen balls were autographed. Mild foxing on the eastern panel remains clear of the signature and there is no other writing on the ball. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
I wouldnt even complain if a stray ball came through the Oval Office window now and then. Ronald Reagan
80018
1909 Pittsburgh Pirates Panoramic Photograph from The Paddy OConnor Collection
Its an image which may be familiar to some collectors, though the same could not be said of the format. This marvelous shot of the 1909 World Champions was reproduced on paper for several varieties of supplements originally issued with periodicals of the day, but the hobby always wondered when (and if) an original photograph might surface. Heritage Auctions is pleased to report that the wait has ended. This flawlessly preserved specimen derives from the personal collection of back-up catcher Paddy OConnor, who stands fifth from left with his teammates before a darkened vista of the newly constructed Forbes Field grandstand. The lower central caption, Pittsburgh Base Ball Club, National League Champions 1909, and the photographers marking R.W. Johnston Studios of Pittsburgh Sep-1909, would indicate that this image was captured very shortly before the historic clash of Honus Wagner and Ty Cobb in the 1909 World Series. We find the Old Dutchman standing third from right, joined by fellow future Hall of Famers Fred Clarke at far right and Vic Willis at dead center of the line-up. The image measures 9x31, housed in its original frame bearing an ancient label from a framing shop in Springfield, MA, the town where OConnor is buried. The entirety of condition flaws is represented by a half-inch indentation at Dots Millers wrist, an issue which falls well clear of derailing our NRMT-MT+ rating.
80019
80020
1924 Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, John McGraw Signed Large Photograph Presented to Jack Dempsey
Participants in our inaugural Platinum Night auction at last years Baltimore National will recall the incredible Christy Walsh Collection that anchored the event, comprised of rare and important artifacts from the estate of the first sports agent. We have The Christy Walsh Syndicate to thank for this remarkable keepsake as well, a splendid oversized photograph gifted to the reigning Heavyweight Champion of the World, the legendary Jack Dempsey. Experienced collectors will recognize the image, or at least similar shots featuring Walshs stable of sports stars typically found posing at the outskirts of a World Series contest. This illustrious crew stands shoulder to shoulder before the start of the Series which would ultimately earn the great Walter Johnson his sole World Championship. He and fellow Washington Senator Nick Altrock appear in their home whites in the shot, joined by Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, John McGraw, George Sisler and Christy Walsh in civilian garb. Each subject has applied a black fountain pen ink autograph at the lower edge, none dipping below a boldness of 8/10. Only Altrocks surname is visible, suggesting that the matting job hides some edge damagethe image has not been examined outside of the frame. Some creasing along the upper edge, where To Jack Dempsey = Champ! is scripted in white paint, is apparent at certain angles to the light, but does little to distract. Otherwise the image presents very well. The photo is matted and framed to 20x23, with a sticker on verso identifying the piece as a former lot in the famous 1999 Barry Halper auction. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
80021
80022
Highly collectible and capable of realizing prices approaching $3,000 in its unsigned state, this glorious panorama first offered in the famous Barry Halper sale takes on an elephantine appeal with the addition of twenty-seven autographs, representing almost every last man pictured, all the way down to the young mascot that kneels at center. Only Harold Ehmke is absent, suggesting that this may have once been the personal possession of the 1929 World Series Game One starter. Those familiar with the composition of this squad, prominent in any educated discussion of the all-time greatest teams, will be intimately familiar with the cast of characters: Mack, Foxx, Cochrane, Collins, Grove, Simmons, Bishop, Dykes, Earnshaw, Miller, Boley and Haas. The signature quality ranges from a perfectly respectable 6/10 to a flawless 10/10, with each entirely legible and all but a few falling quite comfortably into the 8/10 to 10/10 range. The photograph itself measures 7x30 in its original frame and exhibits none of the creasing or staining typical of large vintage photos, save for the smallest defect at the easternmost edge, clear of Earle Macks body. The photo is housed in what we believe to be the original frame, measuring 12.5x35.5. An absolute dream piece for the uncompromising collector.
80023
I swing big, with everything Ive got, the Babe once famously reported. I hit big or I miss big. I like to live as big as I can. A continuation of that oversized theme survives here in the form of a rare and eminently desirable original 11x14 photograph of Ruth and his sidekick Lou Gehrig, autographed by the former in bold blue fountain pen ink. This charming spring training shot is particularly appealing for a few reasons. Perhaps most notably, the vastness of this vintage print is quite rare for pre-war photography, derivative of an expensive process which would suggest the photo was created for a recipient of some notoriety. The few similarly large examples weve seen from Ruth have borne personalized inscriptions, as is the case with most Ruth signed photos of any scale. But the Babe adds only a Best wishes from salutation to his signature here, establishing this as the first oversized Ruth signed photo weve ever encountered lacking an identified beneficiary. While condition problems seem to gravitate to oversized vintage photography, this specimen bucks the trend admirably, with not a single visual distraction worthy of note. An investment-quality piece for the collector who understands what a special opportunity this offering represents. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
80024
80025
1939 Inaugural Hall of Fame Induction Class Signed First Day Cover, PSA/DNA Mint 9
The identity of a sleepy little town in upstate New York was transformed forever on June 12, 1939, the day the ribbon was cut at the newly founded Baseball Hall of Fame on the shores of Lake Otsego. Though Cooperstown had enjoyed some limited fame with its controversial proclamation as baseballs birthplace, never had the eyes of the nation been so keenly focused upon the leafy hamlet until the day that the greatest living ballplayers convened to receive the games highest honor. This exceedingly rare first day cover, affi xed with four newly released three-cent stamps commemorating baseballs centennial, bears the postmark of that historic date and is autographed by the iconic eleven known to history as the Halls inaugural class: G.C. Alexander, Ty Cobb, Eddie Collins, Walter Johnson, Larry Lajoie, Connie Mack, Babe Ruth, Tris Speaker, George Sisler, J. Honus Wagner and Cy Young (twice). Joining this elite brotherhood are the signatures of ruling Commissioner of Baseball and future Hall of Famer Kenesaw Mountain Landis, and an unidentified signature notated PM, ostensibly the postmaster of Cooperstown. It should be noted that United States Postmaster General James A. Farley was in attendance this day, but the signature is clearly not his. All signatures retain every last degree of boldness they enjoyed upon their initial application, with mild toning of the envelopes glue the only possible stone to throw. We couldnt imagine a finer surviving specimen, and PSA/DNA bolsters this opinion with its Mint 9 rating, a grade rarely delivered by the services exacting experts. One of the most important and desirable autographed pieces in the hobby, a granite cornerstone for the finest of private collections. Encapsulated PSA/DNA Mint 9.
80026
80027
1939-43 Mel Ott Game Bat Signed by 1945 New York Giants Team
Important artifact dates to the year the high-stepping Giants slugger made the 500 Home Run Club a trio, the last complete season posted by the Hall of Fame outfielder. The signature model Hillerich & Bradsbys labeling actually dates the lumber to the 1939-43 era, but somehow the bat was spared the trauma of duty in the hands of the Manhattan long ball artist, instead enjoying a relatively peaceful slumber before being passed around the Giants dugout during the closing days of the Second World War. Ott himself is most prominent among the extraordinarily bold black fountain pen signatures that adorn the barrel, joined by fellow future Hall of Famer Ernie Lombardi and notables Nap Reyes, Adolfo Luque, Van Mungo, Bill Jurges, Phil Weintraub, Buddy Kerr, Johnny Rucker, Bill Voiselle and more. None of the twenty-seven signatures dips below 9/10 in strength. The bat is crafted from thirty-four ounces of blonde ash and measures thirty-five inches, perfectly matching Otts factory ordering records for the period. PSA/DNA has assigned the bat a grade of GU5, the highest possible rating for a bat lacking game use. LOA from PSA/DNA (bat). Full LOA from PSA/DNA (autographs). Full LOA from James Spence Authentication (autographs).
Every time I sign a ball, and there have been thousands, I thank my luck that I wasnt born Coveleski or Wambsganss or Peckinpaugh. Mel Ott
80028
A batting crown (.381 average) and an American League MVP Award in 1939 provided the superstar center fielder with no shortage of leverage for negotiating a salary for 1940, and here we find Joltin Joe agreeing to the sum of $32,500. Sure to thrill even the most casual of baseball fans, this Uniform Players Contract assures the Hall of Fame legends services to the New York Yankees for the 1940 season, one in which he would again top the American League with a .352 batting average while driving in over 130 runs. DiMaggio initials the first page to assert his acceptance of the salary figure, then signs a complete Joseph DiMaggio autograph on the second page, adding his 2150 Beach St. address. The contract exhibits original storage folds, and twin punch holes for filing, but otherwise exhibits no condition issues of note. One of the most important documents from this American icon to reach the auction block, for the serious collector and baseball historian. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
80029
80030
1940s Baseball Stars Multi-Signed Glove with Babe Ruth, Joe DiMaggio
Extraordinary relic was the pride and joy of young Jan Dolcater, a resident of Tampa, Florida who took advantage of Major League Baseballs annual southern migration to compile one of the most impressive rosters of autographs weve yet encountered. While there is a percentage of lesser names among the forty-seven signers, Dolcater was clearly a discerning young man when it came to his glove, choosing his targets wisely. The Hall of Fame is disproportionately represented, with thirteen now immortalized in Cooperstown bronze: Babe Ruth, Joe DiMaggio, Ted Williams, Warren Spahn, Bobby Doerr, Joe Cronin, Ernie Lombardi, Hank Greenberg, Bob Feller, Stan Musial, Hal Newhouser, Bill McKechnie, Bucky Walters. Other notables include: Johnny Pesky, Johnny Sain, Marty Marion, Harry Brecheen, Dom DiMaggio, Al Schacht, Tom Henrich, Birdie Tebbetts. While any single item blessed by the touch of so many diamond legends is worthy of attention, the unique medium of a baseball glove sets this specimen apartalmost never do signed gloves of this vintage surface. Perhaps even more noteworthy is the simply spectacular condition of the piece, providing boldness of 8/10 or better for each of the fortyseven autographs without exception. Full LOA from PSA/DNA.
80031
Circa 1950 Bud Abbott & Lou Costello Signed Whos on First? Photograph
A roster comprised of the most unusually named ballplayers in the games history served as the premise of the canonical comedy routine that stands to this day as the defining work of Abbott and Costellos partnership. One might reasonably assume, therefore, that photographs such as the presented example are widely available, but that assumption is negated by the fact that this is the first signed photograph of the routine to reach the major hobby auction block in the past dozen years. The few autographed items relating to this side-splitting battle of wits between a befuddled prospective ballplayer and the quirky teams manager are typically vinyl recordings of the routine, though a signed baseball did emerge eight years ago, realizing a price just short of $8,000 at auction. From a display standpoint, this relic has all the others beat. The black fountain pen signatures of each comedian waver a point at most from perfection, and the 7x10 image likewise provides no cause for complaint. A charming and quite possibly unique piece of pure, unadulterated Americana, sure to charm generations to come. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
Costello: St. Louis has a good outfield? Abbott: Oh, absolutely. Costello: The left fielders name? Abbott: Why. Costello: I dont know, I just thought Id ask. Abbott: Well, I just thought Id tell you.
80032
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80034
1972 Roberto Clemente 3,000th Hit Full Ticket, Only Known Example
Its hard not to believe in fate, in the benevolence of the Baseball Gods, when considering that the noble Clemente recorded his 3,000th career hit during the last of his 2,433 regular season games. Just three months later his airplane, loaded with supplies for the victims of a Nicaraguan earthquake, would fall into the sea, ending the life of one of the few athletes truly worthy of the label of hero. Stubs from this otherwise inconsequential gamethe Pirates had long since locked up the National League East to ultimately finish eleven games ahead of the second place Cubsrarely surface at public auction. Heritage realized a price of $4,182 for a stub in May 2005, one of just four to pass through our offices. But this is the first full ticket from that contest known to exist, and theres no reason to think it wont be the last as well. The untorn ticket which would have supplied the owner with a third row view of history exhibits mild bending but none of the typical staining or tearing found in period paper. PSA encapsulation of this exceedingly rare relic provides both protection and unquestioned authenticity.
80035
80036
1988 The 500 Home Run Club Original Artwork by Ron Lewis.
The hundreds of signed prints created from this work has made the image one of the most recognizable in the hobby and established this as unquestionably the most famous work from Ron Lewis sizable catalog of sports-themed art. The Original Eleven, as they are typically called, mix magic and mastery as each appears in his youthful prime and most memorable uniform style against a backdrop of the old Yankee Stadium. While reproductions number in the tens or hundreds of thousands, there is only one original work, and this is it. The massive 30x57 acrylic on canvas was commissioned prior to the famous Atlantic City summit of the games greatest living sluggers, where they joined forces to create some of the most popular signed collectibles in the modern hobby. The expanded dimensions of the original provides stunning detail lost in the conversion to smaller printseven the facsimile signatures on the Louisville Sluggers are handled with exacting care. Individually, each of the eleven portraits is sure to impress fans of photorealistic artworktogether, the effect is mesmerizing. When it comes to investing potential for fine collectibles, one-of-a-kind status and universal recognition will always take you far, and the offered lot is the definition of each. Mint condition. Interested bidders be advisedyoull need some serious wall space for this enormous eye-catcher! Third party shipping required.
Standard size poster is pictured for scale. It is not included in this lot.
80037
1998 Joe DiMaggio, Study for Yankee Clipper Original Artwork by LeRoy Neiman
The pose will be instantly recognizable to any student of the legendary sports artists work, as well as most fans of the late, great Joe DiMaggio, who signed boatloads of the lithograph printed from Neimans Yankee Clipper original. This brightly colored pastel on artists paper represents one of the final steps in the evolution of Neimans famous work, and a comparison to the later oil on canvas with reveal the identical positioning of Joltin Joe and his famous swing, the yellow bursts of spectators and the deep navy of the stadium structure. Neiman autographs and dates the image LeRoy Neiman 98 at lower center, and identifies the work Joe DiMaggio, Study for Yankee Clipper at lower right. The image area measures fifteen inches square, tastefully matted and framed to final dimensions of 28x28. This is one of two Neiman originals presented within the Heritage Platinum Night auction. Though this most famous artist ever to work in the sporting realm is notoriously prolific, his iconic images are intensely coveted are fiercely pursued when made available. We expect investment-minded bidders to be keeping close watch on this offering. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
80038
1875 Prescott & White CDV Hartford Dark Blues SGC 80 EX/NM 6 Newly Discovered Example!
Nestled in between a pair of musty pages of a literary volume, an account of the battles of the Civil War, comes one of the more surprising new discoveries of recent yearsa very rare, fresh and seemingly uncirculated CDV of the 1875 Hartford Dark Blues (or Blue Stockings), a card that features one of the more significant players of the 19th century in pitcher William Candy Cummings (1848-1924). Cummings (pictured in the back row, center) is given credit for inventing the curveball, now standard issue in the arsenal of every Major League pitcher. The invention helped earn Cummings a place in Cooperstown among men who claim membership in the Hall thanks in part to his innovation. His role of president of the International League (the first minor league) cements his status as a true baseball pioneer. Photographic images of Cummings are almost non-existent. This CDV represents the only photo of Cummings made available during his baseball career. The Dark Blues finished second in 1875, bolstered by a career season for Cummings who went 35-12 with an eyebrow raising 1.60 ERA. The first 75 Hartford Blues CDVs known portrayed the team in front of a blank, lifeless backdrop. In the Heritage Signature sale of April 2009 we offered the first known copy upon which the team is shown inside an elegantly decorated room, resulting in a aristocratic aura worthy of the now historic team. Of the handful of examples that have been made available at auction or that rest in private hands, this is only the second copy to offer this photo treatment. The team is posed in full uniform with a few holding a tool of their trade. An array of caps is dispersed as decoration. This example is the second to earn a SGC 80 EX/NM 6 assessment, thanks to the fragile but loving pages. The photo is virtually mint. The image offers string detail quality and contrast. The thin card mount is 4.125x2.5 with barely discernable edge wear and one tiny surface dot on the obverse, which is all that keeps this amazing find from being the finest technically graded copy recorded to date. Hardly a second thought would be given had the label read 84 NM 7. The flat black reverse surface is as perfect as one could dream from a 135+ year old artifact. The bottom area offers completely legible Prescott & White and Hartford gold metallic text identifying the photographer and studio location. A truly stunning card and a significant addition to the hobby collective.
80039
1888 N403 Yum Yum Tobacco Roger Connor, Redemption Back SGC 60 EX 5
The most challenging and rewarding genre of baseball card collecting is the rarified world of the late 19th century. Presented is a key card from series known as N403 or the Yum Yum Tobacco, an issue considered tremendously rare even by Victorian-era standards. Little is known about the endangered Yum Yum beyond the Chicago, IL derivation from August Beck & Co., but there is no mystery about the extreme rarity. We do know there are over fifty subjects cataloged, with only a total of eighty-six cards graded by both of the most widelyutilized third-party grading services. Why these treasured collectibles are so exceedingly difficult to find seemingly rests with a redemption offer advertised on the backs of a percentage of cards from the N402 Yum Yum Actress edition. To date no baseball subject carried this rare reverse treatment. Until now... Offered for the first time at auction is an extremely rare N403 Yum Yum of early home run king and Baseball Hall of Famer Roger Connor, featuring an August Beck & Co. verso with the Yum Yum redemption offer. Roger Connor (1853-1931) was the premier slugger of his era. His 138 career home runs over eighteen seasons set the benchmark which stood until a man named Ruth raised the bar to seemingly astronomical new heights. Connor was enshrined into the Baseball Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee in 1976, and is noted for clubbing the very first grand slam in Major League Baseball history. The offer on verso of this intense rarity reads, SMOKE and CHEW YUM YUM. Upon the return of 100 of these Photographs, we will send you by mail one Elegant Japanned Tin Patent Folding Lunch or Picnic Box. AUG. BECK & Co. Chicago, Ill. Never before has this offer been seen on the back of a baseball subject, and is very possibly the explanation why these cards are so rare. The card has been graded SGC 60 EX 5. A very attractive high-end example, this is the second-finest copy known of a total population of only three. The card offers strong photo quality and light signs of wear at the corners. The back has some light soiling which is quickly overlooked for the all-important Yum Yum back stamp. A quality example of a major 19th century Hall of Famer from one of the rarest baseball card releases. Without question, this is a card that would fittingly serve as the crowning touch to any advanced vintage card collection.
80040
1909 E95 Philadelphia Caramel Christy Mathewson SGC 88 NM/MT 8 The Finest Example Known!
This simply stunning artifact earns high marks in each and every category of judgment (except spelling!), beginning, of course, with the identity of the man it honors. The inaugural class Hall of Fame pitcher is captured just before the apex of his storied career, framed against a vibrant vista of gold and green. His face conveys the look of determination that would earn him a third place tie with G.C. Alexander on the career victories chart. Joining the most famous (Wagner, Cobb, Plank) and infamous (Merkle, Cicotte) ballplayers of the age, Matty stands as one of the key components from the twenty-five card issue, though this particular representation stands as the finest example of the 185 total cards graded by both SGC and PSA combined. A pair of 80 EX/NM 6 examples are the second-finest recorded. The centering is testament to fine American engineering, the colors have retained their rich vibrancy and the surfaces are beyond compare. Razor-sharp corners indicate a lonely life free from human touch. Its simply one of the finest examples from the E95 Philadelphia Caramel edition, and from most other E class promotions as well. A tempting target for the most discriminating of collectors.
80041
That young fellow is another Cy Young. I never saw a kid with more than he displayed. Of course, he is still green, but when he has a little experience he should be one of the greatest pitchers that ever broke into the game. Addie Joss, on Walter Johnson
80042
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80044
1911 D304 Brunners Butter Krust Ty Cobb PSA EX 5 A Newly Discovered Example!
The most sought-after entry from a short-lived, regionally focused, and very rare production, this visually engaging memento of Ty Cobb is an undisputed highlight within any vintage collection. It holds court as a most prized piece in a Cobb specific assembly. As inherently perishable as the Butter Krust loaves they once accompanied, the colorful D304s have few peers in the industry in terms of elusiveness or mystique. The series personality is endearing on how many other cards is Ty Cobb actually smiling? Its artful employment of color makes the viewer wish that the products of General Baking Co. had been much more widely distributed, way back when. Only a substantial rewriting of history, though, could alter the facts: relatively few General Baking cards survived breakfast-table sessions in the Buffalo, New York area during the 1911-14 era, and only a tiny fraction of those that did endure picture the legendary Cobb. As far as condition goes, this example has few faults. An area of surface soiling on Cobbs jersey and a very faint surface bend (as seen only on the reverse along the top) account for the PSA EX 5 grade. Corner quality is more in line with a card bearing a higher technical assessment, and the same goes for coloring and centering. A largely untouched exemplar, this came to Heritage from outside the traditional hobby population after serving as a treasured token passed down for three generations. The D304 Cobb presented here is one of a pair at the excellent level with one lone copy documented at a higher tier. The cards PSA census accounts for just a dozen total submissions encompassing a quartet of General Baking brands. The pieces delicate cardstock betrays trace evidence of handling, careless treatment while riding with its packages original cargo and, clearly, it has experienced no mishaps since. The obverse discloses a beautiful player image with all hues brightly expressed and well-defined. Centering has been accomplished with precision between snow-white borders, and the back is uncommonly clean save for a trio of light product spot stains. This is one of the most sought after Cobb card collectibles and a formidable example few others could challenge.
When I began playing the game, baseball was about as gentlemanly as a kick in the crotch. Ty Cobb
80045
1912-13 T215 Red Cross Type 2 Ty Cobb PSA Fair 1.5 The Only PSA-Graded Example!
There is one superlative which seems suitably appropriate for a card such as this. No, not scarce, or rare, but Impossible! Yes, the image is the classic Bat Off Shoulder pose found in other tobacco card promotions of the same era, but this is no simple twin. Lines like Pop Oneof-One or Highest Grade Known are typically reserved for the lofty Mint 9 or Gem MT 10 cards, but both terms are fitting here as well. As a matter of fact this is the ONLY RED CROSS TYPE 2 of Ty COBB to be graded by PSA! By comparison, there are just under 130,000 T206s encased in PSA holders. One can surmise Cobbs Georgia roots accounts for the existence of this southern-based card. The card was issued the year after Cobb completed what was arguably the finest campaign of his storied career. His League-leading numbers in the 1911 season are astonishing: .420 average, 248 hits, forty-seven doubles, twenty-four triples, 127 RBIs, eighty-three stolen bases! Despite his uneasy relationship with the fans and press that may have kept him out of the running other seasons, the American League had no choice but to crown him Most Valuable Player, the only year he was honored as such. Cobb stands before a serene background of soft pastel, his stare the picture of determination. Its one of the finest portraits in the long and impressive history of baseball card art. The back displays the distinctive red Red Cross Tobacco advertising, only marginally affected by creasing, mild surface soiling, and a small area of surface loss. Extending outward from his classic image, we come to four blunt corners and the unmistakable COBB, Detroit in bold blue ink establishing this card as the coveted Red Cross Type 2, a crowning achievement present today in no more than one or two Cobb collections. Fair with superior visual appeal.
80046
Extremely Rare 1928 Harringtons Ice Cream Earl Smith Green Print #48 SGC 70 EX+ 5.5 Finest Example of Only Four Known!
For over 125 years, tobacco, gum and food producers have engaged in the practice of inserting trading cards featuring a multitude of subject matter as an inducement to purchase their wares. At times, a complete set of cards could be exchanged for a valuable prize. Little did dewy-eyed innocent youngsters spending their nickels know the joke was often on them. To enhance sales, these exchange offers included the practice of choosing a particular card and severely limiting its distribution to lessen the amount of prizes that could be redeemed. The existence of these rarities is the grist of hobby legend, resulting in some of the most valuable and treasured cards in the hobby. At the top of this list are the 1932 US Caramels Freddy Lindstrom, V117 Maple Crispette Stengel, R306 Butter Cream Babe Ruth and Ivy Andrews from the R300 George Miller series. When a set was returned along with a prize to a consumer, the cards were canceled in some distinctive manner. The act of stamping, hole punching and even cutting cards in half was employed. Harringtons Ice Cream cards appeared in 1928 and are relatively scarce today. The backs advertise that a complete set of sixty cards can be exchanged for one gallon of ice cream. A second offer promising an ice cream novelty in exchange for one cardof course it was Babe Ruthmade for some gut-wrenching decisions. It fully appears that the #48 Earl Smith was the prize control card for Harringtons and other brands as well. The size, stock and print quality all match traditional cards except for the use of green printing ink instead of black and white. This is not some odd coincidence. It is widely believed that the green variation was supplied to shopkeepers to trade for the standard version, thereby avoiding the necessity of damaging the card as a form of prize redemption cancellation. To date, only four examples have been graded by SGC and none by PSA. This SGC 70 EX+ 5.5 is by far the nest copy known! The others grade no higher than a 30. Its rarity is unquestionable. Additionally, where Earl Smith does appear in other sets there are few, if any choices. To date, there is not one recorded #48 Earl Smith with a Yuenglings back. Only one Tharps Ice Cream and a pair of Sweetmans have been submitted. As a W502, there are now eleven known, but note that set has a blank back and no prize exchange offer. To the skeptic, we remind them that even after all of this time new discoveries from single cards like the R306 Ruth to entire series like the 1920 Peggy Popcorn find are being made. The Goudey Lajoie and R328 Lindstrom have a marquee status all their own in part because they originate from immensely popular series. This card originates from a scarce edition and features a player largely lost to history, leaving little to artificially hype. The fact is this card is many times more rare then the Magie and Lajoie, twice as rare as the known R306 Ruth cards, and ranks just below the 32 Lindstrom and V117 Stengel. How many other cards can make that noteworthy claim?
80047
1933 Delong Lou Gehrig #7 SGC 88 NM/MT 8 Pop Two, Only One Higher!
Though the incredible consecutive games streak that earned Lou Gehrig his famous Iron Horse nickname would ultimately extend into the opening weeks of the 1939 season, that unbroken chain had almost been snapped twice in 1933. On April 23rd, an errant pitch struck Gehrig in the head, briefly turning out the lights. Seven weeks later, Gehrig and manager McCarthy were tossed for arguing with the umpire, but a single at-bat earned Lou credit for an appearance. As the nation suffered through the devastating effects of the Great Depression, Gehrig continued to inspire with his uncommon resilience. Emerging the same year as benchmark Goudey edition, the Delong issue likewise deserves recognition as one of the hobbys chewing gum pioneers, though the Delong breed is a great deal tougher to locate. With Babe Ruth absent from the twenty-four card issue, Gehrig is fittingly pictured as a towering figure, more than tripling the value of the issues runner-up. Here we present a remarkably strong representation of the Delong sets key card. A stunning combination of smooth and blemish free surfaces, vibrant color and precise registration and a remarkable absence of corner wear has fuel an ascent to the loftiest regions of SGCs population report. As of this writing, this graded SGC 88 NM/MT 8 example is one of NM/MT twins with only one other managing a half grade higher. One of the finest examples in the hobby!
80048
1933 Sport Kings Gum #1 SGC 92 NM/MT+ 8.5 Highest SGC Grade
While there is little dispute that the Wagner T206 inhabits the throne as king of the card collecting world, back in 1910 Ty Cobb was presented, albeit briefly, as the King of the Smoking Tobacco World. A re-coronation of sorts occurred in 1933 when Goudeys Sports Kings Gum confirmed his status as baseball card royalty. Topping even Babe Ruth for the number one spot (the Bambino was card number two), the tough kid from the state of Georgia starts off a commemorative issue that features the best from the Golden Age of boxing (Dempsey, Tunney), hockey (Shore, Bailey),football (Grange, Thorpe) and many others. The mixture of Cobbs eternal star power, his appearance as number one card and, of course, the cards advanced age make this one of the toughest cards to find in a high grade. Population reports confirm this. Of the 118 Cobb Sport Kings to pass through SGCs service, none has ever topped it. Furthermore, only one other has matched the grade of the offered specimen, establishing this entry one of the top 1% in its class. The surfaces are without fault, the corner tips all well-defined and sharp. A slow and critical review revealed no additional flaws. The centering of 60/40 should deter no one from vying for one of the finest examples known. Had the elegant and colorful portrait of the greatest hitter of the game rested a sliver to the left a new SGC king of the Sport Kings could have been born. We could continue with an extended series of superlatives, but we defer the age-old statement a picture is worth 1,000 words. Considering the PSA census as well, the cards ranking as top 1% of its class is confirmed. A truly stunning and exceptional card that would elevate the status any vintage collection.
80049
1936 World Wide Gum Joe DiMaggio #51 SGC 84 NM 7 Highest Grade Available
Joe DiMaggio was the greatest all-around player I ever saw, contemporary diamond legend Ted Williams once told reporters. DiMaggio had a career which cannot be summed up purely in numbers and awards. He had an impact on society as well as baseball history. Perhaps only Babe Ruth could match Joltin Joe for pure notoriety, and certainly not since Ruths retirement had a player garnered the sort of adulation that DiMaggio claimed both on and off the playing field. Though intensely private, his marriage to Marilyn Monroe only brightened his star, and further solidified his status as one of the most recognizable figures of twentieth century America. In 1936, as a rookie out of the Pacific Coast League he would reserve a place with his team at the Worlds Champions table, acquiring his first taste of Fall Classic cuisine. It would be a meal he would savor ten more times in his career. DiMaggio made few appearances on cards in 36, but none are as rare and significant as his Canadian World Wide Gum rookie card. For the DiMaggio specialist or the vintage card aficionado, this is a monumental addition without comparison. Graded 84 NM 7 from the conservative judges at SGC, this is a card well worthy of the high end adjective. The horizontal centering is teasingly close to precise, vertical centering is 50/50. Surfaces are close to immaculate, and only very slight wear to the two right corner tips suggests the fact this rookie card entry of one of baseballs premier players has passed the three-quarter of a century mark. This example rests alongside an additional pair of equal quality examples within the population records. The three (assuming no resubmission occurred) stand as the finest recorded examples known to date, with little worry of ever being topped. The reverse resonates quality. The printing is a bold, fully legible strike, the text translated into French to confirm its Canadian origins. Once a card of this importance and quality is acquired, it will not see the public auction circuit for some time, if ever. This is a rare chance to acquire what must be one of the top 500 all-time baseball cards the hobby has to offer.
There is always some kid who may be seeing me for the first or last time. I owe him my best. Joe DiMaggio
80050
1953 Topps Willie Mays #244 SGC 96 Mint 9 Pop One, Highest SGC Graded Example!
Bowman may have dropped the proverbial ball for failing to include this young legend-in-the-making in its 1953 issue, but Topps thankfully proved itself to be as sure-handed as the Say Hey Kid himself. But, in fairness, it had been a close call. With their attention turning to the impending football season, the Topps Chewing Gum Co. dodged the future wrath of vintage trading card collectors by making the 1951 Rookie of the Year card number 244 in their short-printed high series, ensuring future availability if not plenitude. Graded SGC 96 Mint 9, presented is one of the very best 1953 Topps Mays cards on earth. This specimen shares with no others its stratospheric tier, nor does any representation grade higher within the nearly 200 SGC-holstered examples. The cards pristine character incorporates a phenomenal image, and, after almost sixty years of existence, displays no perceptible effects of exposure to circulation, dust, or light. In short, the card appears exactly as it did the day it hatched from wax. A satisfying rough cut at the bottom edge and the lack of so much as the implication of wear in the all too critical full-bleed corners provides indisputable evidence that the piece has escaped handling (in all of its deleterious forms) since the moment of striking. A mandatory component in any serious assembly of 1950s treasures.
80051
He struck the first shot in the inaugural British Open (then called The Open Championship), winning four of the seven to follow in 1861, 1862, 1864 and 1867. Remembered as the foremost pioneer of the early game, Old Tom was likewise one of its most diverse practitioners, serving as greenkeeper, clubmaker, ballmaker, instructor and course designer during his decades of service to the sport. His dedication to golf extended to the very last days of his life, as Morris perished from injuries sustained during a fall down a flight of stairs at the New Golf Club in St. Andrews just before his eighty-seventh birthday. Despite Morris long life and decades of fame, autographed material is exceedingly scarce, with signed images all but non-existent. Here we present the most remarkable example weve yet encountered, a masterful art print picturing the ancient linksman autographed by both artist and subject in the wide lower margin. Each signature survives with wonderful 9/10 boldness. This is an original photogravure print based upon an oil painting of Old Tom Morris by Sir George Reid (1841-1913) as commissioned by the Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews in the fall of 1902. Image size is 17.25x12.5 and stems from an edition of approximately fifty which were signed in pencil by Old Tom. This exact photogravure was set aside for the artist and signed in fountain pen in the lower margin by both Reid and Old Tom, one of two known to exist in this format. Above the image to the right is the printed legend Copyright 1903, by the Committee of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club St. Andrews Scotland. Printed in Berlin. Framed to a museum-quality 21x27. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication. Third party shipping required.
80052
It is nothing new or original to say that golf is played one stroke at a time. But it took me many years to realize it. Bobby Jones
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He was the greatest golfer of his age, and arguably the greatest sportsman of any. Though his unmatched 1930 Grand Slam and his Augusta National course have assured immortality for the name Bobby Jones, we must remember that just seven years separate his first Major Championship from his last, his professional career closed at age twenty-eight. While any Jones autograph carries tremendous collecting appeal, advanced hobbyists understand the enhanced appeal of signed material deriving from this narrow term of professional activity. Here we present one of the finest pieces weve ever encountered from that ultimate vintage. The classic image of Jones world-beating swing finds a youthful subject decked out in the height of Golden Age links fashion, with bow tie and saddle shoes. The viewer is instantly struck by the expanded dimensions of the shot, the viewable area measuring 10x14. Such oversized photographs were quite expensive to produce in the 1920s, and therefore particularly rare. Large photos are also much more susceptible to damage, but this specimen survives without a flaw to report (photo has not been examined out of frame). The same glowing condition report can be applied to the black fountain pen signature, reading To my dear friend Mr. Leonard Fackner with sincere regards, Robt. T. Jones Jr.PSA/DNA assigns a Mint 9 grade to the bold application. The image has been professionally matted and framed to a museum quality 22x27. Full Grading LOA from PSA/DNA, Mint 9. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication. Third party shipping required.
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Circa 1930 Bobby Jones Match Used Club with Exceptional Provenance
The definitive text on the topic of Bobby Jones match used clubs was written by golf historian Sidney Matthew, the 1992 title The History of Bobby Jones Clubs. Matthews used his skills as a trial attorney to piece together all the evidence pertaining to the . whereabouts and identification of Jones authentic clubs. His research ferreted out the facts from the legends and the real from the alleged. In the end, Matthews was able to identify and certify only a couple of dozen authentic Bobby Jones golf clubs. Of course, all of them are fitted with hickory wood shafts, still the standard of excellence at that time. Matthews accounted for fourteen of the sixteen clubs that Jones used during his final year of competition in 1930, the year Jones captured the Grand Slam, winning the British Open, the British Amateur, the U.S. Amateur, and the U.S. Open all in the same year a feat never accomplished by anyone before or since. Jones gave twelve of his sixteen Grand Slam clubs to Augusta National Golf Club, home of the Masters, in 1948, where they remain to this day. He gave his driver (he named it Jeanie Deans) made by club professional Jack White to the Royal and Ancient Golf Club at St. Andrews, Scotland, where it resides today in the British Golf Museum not far from the R & A clubhouse. And he gave his putter, Calamity Jane II, to the United States Golf Association where it is on display in Golf House, their great museum. Only a Hagen concave sand wedge (used for only two shots that year) and Jones coveted Run-Up chipping club remained unaccounted for. It is particularly exciting, therefore, that the presented club (36 in length) happens to be a Run-Up, a flawlessly provenanced relic gifted to Jones close friend O.B. Keeler. In Jones 1926 book Down the Fairway (co-authored with Keeler), Jones described his use of a There Run-Up club, There is another kind of shot from just off the putting surface to which I am partial...with a little old cleek... The shaft is rather soft and of putter length, and the stroke is only a big putt, and I have found it pretty reliable in getting the ball at least decently near the hole. Matthew documents the Keeler connection on page twenty-seven of his book: O.B. Keeler subsequently expanded on this unique club: The rst club I purchased was a second hand cleek, designed to handle the gutta percha ball. It was long, narrow, and graceful in the blade... I have the original today. I had two copies made, cut down to putter length in the shaft; and a few years before when Bobby was worrying about his short club shots, I asked him to try this little club. He played tiny approach shots from just off the green with such success with it, that he had Tom Stewart make up a dozen copies for him, all marked with his autograph. Of Mathews goes on to say, Of the 12 copies made by Tom Stewart, one has come to light recently. The provenance of the club runs from Jones to his beloved Boswell, O.B. Keeler, and is stamped with the initials O.B.K. on the back of the club. It bears the pipe cleekmark and the unusual and distinguishable signature of Robt T. Jones Jr. It is putter length and has cleek on the toe with a single punch dot (signifying that Tom Stewart himself nished the club and not one of his hired workers) and HAND FORGED MADE IN SCOTLAND all on the toe. Above the Jones signature is SPECIAL and below the pipe is T.S. ST.A. REG. TRADEMARK. It has a lined face. A plausible hypothesis is that Jones gave his run-up-club to O.B. Keeler and thereafter Keeler stamped his own initials on it. Whether or not this Run-Up club is one of the two missing members of Bobby Jones Grand Slam playing set is not certain, but it is clear that if there were twelve of them at one time it remains the only Run-Up club to turn up so far. And its provenance is impeccable, having been consigned in 1992 to Sporting Antiquities Auction House, where Dr. Barry Glaser purchased it for his collection. In the accompanying 1992 letter of consignment to Sporting Antiquities, the former owner of the club, Dr. William W. Hedrick, explains how his great aunt, the widow of O.B. Keeler, gave him the club in the early 1960s. As one of just a tiny handful of documented Jones club in private hands, the appeal of this lot is impossible to quantify. And as perhaps the only available club from Jones fabled Grand Slam masterpiece, the value borders on priceless. Letter of provenance from gentleman who received club from Keelers widow.
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Almost as legendary as the skill which earned him golfs only Grand Slam was the grace and dignity of the man who claimed all four Majors of the 1930 season. Jones famously dismissed accolades for calling a penalty stroke upon himself at a crucial juncture of a match with the statement, You may as well praise a man for not robbing a bank. For Jones, there was no struggle between right and wrong. Wrong never stood a chance. Golf journalist Herbert Warren Wind put it best when he wrote, In the opinion of many people, of all the great athletes, Jones came the closest to being what we call a great man. Presented is arguably the most important Bobby Jones artifact that exists, which puts it quite solidly in the running for the most important collectible from the history of golf as well. While Jones joined Babe Ruth, Jack Dempsey and Bill Tilden as the leading icon of his respective field of endeavor during the Golden Age of Sport, his most enduring contribution to the game is the Masters Tournament, contested on the Augusta, Georgia grounds he personally transformed from untamed woodlands during the Great Depression. The fabled Green Jacket serves as the tangible symbol of golfs greatest achievement, awarded to the victor every second Sunday in April inside Augustas Butler Cabin. As closely guarded as it is coveted, the Green Jacket today is restricted to the grounds of Augusta with winners strongly urged against taking the garments off campus, and absolutely forbidden from selling them. Super Bowl rings, World Series trophies and Championship belts may routinely enter the hobby, but the Green Jacket remains the most elusive of prey. Jones had retired from professional competition by the time he turned his attentions to the Augusta project, though he still competed in the Masters Tournament for a number of years as a treat to his fans anxious to see the legend in action. Jones personal Green Jacket was not a victors prize, but rather worn to identify him as a member of the staff, an idea germinated from his experience at the 1930 British Open where red jackets were supplied to course representatives and the winning golfer. It was in 1937 that Jones issued Green Jackets to all Augusta members, and 1949 that the garment became an annual prize for the Masters Champion. The very first Green Jacket was custom made for Bobby Jones by Hackett of New York City. Clifford Roberts, Jones partner in founding Augusta National, was a Wall Street financier. He most likely commissioned Jones original jacket which was to become the prototype for all future Green Jackets. Its main distinguishing feature from later Green Jackets is that only on Jones original jacket is the Augusta National Golf Club logo embroidered into the lapel pocket and not sewn onto the pocket as a separate patch. When Clifford Roberts ordered Green Jackets for the general club membership he used the services of the Brooks Uniform Company, also located in New York City. Afterwards, other manufacturers were contracted to provide later editions of the original design. As far as we know, Bobby Jones first Green Jacket made by Hackett, as offered here, is the only surviving example from 1937. Apparently, all of the Brooks Uniform Company examples were discarded in the distant past. A few Brooks examples can be seen on vintage photographs, the most distinctive feature being the A.N.G.C. (Augusta Nation Golf Club) lettering on the lapel patch and the crude shape of the map of the United States, both features which exactly match Bobby Jones original Hackett jacket. With characteristic generosity, Jones personally made a gift of this jacket to the artist who painted the portrait of Jones that hangs in Augusta to this day. A 1991 notarized letter traces the chain of custody from the artist, to the gentleman who purchased the jacket when the artist fell upon hard times, to the letter writer. A second letter from Frank J. Christian, who served as the club photographer for Augusta National for fifty-two years, confirms the jacket style as the earliest of its kind. Also included is a modern print of one of Christians photos, picturing Jones wearing this exact jacket. The green wool garment survives in remarkable and 100% original condition, down to the brass buttons and the simple golden RTJ embroidered on the interior chest pocket. Inside this pocket we find a label from Haskett, 2 West 45th St., New York with handwritten identification Robert T. Jones Jr., Feb/37, 6133, the final number apparently some form of inventory code. A more fitting digit would be 1, considering this blazer is the very first Masters Jacket, that it serves as a symbol of the pinnacle of links achievement, and that it originally belonged to the man who will forever reign as the most illustrious figure in the history of competitive golf. Letter of provenance from owner. LOA from Augusta club photographer. LOA from Heritage Auctions.
See: Video Lot Description
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Please see photograph of Jones wearing this jacket on the catalogs inside front cover.
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1940s Green Bay Packers Multi-Signed Book with Lambeau, Kiesling, Calhoun
Its a bold statement, but were prepared to make itthis is the most comprehensive collection of early Green Bay Packers autographs ever assembled. Fifty-four signatures appear in the presented hardcover (complete with original dust jacket) first edition of Arch Wards The Green Bay Packers, a highly collectible volume in its own right as the first book every written about this historic franchise. From the cast of characters, we are able with a reasonable degree of certitude to determine the occasions of the signings, a pair of events just after the close of the Second World War. The pre-war players autographs likely date to the 1946 Homecoming Game at Green Bays Old City Stadium, a contest between the Packers and the Chicago Cardinals attended by a great number of team veterans. The page dedicated to the 1947 roster was probably completed that year at the teams Rockwood Lodge training facility on the outskirts of Green Bay. Like any good autographed Packers artifact, this volume begins with the signature of Curly Lambeau, whose black fountain pen offering appears on a full page image, effectively a signed photograph. George Calhoun resides within the books pages as well, the former sports editor of the Green Bay Press Gazette who conspired with Lambeau to give birth to the team. Calhoun is not just one of the most important figures in Packers history but also one of its rarest signatures, with just a handful of known exemplars. Possibly the toughest autograph in the Pro Football Hall of Fame is present in the form of Walter Kiesling, whose two seasons of Packers service is often forgotten given his twenty-year association with the rival Pittsburgh Steelers. Other notable names: Bruce SmithTough Heisman Trophy winner who passed away at age forty-seven. Verne LewellenNearly impossible signature, with less than a few known. Cub BuckThe Packers first big signing. A Wisconsin standout and blocker for Jim Thorpe on the 1920 Canton Bulldogs. Ted FritschPackers standout running back from 1942-50, and a legend in the small Wisconsin college town of Stevens Point. Jim CoffeenMember of first team in 1919. First team PA announcer. Tubby BeroMember of first team in 1919. Police Chief of Green Bay. Dave ZuidmulderFire Chief of Green Bay. Dr. W. Webber KelleyTeam president, first team physician. Clark Hinkle, Tony Canadeo, Don Hutson, Arnie Herber, Mike MichalskeHall of Famers. All signatures remain as bold as the day they were applied, with any condition issues relating to the book itself. It appears that Johnny Bloods signature was clipped from above his photo inside the book, leaving a corresponding gap on the back of the page, where Hutson resides. The page is also torn and repaired with vintage tape, which has stained the adjoining pages as well. Otherwise the book remains in quite nice condition, likely filed for decades on a climate-controlled shelf. A full accounting of all signatures and the corresponding images will be available on our website at www.HA.com, so we urge all interested bidders to visit us online. May the biggest Packers fan win! Full LOA from PSA/DNA.
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1961 Ernie Davis Handwritten Notes for Heisman Trophy Acceptance Speech
The most illustrious collegiate gridiron star never to play a down of professional ball, Ernie Davis joins George Gipp and Lou Gehrig among the great tragic heroes of American sport. Nicknamed The Express, Davis appeared in every regard to be the second coming of fellow Orangeman Jim Brown, from the number 44 he wore in the Syracuse backfield to the Cleveland Browns team he intended to represent in the National Football League upon his graduation. But the summer of 1962 would bring the heartbreaking diagnosis of acute monocytic leukemia. Less than a year later, Davis was dead at age twenty-three. Here we present a thrilling relic from the pinnacle moment of Davis tumultuous final years, the handwritten pages he carried to the podium at the Downtown Athletic Club in Manhattan to deliver his Heisman Trophy acceptance speech. The text, in part: It is indeed a pleasure to be here this evening to receive this great award. I would like to thank each and everyone of you who have made this award possible. Throughout my four years at Syracuse I have had many exciting moments, but this has to be the biggest. I would like to thank my mother, Mrs. Radford, my coach, Mr. Schwartzwalder, Val Pinchbeck, our publicity director and most of all my teamates (sic) for without all these people I feel that I would have been unable to win this award...In the future I hope to play pro football, but as of right now I dont know how, where or whom I will be playing for but wherever I play I will try to the best of my ability to live up to the faith that you have entrusted in me. The three pages of Heisman speech text are joined by two other shorter handwritten speeches delivered to new Syracuse football recruits and to sportswriters respectively. All ink registers at 9/10 boldness or better. The sixteen-page Examination Book exhibits a single vertical center fold and general handling wear, but nothing that could be properly characterized as damage. A truly special opportunity to participate in preserving the memory of one of Americas noblest young sportsmen. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
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1967 Green Bay Packers Super Bowl II Championship Ring Presented to Frederick Fuzzy Thurston
Its often been theorized that Thurstons lack of Canton credentials is due only to the Hall of Fames resistance toward enshrining yet another figure from a team featuring the most members in NFL history. But few would dispute that Fuzzy had been a leader both on the field and off of it during his nine seasons at Lambeau Field, paired with Jerry Kramer in the famed Packer Sweep, which beneficiary Paul Hornung decreed as the best play in football and Vince Lombardi called his bread and butter. Today Thurston remains one of the most beloved players ever to wear the green and gold, a man who epitomized Lombardis mantras of teamwork and the unyielding pursuit of perfection. The hard-nosed guard did not abandon the city that embraced him after hanging up his cleats, opening a string of restaurants and taverns where he would hold court nightly, regaling patrons with tales of the Ice Bowl and his six World Championships. Presented is the very ring he earned for his participation in the very last game of his career, likewise the final Championship claimed by the iconic Lombardi. The story of its current availability is a sad one, the sale mandated by the United States government due to an unpaid $1.7 million federal tax bill accrued by the popular Packer. The design is refreshingly elegant and understated compared to its recent Super Bowl XLV counterpart, the trio of diamonds on its face (1.50 carat weight total) representing the teams three consecutive Championships. They are set in a football-shaped green stone, edged by raised text reading Green Bay Packers World Champions. The left shank announces the scores of the Ice Bowl (NFL Championship) and Super Bowl with crown imagery, a Packers helmet and the word Challenge. Right shank announces Thurston 63, NFL/AFL, Run to Win. Interior band is stamped Jostens 10K, and measures to a size 13.25. One of the most important post-war Championship rings ever to be placed upon the public auction block, this Super Bowl II representation from a key figure in the teams ability to Run to Win should bring the most devoted Packers fans to the table. We expect a battle of wills that would make Lombardi himself proud.
About ten vodkas. Fuzzy Thurston, when asked how he prepared for the frigid Ice Bowl game.
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1987 Walter Payton Chicago Bears Jersey Worn in Final Regular Season Game with Photo Matches
Sports memorabilia is a lot like lovetheres nothing quite like the first, or the last. Whether its home run baseballs, touchdown footballs or game worn uniforms, bidder interest is always increased exponentially by the alpha and the omega. And never does the statement ring truer than when applied to all-time record material, such as the spectacular gridiron relic provided here. This white mesh Chicago Bears jersey can be definitively photo-matched to onfield images of Hall of Fame running back Walter Payton taken at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum where Payton scrambled for the last of his NFL career record 16,726 yards. Though Sweetness would make one more appearance in an NFL uniform in a first-round playoff defeat, this jersey brought an end to all regular season stats which earned him a well-deserved first round Canton nod. But dont jump to the conclusion that this jersey was a virgin before its date with destinythere are huge team repairs in the reinforced shoulders and another between the rear digits to prove it was no stranger to human contact. This is season-long wear. Its worthy of note that one of the photos of the distinctive paint scuffs on Paytons rear nameplate was snapped during the opening ceremonies of the game, as the people of Los Angeles tastefully paid their respects to their esteemed opponent. In other regards, the jersey is identical in style to those worn during the glory days of the Super Bowl Shuffle era. Number 34 is screened in deep navy and orange to chest, back and shoulders, with Payton similarly applied to rear nameplate. Classic triple striping on each sleeve is interrupted by George Halas tribute initials on left. A sweat-bleached Wilson [size] 42 label appears at lower left exterior tail. Though Emmitt Smith has since overtaken Payton in career yardage, this development dulls none of the luster of Sweetness accomplishments, or that of the jersey he wore upon their completion. A piece as worthy of a home in the Hall of Fame as the man who wore it. LOA from Heritage Auctions.
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1982 NCAA Basketball Championship Game Net from Michael Jordans Game-Winning Shot!
Three future Hall of Famers would do battle at the Louisiana Superdome on March 29, 1982 to determine whether Michael Jordan and James Worthys UNC Tarheels or Patrick Ewings Georgetown Hoyas were the best team in collegiate basketball. It would prove to be one of the most exciting and fiercely contested Finals in March Madness history, providing the freshman Jordan with the first of many watershed moments on the national stage, a fifteen-foot jumper from the left baseline with seventeen seconds to play which would prove to be the final points scored in Carolinas 63 to 62 victory. On this date, the legend of Air Jordan was born. Joyously following the longstanding tradition, the conquering Tarheels snipped the nets from the rims after the final buzzer of their victorious Final, and an included issue of the March 30, 1982 Durham Morning Herald pictures famed coach Dean Smith on the front page as he takes his turn with the scissors. At bottom right of this image, we can see senior forward Christopher Brust cheering his coach on. Around his neck hangs the other net, presented here within this Platinum Night auction. His signed letter of provenance (complete with original mailing envelope) states: This is the Net from the 1982 National Championship Basketball game that was played in the Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana. The nal score was University of North Carolina 63 Georgetown University 62. The nets were cut down piece by piece by each player. When both nets were nally cut down, James Worthy had one and I had the other. Being a Senior that year had its perks!!! This is the net that Michael Jordan made the winning shot through. Unquestionably one of the most important Jordan artifacts ever made available for public sale, this net is a seminal relic in his ascension to the pinnacle of sporting fame and achievement. We expect a great deal of interest from the Tarheel faithful as well, but admittedly Bulls fans will have home court advantage in this Platinum Night event. As a bonus, this lot will include a signed basketball from the 1983-84 Tarheels, featuring Jordan among the fourteen bold black sharpie signatures, which also include Sam Perkins, Kenny Smith and Brad Daugherty. Letter of provenance from Christopher Brust. Full LOA from PSA/DNA (autographed ball). Full LOA from James Spence Authentication (autographed ball).
I never looked at the consequences of missing a big shot. When you think about the consequences, you always think of a negative result. Michael Jordan
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1989 Michael Jordan NBA All-Star Game Worn & Signed Sneakers
The fourth incarnation of the celebrated Air Jordan sneaker remains one of Nikes most collectible styles, but here we encounter the most important and coveted pair ever to hit the hardcourt, worn by Jordan himself in his fourth All-Star Game appearance. Though his East squad would come up short in the Houston Astrodome exhibition, the Chicago Bulls superstar led the charge for the vanquished side, topping a starting roster comprised entirely of future Hall of Famers with twenty-eight points. While Jordan material dating to the Championship era and beyond could not accurately be characterized as rare, the same could not be said of 1980s material. When seeking pre-Championship gear which can be definitively assigned to a particular game, the trail goes colder still. We have an enterprising young man from Houston to thank for this special deviation from the norm. A ballboy for the 1988-89 Houston Rockets, our consignor had chased down the emerging Chicago Bulls star during the Eastern Conference teams sole visit to Houston as Jordan headed to the showers. His request for his game worn shoes was rebuffed howeverJordan had promised the shoes to somebody else. The boy then had a revelation. Mr. Jordan, he said. Youll be back here in a couple weeks for the All-Star Game. Could I please have those shoes? Jordan assured him that he could. So the scene repeated itself a couple weeks later, the ballboy chasing Jordan down the corridor after the game, reminding the future Hall of Famer of his promise. Minutes later the lucky young Astrodome employee owned the slightly used pair of Air Jordans, still a bit damp with sweat and each autographed in thin gold paint pen. Years later, after the signatures had faded considerably, he got a second black sharpie signature on the left shoe. Each is tagged size 13 inside, with patent numbers 4183156; 4340626. Some minor degradation of the rubber soles must be noted in the interest of full disclosure, but our catalog imagery should properly indicate that the visual effect is minimal. A letter of provenance from the former ballboy will be included, along with Astrodome paperwork listing him as a staff member, a photograph of the young man holding a signed poster (poster not included in the lot) featuring both All-Star teams, press and media guides for the game, an offical program and a player towel from the event. Also included is an 8x10 photo of Jordan going to the hoop during the final minute of the game, the offered shoes clearly visible on his feet. Letter of provenance from ballboy. LOA from Heritage Auctions. Full LOA from PSA/DNA (autographs).
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2009 Los Angeles Lakers NBA Championship Ring with High-Tech Original Display Case
With five NBA Championships between the years of 2000 and 2010, the Los Angeles Lakers find no competition for its stature as the greatest modern dynasty in American sports. Presented here is the glorious symbol of that dynastys fourth trip to the mountain top, and the fifteenth in the franchises illustrious history. Not an expense was spared nor a corner cut when crafting the award, a staggeringly opulent ring with enough flash to make a major label rapper blush. Stamped and tested at fifteen karat gold, the ring boasts 148 round brilliant-cut diamonds with a total carat weight of 2.75, and the ring a gross weight of 71.6 grams. The Larry OBrien Championship Trophy appears in miniature on the ring face along with the Lakers logo, set against a background of wall-to-wall diamonds. 2009 World Champions balances at the perimeter in raised text. The left shank features an image of the LA skyline, the year 09 and the regular season record of 65-17. The name Barraza at top of the left shank is that of our consignor, the gentleman who won a raffle after purchasing a $100 ticket to benefit the Los Angeles Lakers Youth Foundation. The right shank lists the results of each Playoff series, with a roman numeral XV keeping count of franchise Championships. The band measures 11.5, and is stamped JBH-396, 15k inside. Even the original display case is something truly special here, a shiny black wood and leather creation holding a battery-operated mechanism which makes the ring rotate slowly at the center as two LED spotlights shine down from the open lid. An engraved brass plaque is affi xed to the front. Condition of ring and box is Mint.
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1908-1930s Shoeless Joe Jacksons Legendary Black Betsy Game Used Bat
When Bernard Malamud penned the novel The Natural, later adapted for the screen to become one of the most beloved baseball-themed films in American history, he mined an array of mythic and secular sources to craft the story-Homers Odyssey, the Bible, the works of Freud and Jung. While the tale was, on its surface, an homage to our National Pastime, it was also something much larger, an allegorical exploration of the timeless themes of loss and redemption. As such, it was quite reasonable that Malamud would turn to the saga of Shoeless Joe Jackson for inspiration, a figure whose rise and fall brings the great tragedies of William Shakespeare to mind. Malamud also recognized the parallel to Arthurian legend of Excalibur when considering the illiterate farmhands almost religious devotion to the bat he carried throughout his professional career and beyond. For Roy Hobbs, the axen-haired protagonist of The Natural, Malamud created Wonderboy, a bat hand-carved from a tree split by a heavenly bolt of lightning and infused with magic Hobbs would ultimately come to realize had always owed from within himself. Malamud would acknowledge that it was the fabled Black Betsy, the hand-carved slab of hickory that functioned as both talisman and weapon of war for the legendary Shoeless Joe, which served as the fictional Wonderboys template. Heritage is proud and honored to present within this Platinum Night auction what is inarguably the most famous and important game used bat of baseballs long history, bar none: Shoeless Joe Jacksons one and only Black Betsy. Jackson himself discussed the bats origins in a 1932 interview with The Greenville Piedmont newspaper, a photocopy of which is included within the hefty ream of provenance paperwork:
1908: Jackson receives Circa 1910: Jackson Black Betsy from Capn sends Black Betsy to Martin, a Greenville street Spalding for stamping. car driver who carved the bat out of hickory. He makes first Major League appearance with the Philadelphia Athletics.
1911: Jacksons official rookie season, .408 batting average best ever for a rookie.
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The bat was given to me by old Capn Martin, who drove one of the rst street cars in Greenville. The bat was whittled out of hickory but I dont know just where the Capn got hold of it. I sent it to the Spaulding (sic) baseball company and they nished it for me and stamped their label on it. Ive had it ever since and its never been broke, although its getting old now and I expect it any time. I used to keep it soaked in a barrel of oil, but lately its just been thrown by my desk in Savannah. The article also touches on the incredible durability and historical import of the bat, noting that Jackson, at age forty-five, would be reprising his role as centerfielder for the Greenville Spinners with his faithful companion: Joe has his famous bat Black Betsy with him, and he will use the bludgeon in the game Wednesday. The bat is 24 years old, and has never been broken. It was with this bat that Jackson made all his hitting records, one of them, a world series record, still standing and tied only by Pepper Martin in the last series. Jackson recalled today how he rst showed Babe Ruth how to stand properly at the plate to hit. The Babe caught on and became the games mightiest home run hitter. The Babe borrowed Joes Black Betsy on several occasions, and loaned Jackson one of his bludgeons. Babe was with the Boston Red Sox at the time. This thrilling connection to Ruth will come as no surprise to baseball historians, as the Babe often credited Jackson as his batting mentor: I copied Jacksons style because I thought he was the greatest hitter I had ever seen, the greatest natural hitter I ever saw. Hes the guy who made me a hitter. Turning to the physical attributes of this remarkable relic, blessed by the touch of the games most famous and infamous legends, we first encounter the aforementioned factory stamping, reading The Spalding Old Hickory in the trademark position, and the Spalding factory logo burned into the knob end, where an ancient wood staple resides. But perhaps even more striking than these ancient imprints is the prominent bend in the bat, a result of the lack of proper finishing due to the humble nature of its creation. This unique characteristic further solidifies the bats Black Betsy identity, referenced in several newspaper articles: September 23, 1951 article in the New Orleans Times Picayune, discussing a game Jackson played in Bastrop, LA in 1922: The bat incidentally was something else. Says Montgomery; In that old leather case Joe carried two bats, one of which-his favorite-was a home made affair slightly sprung with a curve in it. He wouldnt let anyone touch it. Bat boy of the Waycross, GA team, 1924: ...it was crooked and a very dark brown. William Webb, Jacksons teammate in the 1920s: ...it had a crook in it. Joe would turn the crooked part towards the pitcher and when he hit the ball it sounded like he hit it with a brick bat. The provenance is supplied in a trail of paperwork dating back to the will of Katie Jackson, Joes widow, who references the bat specifically in the document:
1917: Jackson claims his only World Championship as his White Sox defeat New York Giants in World Series.
Circa 1918: Jackson loans Black Betsy to Babe Ruth, who credits Jackson with teaching him how to hit.
1919: Jackson conspires with seven other teammates to throw the World Series, though his batting stats lead the team.
1920: Jackson is one of eight Black Sox banished from the Major Leagues by commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis.
I do constitute and appoint Jack Abbott as my agent to go into my residence and remove certain items and bring them to me...I also direct him, as my agent, to deliver the following gifts to these persons: 1) My husbands ring to his nephew, Lee Jackson. 2) My husbands New Orleans metal to Bill Davidson. 3) The watch given him by fans to Sinclair Ellis. 4) His other watch to Ray Jackson. 5) His baseball bat to Lester Ervin. An undated signed letter from Lester Ervin, notarized in Greenville, South Carolina at some point before the notarys 2006 commission expiration, completes the trail. In part, it reads: Please accept this declaration of ownership of the Black Betsy bat. I inherited the bat from my cousin Katie Jackson, wife of Shoeless Joe Jackson shortly after her death in 1959. Mr. Jack Abbott, the Executor of the estate of Katie Jackson, delivered the bat to my house shortly after Katies death in 1959. I was 13 years old at the time. The last of the accompanying paperwork is supplied by PSA/DNA, which makes note of the included photographs of Jackson with the bat, and lists the specifics of length (34.5), weight (39.4 oz.) and the black electricians tape utilized for grip and crack repair at the handle. Properly characterizing the provenance as impeccable, the experts designate a grade of PSA GU 10, the highest rating possible. The tragic tale of Joe Jacksons march from obscurity to the height of athletic fame and back again has become American folklore over the passing decades, and though his harsh sentence has long since been carried out to its conclusion, the question of his guilt or innocence remains a point of debate. What does not, however, is the status of Shoeless Joe among the pantheon of the sports greatest legends, perhaps the most naturally gifted hitter ever to wear a Major League uniform. This definitive artifact, Jacksons constant and faithful companion throughout his tumultuous baseball career, stands as one of the most important collectibles ever made available at auction, in the sporting realm or otherwise. Graded PSA GU 10.
1932: Jacksons 1951: Jackson passes continued use of Black away at age sixty-four. Betsy is confirmed by the Greenville newspaper.
1959: Jacksons widow Katie passes away, bequeathing Black Betsy to her cousin Lester Ervin in her will.
Circa 2000: Lester Ervin sells the bat, providing a notarized letter of provenance.
2011: Black Betsy reappears at auction within the 2011 Heritage Auctions Platinum Night event.
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There is no question but that Honus Wagners star has been burnished over the passing decades by his residence upon baseballs most coveted trading card, but the true baseball historian doesnt need those million dollar price tags to draw his attention. Take it from Hall of Fame manager John McGraw, properly recalled as one of the greatest minds in the games history and, with over four decades in a Major League uniform, one of its most experienced. You can have your Cobbs, your Lajoies, your Chases, your Bakers, he once lectured a newspaper man, but Ill take Wagner as my pick of the greatest. Just six years short of the centennial of Wagners last plate appearance, we should expect that game used material relating to his Hall of Fame playing career would be scarce. The tiny quantity of annel and lumber relating to his Pirates tenure derives almost exclusively from his lengthy term of service with the Pittsburgh coaching staff, which concluded in 1952 at the advanced age of seventy-eight. Still this material from his secondary career carries tremendous collecting appeal, and properly so, as Wagner was instrumental during this period in refining the swings of later legends such as Arky Vaughan, Ralph Kiner and the Waner brothers. But this early relic is something truly special, a picture-perfect representation from the closing seasons of Wagners playing career as the first ballot Hall of Famer approached and surpassed the fabled 3,000 hit milestone. Although the J.F. Hillerich & Son model 40K bat was available in retail format, there are several factors which place this bat in Wagners hands: 1) The wood is identified as rst growth Northern White Ash, which features grain that bat expert John Taube describes as among the widest we have ever seen on a professional bat, concluding there is no question as to the professional grade of the wood. 2) The unusual and distinctive tight wind of electrical tape on the knob perfectly matches photographic documentation of Wagner. The handle is not cracked, assuring the application relates to grip rather than repair. Furthermore, and most importantly, these images picture Wagner holding this exact 40K model. 3) Retail model bats featured an imprinted length on the knob end, whereas the presented example presents instead a rough filing after its removal from the lathe. 4) The length of thirty-two and three-quarter inches (recorded at thirty-three inches) and weight of forty-three and a half ounces match known Wagner exemplars, notably the example acquired by famed collector Joel Platt directly from Wagner. The bat exhibits heavy use, with an array of ball and cleat marks speckling its ancient surface. The volume of apparent game action and fidelity to Wagners unique specifications command a final grade of PSA GU 9. This is, without question, one of the most desirable pre-war bats available in the hobby today. LOA from PSA/DNA.
I dont make speeches. I just let my bat speak for me in the summertime. Honus Wagner
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1949 Jackie Robinson All-Star Game Used Bat from Robinson Estate
Though the brave Robinson battled through the harshest adversity ever faced by a Major League player in winning the 1947 Rookie of the Year Award, his first great season (and arguably his greatest ever) would be posted two years later in 1949. In the spring of that year, the second baseman came under the tutelage of Hall of Famer George Sisler, who taught Jackie to anticipate the fastball when at the plate, and then simply adjust for breaking pitches. Sisler showed me how to stop lunging, Robinson explained, how to check my swing until the last fraction of a second. The results were striking. Robinsons batting average jumped forty-six points to a National League-best .342. His ratio of walks to strikeouts more than doubled, and he added thirty-nine RBIs to his 1948 total, which, along with his League-leading thirty-seven stolen bases, earned him the 1949 Most Valuable Player Award. His early-season brilliance likewise earned him the lumber listed here, presented to Robinson as one of the first African-American players (along with teammates Roy Campanella and Don Newcombe) to appear in an All-Star Game. This historic milestone, the Ebbets Field geography of the contest, and the connection to Robinsons MVP and National League Championship season establish this bat as one of the most historically and culturally relevant Jackie Robinson artifacts ever made available for public sale. The appeal is further enhanced by the fact that the bat served for decades as Robinsons own trophy commemorating the occasion, as the mounting hole at knob end and the ring of discoloration around the barrel from the wall cradle indicate. This is particularly noteworthy, and heres why: Hillerich & Bradsby supplied two bats to every All-Star player each season, identical to standard issue gamers with the exception of the special stamping on the barrel, in this case All-Star Game, Brooklyn 1949. Remarkably, both of Robinsons bats from this game have survived to present. The other example, boasting heavy (obviously multi-game) use realized a remarkable $158,400 in a 2006 auction. The presented example, exhibiting what appears to be just a single games use, is the one Robinson chose to mount in his trophy room. While the six decades that have passes allows us to do no more than hypothesize, this data would point to the conclusion that the heavilyused example had been left in Jackies Ebbets Field locker for the All-Star Game and then integrated into his arsenal as the regular season resumed. The presented bat, conversely, saw its light use in this most historic of Midsummer Classics, and was then toted home that evening by Robinson as a memento of the occasion. Make no mistakeRobinson took great pride in that first All-Star nod, and saw it for the turning point it was. His emergence in 1947 may have signaled the Major Leagues ability to accept his race, but this recognition as one of the games finest players was emphatic proof that his skin color was no longer its main focus. Despite Rookie of the Year play and a fifth place finish in 1947 MVP voting, Robinson had been denied the honor his first season. The following year the 1948 All-Star Game was played at St. Louis Sportsmans Park, where Robinson faced his ugliest protests of all National League road trips. It was only fitting that the ballpark that first welcomed him to the game would welcome him to its elite brotherhood as well. The bat is accompanied by a letter from Jackies widow Rachel Robinson providing ironclad provenance which bolsters the GU 7 rating applied by PSA/DNA.The thirty-five inches and ounces of length and weight respectively perfectly match the Louisville Slugger ordering records for this All-Star S100 model, with points lost only for the expected light use and the mounting marks. But the tale these detractions tell is worth far more than the numerical tally, establishing this bat once treasured by the games greatest sociological pioneer as a treasure for the ages. Letter of provenance from Rachel Robinson. LOA from PSA/DNA, GU 7.
Im not concerned with your liking or disliking me. All I ask is that you respect me as a human being. Jackie Robinson
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1994 Derek Jeter Game Used Bat from First Order as a New York Yankees Player
By the time this auction catalog rolls off the printing presses, the superstar shortstop will have become the twenty-eighth member of the 3,000 Hit Club and (unbelievably!) the first ever to accomplish the feat in the uniform of the New York Yankees. This monumental achievement will only serve to further crowd a trophy room packed with a Rookie of the Year Award, five Gold Gloves, four Silver Sluggers, five Championship rings and both the All-Star and World Series MVP trophies for the year 2000. The defining figure of the modern Bronx dynasty, Derek Jeter is unquestionably one of the digits on the hand listing the greatest Yankees of all time, joining Ruth, Gehrig, DiMaggio and Mantle. Here we present one of the most thrilling Jeter artifacts ever made available at public auction, one of a dozen bats from the March 2, 1994 order that represents the very first of his professional career. As bat expert John Taube explains in his detailed letter of examination: This is the first order of professional model bats on Jeters PBOR (Professional Bat Ordering Records). Jeters 1994 season was spent with Tampa in the Florida League, then the Albany Colony Yankees of the Eastern League and finally the Columbus Clippers of the International League. All three Minor League teams were Yankee affilliates. As a Minor League player, Jeters bats would not have the New York Yankees branded on the barrel. Louisville Slugger would appear in its place. This is standard procedure by the manufacturer of Minor League bats. With the New York Yankees name on the barrel, together with the March 2nd order date, we can assume these bats were ordered by Jeter while a member of the Yankees 1994 Spring Training roster. As thrilling as this find is for the collecting community, one can only imagine the reaction of the twenty year old kid from Kalamazoo upon seeing his own name and that of baseballs most storied franchise joined in Louisville Slugger ash for the first time. But Jeter did much more than simply admire this bat, infusing it with an absolute pounding which has left a constellation of ball marks on the barrel and separated the grain slightly with dozens of hard impacts. Pine tar blackens the handle, which remains surprisingly uncracked from its hours in the trenches. Length of thirty-three and a half inches and weight of thirty-one ounces perfectly match Jeters first ordering records for this P72 relic, resulting in an impressive GU 8.5 rating from PSA/DNA. A flawless blue sharpie signature in Jeters rare early format completes the package. LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from PSA/DNA (autograph). Full LOA from James Spence Authentication (autograph).
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Too many pitchers, an elderly Cy Young lectured a reporter for The Sporting News before the start of the 1951 season. Thats all. There are just too many pitchers. Ten or twelve on a team. Dont see how any of them get enough work. Four starting pitchers and one relief man ought to be enough. Pitch em every three days and youd nd theyd get control and good, strong arms. But despite the legendary hurlers unimpeachable credentials, the baseball world would continue to trend in the opposite direction as the decades passed until the rare complete game was seen as a charming old relic amidst a tangle of various starters, middle relief, set-up men and closers. Though Youngs public lamentations of pitcher coddling were undoubtedly heartfelt, he must have realized on some level that the movement toward decreasing workloads had cemented his legacy, and ensured that his career record of 511 Major League victories would endure eternally. It has been over two decades since the last 25+ victory season was posted, with Oakland As right hander Bob Welch earning the 1990 American League Cy Young Award for the feat. Had he begun his career with that performance, then repeated it each season to present day, Welch would be pulling even with Young just about now. Youngs career victories record is widely, and properly, considered the most untouchable in American sport.
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Young was sitting at an even 450 career victories at the start of the 1908 season, his nineteenth in the Majors and his nal term of service to the Boston Red Sox. Though his birth, childhood and early career had been conned to his home state of Ohio, Young became the face of the new American Leagues Boston franchise upon its founding, winning over forty percent of the Red Sox games its 1901 debut season and earning the AL Triple Crown with top marks in victories, strikeouts and ERA. In 1903 Young would throw the rst pitch of World Series competition, notching two of the ve wins required in claiming the rst Fall Classic title. At age forty-one, Young would post his nal twenty victory season as the ace of the 1908 Boston Red Sox, his 1.26 ERA the lowest of his illustrious career and second only to the doomed Addie Joss in AL rankings. But Youngs 1908 season is perhaps best remembered for the third and nal no-hit performance of his career, an early blow in the enduring Red Sox/Yankees rivalry (though the latter was still known as the New York Highlanders at the time). Adding to the sting for the vanquished was the fact that the task was accomplished at home, at Manhattans Hilltop Park where the future inaugural class Hall of Famer may well have been wearing the stunning road grey uniform we present here, one of just two Young representations known to survive to this day. You may have seen the other one-its in the Baseball Hall of Fame at Cooperstown. Its the home white variation of this single season style, considered by many to be the high water mark of Boston baseball fashion due to the classic yet playful imagery of a red sock on the chest. Our road grey jersey is presented with a modern replacement of that charming patch, the original peeled from the chest by Young himself, who made use of the jersey for post-career sandlot contests. Our replacement patch is not af xed to the jersey, however, so that the darkened shadow where the original patch resided and a thin portion of its edge remain visible. Leading uniform authentication rm MEARS designates an A7 grade, the three point deduction from a perfect rating due only to Youngs patch removal. The uniform otherwise presents as 100% original and unaltered, right down to the ancient twine of the laced collar. Local Boston sporting goods manufacturer Wright & Ditson labeling remains at interior collar, just above a pale embroidered Young sewn directly into the jersey body. Some inconsequential foxing in this area represents the bulk of any condition issues, as the jersey remains free of the staining and moth holes almost always encountered in pre-war uniforms. The matching pants exhibit more wear than the jersey but nothing that adversely affects the display, just a few missing buttons in the y and wear at the interior waistband. A hole in the seat of the pants is likely a battle scar. In an abundance of caution, the uniform was also submitted for scientic evaluation by a leading textile expert, whose lengthy (and included) scientic report nds that no bers incongruous with the period are present. The uniform entered the collecting hobby in 2007 after having been deacquisitioned from The Cy Young Museum in Youngs hometown of Newcomerstown, Ohio, where it had been displayed for over twenty-ve years. As a notarized letter from museum president Barbara Scott attests, the uniform was given to local resident Ike Norris by Young himself in the 1940s, and donated to the museum for display upon the occasion of Norris passing. Included with the letter is a pair of printed brochures from the museum boasting of this important display. The eponymous award for pitching excellence presented annually to each Leagues top ace has made the name Cy Young a household one, and further enhanced the appeal and value of any artifact once blessed by his touch. As a marvelously preserved and awlessly provenanced example of his game worn uniform, the only specimen existing in private hands, this is unquestionably the most signicant Cy Young relic available. One might even go so far as to declare this offering the most important collector-owned baseball uniform in existence today, bar none. Letter of provenance from The Cy Young Museum. LOA from MEARS, A7. Letter of examination from The Textile Conservation Workshop, Inc.LOA from Heritage Auctions.
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1920 Urban Red Faber Game Worn Chicago White Sox Uniform
Victimized by the Spanish Flu pandemic that took the lives of an estimated ve percent of the global population in the months surrounding the close of the First World War, the Chicago White Sox star pitcher Red Faber proved too ill to participate in a World Series which would live in infamy and doom eight of his teammates to banishment from organized ball. Years later, catcher Ray Schalk would theorize that the x might never have happened had Faber not been incapacitated, believing that the future Hall of Famer would never have taken the poisoned bait and would have assumed a couple of the tainted starts from Cicotte and Williams. Presented is Fabers home white pinstriped uniform from the season after baseballs greatest scandal was recorded. The gorgeous singleyear style, featuring the classic SOX over the heart and the key double White Sox logo on the left sleeve, is identical to the last worn by Shoeless Joe, Lefty, Hap and the rest of the Eight Men Out before commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis imposed his death sentence on their Major League careers. Though the White Sox would take years to recover from the cruel blow, never again emerging from the lower half of the American League during Fabers ensuing thirteen seasons in Chicago, the resilient right-hander pitched past his forty-fth birthday to earn a 1964 induction in the Baseball Hall of Fame. The jersey remains in astonishingly ne condition, with a couple pinpricks of moth damage to the logo SOX over the heart and a 1/2 unrepaired tear on the back the only notable detractions. The charming felt patch on the left sleeve remains untouched, and the Chicagobased Thos. E. Wilson & Co. label at interior collar is still rmly af xed. At lower left front tail, the name Faber is embroidered directly into the jersey body. The cuffs feature buttonholes to accomodate sleeve extensions, which were rarely utilized and are not present here. The matching pants feature an identical Wilson label at interior waistband and Faber chain-stitched inside the y. Like the jersey, the pants exhibit strong wear, most apparent in the team-instituted repair at the left knee and some tearing at the back right pocket. The ensemble is completed with the eponymous white socks, crafted from heavy wool and neatly darned in the stirrup areas. The twin inducements of Hall of Fame ownership and earthshaking White Sox vintage makes this a most appealing target for the advanced uniform collector. Straddling the line between the Dead and Live Ball eras, this uniform is one of the great survivors of baseballs most tumultuous age, commanding attention and respect from the educated baseball historian. LOA from MEARS. LOA from Heritage Auctions.
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1942 Stan Musial Game Worn St. Louis Cardinals Rookie Uniform
With the passing of Marty Marion in March of this year, Stan Musial survives as the last living member of the World Champion 1942 St. Louis Cardinals, a team that rebounded from an ugly Game One loss to the New York Yankees to win four straight Fall Classic contests. Stan the Man was just a kid at the time, a twenty-one year old rookie sharing an outfield with fellow future Hall of Famer Enos Slaughter, whose famous Mad Dash was still four years away. Presented is the heavy white wool flannel jersey worn by Musial that historic 1942 season and quite possibly for the first two games of the red birds glorious World Series victory. The timeless birds and bat logo takes center stage on the (still fully functional) zippered chest, with wide red trim at collar, zipper path and sleeve cuffs. The retired number 6 is applied to jersey verso in red and navy felt, with Stan Musial 42 embroidered directly into the jersey body at lower left front tail. The highly collectible Health patch, worn throughout professional baseball during the War years as part of the Hail America physical fitness campaign, remains affi xed at left sleeve. Local St. Louis-based Rawlings manufacturers label is located at interior collar. Wear is solid and consistent throughout, with a one-inch vintage team repair at left sleeve. Matching pants are clearly period St. Louis Cardinals issue, but the lack of a player identifier makes definitive attribution impossible (though it must be stressed that the pants and jersey were sourced as a single unit). The sole identifying marks within the pants are the embroidered numbers 36 and 2. The former is clearly a size measurement, with the latter either a set or uniform number. It should be stressed that the pants would be correct for Musials build. Several vintage team repairs appear in the seat of the pants, but the pants present nicely and, when paired with the jersey, form a striking display. Each uniform piece is autographed in 10/10 black sharpie by Musial, who adds the notation 1942 World Champions to both signatures. With points lost only for the repaired holes and a minor amount of staining/foxing to the woolen fabric, MEARS assesses the impressive rating of A9 for the historic jersey. An absolutely splendid artifact boasting a collectors trifecta of Hall of Fame heritage, rookie season vintage and World Championship magic. LOA from MEARS, A9. Full LOA from PSA/DNA (autographs). Full LOA from James Spence Authentication (autographs).
You wait for a strike, then you knock the #%&$ out of it. Stan Musial
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If Mickey Mantle hadnt existed in reality, Hollywood would have needed to invent himan affable blonde-headed Oklahoma boy with enormous natural gifts turned loose upon the City that Never Sleeps, slugging titanic homers during the day and boozing away the nights. Though the Mick nobly spent the final weeks of his life casting himself as a cautionary tale, there was nobody in America that more young boys were inspired to emulate, from the way he swung the bat to the hunch-shouldered way he trotted around the bases after connecting. Close observers of the Mick will recall another of his on-field mannerisms, his habit of folding his cap and sticking it in his back pocket when donning his batting helmet for a turn at the plate. While this practice lends further credence to the authenticity of the presented example, it has also caused the cardboard interior of the visor to break through the fabric and be lost, leaving the green fabric underbelly of the brim in tatters. Thankfully there is still enough here to identify a vintage number 7 in marker, and the remnants of a later Mantle signature. The leather interior headband likewise shows some damage, but the size of 7 3/8 is still visible, proper for the Micks hats. A Tim McAuliffe label appears nearby. It must be stressed that professional model caps were not available in retail outlets as they are today, a fact which leading uniform authenticator MEARS surely considered when issuing its Authentic paperwork. Also here is a letter from noted collector Bob Kirk, who traces the caps provenance to his purchase from Paul Hill, who got the cap from Mantles teammate Allie Reynolds. LOA from MEARS. Letter of provenance from former owner. LOA from Heritage Auctions.
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1970 Frank Tug McGraw Game Worn New York Mets Jersey
Best remembered for his strikeout of Kansas City Royals outfielder Willie Wilson to finalize the Philadelphia Phillies 1980 World Series Championship, McGraw proudly donned this road grey gamer a decade earlier as a defending Champ the season after the Amazin 1969 Mets campaign. The gorgeous garment, a stylistic homage to the clubs National League predecessors the New York Giants, derives from a very small supply of surviving Mets flannels, most long since lost to the minor leagues and/or the dustbin of history. McGraw repeated his 1969 status as the clubs most utilized reliever in 1970, making fifty-seven appearances in support of a deadly starting rotation which included Hall of Famers Tom Seaver and Nolan Ryan. Though these legends would be a tough act for any ballplayer to follow, McGraw remained one of the fan favorites, both for his talents on the mound and his magnetic charm. It was Tug who coined the phrase which became the theme of the 1973 National League ChampsYa Gotta Believe! The presented jersey features the classic Old English New York in blue felt and red tackle twill on the chest. McGraws number 45 is similarly crafted on the jersey front, then repeated entirely in tackle twill on verso. Team logo patch remains in position on left sleeve. Embroidered swatch at interior collar announces 45-44-70 Set 2. Proper Wilson [size] 44 label appears at lower left front tail. Solid wear 2. is evident throughout, and blue sharpie signature on chest is 10/10. A flawless representation from one of the most popular figures on those unforgettable early Mets squads. LOA from Heritage Auctions.
Ninety percent Ill spend on good times, women and Irish Whiskey. The other ten percent Ill probably waste. Tug McGraw
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1977 Reggie Jackson World Series Game Five Worn New York Yankees Jersey
If Reggie lacked anything, it definitely wasnt confidence. As teammate and fellow Hall of Famer Catfish Hunter once quipped, When you unwrap a Reggie bar, it tells you how good it is. But love him or hate him, nobody could deny that Reggie Jackson was the greatest playoff performer in Major League Baseball history. You dont get the nickname Mr. October for nothing. Presented here is one of the most important Jackson relics to reside within a private collection, a road grey knit worn during the World Series in which Reggie earned his famous moniker. In the eighth Fall Classic meeting between the Dodgers and the Yankees, Jackson slugged an outrageous 1.250 on the strength of five home runs, most famously his back-to-back-to-back long balls in the decisive Game Six in the Bronx to end a fifteen-year World Championship drought. The jersey can be pegged definitively to the final contest in Los Angeles, the last before Reggies historic trifecta. Though the Yanks ultimately proved unable to claw their way back from a ten run deficit in Game Five, Jackson planted an eighth inning offering from Don Sutton in the cheap seats, just two pitches after Thurman Munson launched a solo shot of his own. An included letter from famed collector Bob Case to our consignor tells the story: Just wanted to drop you a line to let you know your 1977 Reggie Jackson rd jersey was the one he wore in game 5 of the 1977 World Series in which he hit the rst of his World Series home runs (Editors noteit was actually his second)...I got it from a very close and longtime friend who was a Dodger employee at the time. The shirt was soaking wet when he got it on getaway day and was in his possession until I received it from him... The timeless design, unchanged for decades, provides a bold block lettered New York upon the chest and the since-retired number 44 on verso. Proper Wilson [size] 44 label is affi xed at lower left front tail. Embroidered strip inside collar reads Jackson 77 2. The included 2 MEARS authentication paperwork characterizes the wear as moderate, and designates an unimprovable rating of A10. A DVD of Game 5 is included in the lot. Letter of provenance from Bob Case. LOA from MEARS, A10. LOA from Heritage Auctions.
The only reason I dont like playing in the World Series is I cant watch myself play. Reggie Jackson
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1977 Mickey Mantle Game Worn New York Yankees Coachs Uniform
For the vast majority of collectors, the dream of owning a Mickey Mantle uniform from the Hall of Fame outfielders playing career will remain just thata dream. The vast majority of surviving examples are locked down in permanent collections, and the rare few that surface typically command astronomical prices. Here we present the perfect alternative, a genuine Yankee pinstripes with the immortal number 7 on the back, worn by Mantle during the first World Championship season in the Bronx since the Mick was in his prime. The uniform derives from the famous 2003 auction of Mantles collection at Madison Square Garden, and is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity signed by Mickeys widow and his two sons. The jersey provides the classic home Yankees style, with a navy tackle twill NY logo over the heart and Mantles number 7 on verso. Proper Wilson [size] 44 label appears at lower left exterior tail, and Mantle 77 1 is embroidered on a white strip sewn into interior collar. The matching pants are tagged Wilson [size] 36 at interior waistband, where a simple number 7 embroidered swatch resides. Light staining on the pants, apparently tobacco juice, causes no distraction. We believe we have matched the pinstriping to a Corbis.com image of Mickey joking with Yankees manager and former teammate Billy Martin at 1978 spring training, but invite interested bidders to make their own judgment. The image number is 42-26394300. Certicate of authenticity from the Mantle family. LOA from Heritage Auctions.
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1887 Sam Wise Boston Beaneaters Batting Championship Sterling Silver Presentational Bat
If modern Silver Slugger awards provided half the aesthetic fireworks of this early batting trophy, we probably wouldnt be marking seven decades since the last .400 seasonhitters would try harder. Arguably the most gorgeously crafted presentational piece to derive from our National Pastimes professional ranks, the listed sterling silver masterpiece was awarded to Boston Beaneaters middle infielder Sam Wise, who led the team with a .334 batting average, narrowly edging teammate and future Hall of Famer Mike King Kelly for the honor. This one-for-three consistently proved to be good enough for fifth place in the 1887 National League rankings, topped only by the Hall of Fame quartet of Sam Thompson, Cap Anson, Dan Brouthers and Monte Ward. Our skilled Heritage researchers were able to track down an article in the October 18, 1887 issue of The Boston Globe, the local newspaper that honored the best of the Beaneaters, recounting the details of the , presentation ceremony. In part: When Honest Sam Wise took THE GLOBE trophy from Colonel Taylor and contemplated the handsome silver bat as it lay in its silken case, a ush of manly pride swept over his face. He took the long case, and, holding it as he might a good-sized baby, the big short stop said: Colonel Taylor and GentlemenI never made a speech in my life, but this elegant and beautiful emblem ought to inspire me to say something. The trouble is I aint built that way, but I do want to return my sincere thanks for it, and wish you many prosperous years of life. I wish to express my thanks to the members of the press for many kind favors during the past season. Once more I thank you for this splendid prize and say I shall never forget your kindness. This magnum opus from an unidentified Boston silversmith owes its basic dimensions to the preferred lumber of the day, measuring a sizable thirty-eight inches in length with the mild tapering typical of 19th century game bats. The similarities end here, however, as the knob, lower and upper barrel provide an intricate garden of flowery relief detailing. Commanding the mid-barrel is a splendid figural of Wise in his narrow-legged batting stance, the word Boston clearly etched upon the chest of his collared jersey. At the center of the bat are the elegantly engraved words: Presented by the Boston Globe to Samuel W. Wise, Champion Batsman of the Boston Base Ball Club, For the season of 1887. The bat was consigned to Heritage by a descendant of Wise, and makes its hobby debut in this Platinum Night auction. The magnificent relic provides not a single evident dent or scratch to mark its twelve decades of existence, with typical tarnishing the only sign of age. A simple polishing job will instantly restore the bat to its original appearance, but Heritage has chosen to present the lot in its acquired state and leave any such decision up to the lucky victorious bidder.
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1906 Chicago White Sox World Championship Watch Fob Presented to James Hub Hart
Remembered in baseball history by the less-than-flattering nickname The Hitless Wonders, the Chicago White Sox managed to capture the American League pennant despite posting the worst team batting average (.230) in the Junior Circuit. Most expected the A.L. Champs to be easy prey for the crosstown National League Champs, a juggernaut anchored by the Hall of Fame quartet of Joe Tinker, Johnny Evers, Frank Chance and pitching ace Mordecai Three Finger Brown, which posted a stunning 116-36 record to finish with a twenty-game lead over the second place Giants. But despite the fact that the Sox bats remained cold for the Fall Classic, their pitching managed to refrigerate the Cubs lumber as well, leading to a six-game Series victory for the American League side. Presented is the first Championship award weve yet encountered from this first World Series contested entirely within a single citys borders, and just the third of baseball history. It was presented to back-up catcher James Henry Hub Hart, whose three seasons of Major League service were rendered solely in a ChiSox uniform. To ensure no misunderstanding, we stress that this fine relic is the modern equivalent of the Championship ringthe sole World Series victors prize presented to the members of the winning team. The obverse features the winged foot team logo, complete with an enameled white sock, ringed by the verbiage Worlds Champions White Sox. Eagle wings and ball and bats iconography . frames the design against a stars and bars background, with a single genuine diamond set into the top. The design is replicated on verso with a few modifications, the diamond swapped out for a sapphire and the engraved text J. Hart, 1906 orbiting a central globe. Mild enamel wear represents the entirety of condition issues. Pendant (not inclusive of chain) measures approximately 1.25x1.75 and tests at fourteen karat gold. An exceedingly rare and aesthetically stunning Championship artifact makes its triumphant return to Chicago within this Platinum Night auction. The fob is consigned to this event by the granddaughter of Hub Hart, with her signed letter of provenance.
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1963 Los Angeles Dodgers World Championship Ring Presented to Bill Moose Skowron
After participating in seven World Series during the first nine seasons of his career as a New York Yankee, Moose found himself in the unfamiliar role of the enemy as he faced off against his former brothers in arms in yet another episode of the games most storied Fall Classic rivalry. While Skowron had struggled against unfamiliar National League pitching throughout the regular season, he found new life in the Series, leading the Dodgers with a .385 batting average and clubbing a home run in an unprecedented four-game sweep of the Yankees. Presented here is the ring awarded to the popular starting first baseman of the Dodgers third World Championship team. A round brilliant-cut diamond (.75 carat) commands the face, set in a blue stone and ringed by the words Los Angeles Dodgers World Champions. Left shank features ball and bats imagery with Skowrons name engraved on the sweet spot. Right shank celebrates the sweep with 4 Straight terminology, the Dodgers logo and the year 1963. The white gold beauty is stamped Balfour 14K at interior band, which measures to size eleven. Fine, undamaged condition. A wonderful memento of those thrilling Dodgers vs. Yankees Fall Classics.
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1992 & 1993 Toronto Blue Jays World Championship Rings Lot of 2
The Championship of our National Pastime took a two-year foreign vacation in the early 1990s as Cito Gastons supercharged Toronto Blue Jays claimed back-to-back World Series, each capped with thrilling extra-innings Game Six victories. Presented is a genuine World Series Championship ring representing each of those glorious Fall Classics, presented to and consigned by a former front office worker for the Jays. Each ring is crafted by the famous Tiffany & Co., and is housed in their classic robins egg blue boxes. 1992: Face holds seventeen round brilliant-cut diamonds with a total carat weight of .30. Team logo bird and Canadian flag imagery appears, with World Champions 1992 ringing perimeter in raised lettering. Left shank reads Toronto Blue Jays, 1992 World Series, Canadas 1st. Right shank provides recipients surname MacNeil, the symbol of the American League and the four million+ attendance total. Interior band is stamped Tiffany 14k 585. Gross weight 35.41 grams. Size 9. 1993: Face holds forty-six round brilliant-cut diamonds with a total carat weight of .60. Team logo bird and double-Canadian flag imagery appears, with World Champions 1993 ringing perimeter in raised lettering. Left shank reads Toronto Blue Jays, 1993 World Series, Back to Back 92-93. Right shank provides recipients surname MacNeil and the symbol of the American League. Interior band is stamped Tiffany 14k 585. Gross weight 36.13 grams. Size 10.5.
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I made a lot of mistakes out of the ring, but I never made any in it. Jack Johnson
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80095
1923-24 V145-1 Frank Clancy #3 SGC 88 NM/MT 8 Highest Graded Example Known!
The king of Kings, our presented representation of this rare cardboard dedicated to Hall of Fame defenseman finds no equals nor superiors in either the SGC or PSA population reports. Its a fitting tribute to Frank King Clancy, who ruled the ice for sixteen seasons, claiming Stanley Cup titles in 1923, 1927 and 1931 before transitioning to the roles of coach, referee and team executive after hanging up his skates. Clancy was one of the top players of his era, but not the most intimidating sight at 57 and 155 pounds. Not letting his size deter him, Clancy paired great speed with a pugnacious spirit. Brian McFarlane, a top Canadian sportscaster, once said that King Clancy started a thousand ghts and never won one. A top-scoring defensemen with 136 career goals, Clancy ranks first on the all-time list of top scoring defenseman. His final appearance on the ice was the Howie Morenz Memorial Game in 1937. This rookie representation of the all-time great Ottawa Senator is a recent addition to the SGC population report, and by far the highest graded example of this key hockey card. The best contenders of quality are a trio resting at the excellent level some five numerical grades lower. The finest submission to PSA is a lone EX-MT+ 6.5. The presented specimen is basically like-new. The viewer will marvel at the complete absence of creases, wrinkles or surface marring, defying all laws of probability. The slightest hint of fuzziness at the top left outer corner tip seems to be the only element denying this stunning beauty an even higher assessment. Nothing provides visible credence to the fact that this card is an octogenarian and not a freshly-printed gem. For the hockey collector, this is the premier example of a pivotal entry in the full library of hockey trading card promotions.
80096
1934 1967 St. Lawrence Starch Bee Hive Photos Near Set (973) Plus Advertisements and George Bridgman Letter
One can only imagine if the St. Lawrence Starch Co. envisioned that their promotion showcasing Canadas National Pastime would evolve into a thirty-year endeavor. The monumental Bee Hive Honey promotion is a project that can and does keep passionate hockey collectors busy for a lifetime as they inch closer to complete set nirvana. There are just over 1,025 known pieces offering over 600 different players (110+ Hall of Famers), teams and awards spanning over 30 years of hockey history. The Bee Hive allure is made all the more intoxicating when one considers their availability ranges from common to truthfully next to impossible to find. Issued in three distinct groups, the set showcased players from every contemporary teamBoston Bruins, Chicago Black Hawks, Detroit Red Wings, Montreal Canadians, New York Rangers and Toronto Maple Leafs plus the Montreal Maroons and NY/Brooklyn Americans. This presentation includes: Group 1 (193443) 290 different; Group 2 (1944-64) 477 different and Group 3 (1964-67) 206 different. To the best of our knowledge, not one single hobbyist can claim ownership of a complete run of Bee Hive images. This 973-piece presentation includes renowned rarities Cy Wentworth (fewer than ten known), M. Richard, Howie Morenz, Joe Klukay, Maki/Script On Stick, Gus Marker, Eddie Robinson, Harry Watson, Babe Pratt, Armstrong/Light Background, Simmons/Error, B. Hull/#9, Berenson/Black Letters, Bionda, Maloney, Don and Nick Metz, Stanowski, Perreault, M. Hall, B. Hull/Home-portrait, Pilote/Home, Nesterenko/Light Background, Bob Turner, Faulkner, Howe/C, Ingram, Bower/#1, Harris, thirty trophy and awards photos and many others. This is the most complete set of Bee Hive Hockey photos ever auctioned. In addition to completeness, quality and a fantastic selection of more than two dozen St. Lawrence Starch Bee Hive ads and promotional material is also included. Overall, the collection is surprisingly nice with approx. 85-90% in Excellent to Near-Mint condition. Most condition issue are limited to the thin paper mounts. If one would just grade the photos, this phenomenal display would be mostly EX/MT to Mint. It is readily apparent this was a work of love, assembled piece by piece with an eye toward quality. Included will be a letter from respected Bee Hive specialist George Bridgman. Please see our web site for more details plus a link to a full list of the contents of this collection.
80097
80098
1955-56 Quaker Oats Hockey Near Set (76/79) #1 Current Finest on the PSA Set Registry!
A foreshadowing of the Post Cereal sets to come some five years later, this issue borrowed its format from the Parkhurst cards issued the same year, but instead came circulated inside boxes of Quaker Oats products. The cards were the main focus of a promotion giving youngsters the chance to redeem a complete set of cards for impressive prizes like a pair of C.C.M. Skates or a new C.C.M. Bicycle. The promotion appears on its surface to have been a smashing success, as ads extending the prize offer announced 100 MORE BICYCLES to be given away! But one must wonder if this was simply a rather cynical marketing ploy considering the trio of extremely limited short print subjects which have proven impossible to find. Neither PSA nor SGC has graded a single example of any of the following three subjects, as recorded in their population reports of elusive short prints#s 1 Lumley, 33 Clancy and 37 Richarda fact which should shed some light upon just what a difficult task set completion had been, and continues to be. Consider the other sport cards renowned for raritythere are almost ten R306 Babe Ruth cards noted, nine N302 Anonymous Mayo Football cards, four V145-1 Corbeau cards, almost 70 Magie errors, and over 100 1933 Goudey Lajoie examples. Even the 1932 US Caramels Lindstrom card is represented in the PSA pop report. This issue may appear to be the very common Parkhurst variety, but rest assured each is clearly a Quaker Oats product as the distinctive green ink backs will attest.This presentation is not just a testimonial to the tenacity of hobbyist who faced the challenge of putting together these scarce collectibles, but also to his discerning eye for quality. The set currently ranks as the #1 set on the PSA Set Registry with a GPA of 4.99! There are no fewer than ten cards that equal the highest grade known for that subject, including a trio which claim Pop one-of-one with none higher status. Overall, more than 70% of the set is in excellent to near mint condition, with some cards rating under the excellent plateau being particularly strong for the grade. Even card #36, the lone PSA 1 entry, is an attractive representation with only four examples grading higher. The following is a detailed account of this presentation plus significant population information. Includes: PSA NM 7: 7 cards, #s 11 Thomson, 13 Cullen (Pop One-None Higher), 20 Harris (Pop Two-None Higher), 35 Marshall (Pop OneNone Higher), 40 Curry (Pop Three-None Higher), 43 Geoffrion, 49 Johnson, 57 Morenz (Pop Four-None Higher) and 79 Maple Leaf Gardens (Pop 2-None Higher); PSA EX-MT+ 6 5: 3 cards, #s 46 Bouchard, 58 Joliat and 66 Reay; PSA EX-MT 6: 17 cards, #s 6 Klukay, 10 Sloan (Pop One-None Higher), 12 Migay, 17 Marshall, 18 Duff, 21 Chabot, 28 Apps, 38 Moore, 51 Meger, 52 McNeil, 54 Turner, 56 Vezina, 62 Siebert, 64 Reardon, 67 Blake (Pop TwoNone Higher), 74 Beliveau Bats Puck and 76 Curry Scores Again; PSA EX 5: 30 cards, #s 3 Horton, 4 Armstrong, 8 (MC), 9 MacDonald, 14, 15, 16, 24, 27, 29 Kennedy, 31, 32 Cotton, 34 (MC), 39, 41 Mackay (Pop Two-None Higher), 42, 45 Harvey, 47 (MC), 48, 59 Hainsworth, 60, 61, 63, 68, 69 Hugh Beats Hodge, 70 Lum Stops Boomboom (Pop Three-None Higher), 71 Plante Is Protected, 75 Leaf Speedsters Attack, 77 Jammed On The Boards and 78 The Montreal Forum; PSA VG-EX+ 4 5: 2 cards, #s 5 and 55 Lalonde; PSA VG-EX 4: 6 cards, #s 19, 23 Broda, 44 Beliveau, 50 Plante, 72 and 73; PSA VG+ 3 5: 1 card, #22; PSA VG 3: 3 cards, #s 2, 25, 26 Conacher and 65; PSA Good 2: 3 cards, #s 7, 30 and 53; PSA Poor 1: 1 card, #36.
80099
1958-59 Ted Lindsay Stanley Cup Playoffs Game Worn Chicago Black Hawks Jersey
With world-class aesthetics to match its elite heritage, the presented sweater derives from the family of a close friend of Walter Gunzo Humeniuk, the backup goaltender and assistant trainer for the 1955-61 Chicago Black Hawks who would begin a successful second career in sporting goods following his retirement from the ice. The gorgeous jersey is believed to have been worn by his teammate Lindsay during the Black Hawks single series of post-season play in 1959, exhibiting light but definite game wear and inspiring leading expert Brad Moore to declare it without a doubt the best preserved late 50s Blackhawk sweater in the hobby in the attending letter of authenticity. Lindsays diminutive size belied his brutal style of play, which earned him the nickname Terrible Ted and more than 400 stitches before he finally lost count. Considered by many the finest left winger ever to wear an NHL uniform, Lindsay was a nine-time All-Star and four-time Stanley Cup Champion. Yet game worn jerseys from this legendary bruiser remain the most elusive of quarry. Lindsays number 7 appears on verso in white tackle twill, and again on each sleeve, where the positioning of the numeral and tomahawk allows us to pinpoint the jerseys exact vintage. The next season Lindsay would wear the Assistant Captains letter A on his chest, a feature properly absent here. The classic and elegantly crafted Indian head patch remains unblemished on the chest, confidently asserting its claim to the status of most attractive style in NHL fashion. The tie-down collar features its original lace, and the proper Lippmans manufacturers label remains at interior seam. Size measures to a 44, proper for Lindsay. Two team repairs and a scattering of stick slashes recall the semifinals meeting with the eventual Stanley Cup Champion Montreal Canadiens. LOA from Brad Moore. LOA from Heritage Auctions.
80100
80101
The highest compliment that you can pay me is to say that I work hard every day, that I never dog it. Wayne Gretzky
80102
80103
You may be leading, then you might be at the back of the pack trying to work your way up. Its just a constant reminder not to give up. Jeff Gordon
27. If any Auction invoice submitted by Auctioneer is not paid in full when due, the unpaid balance will bear interest at the highest rate permitted by law from the date of invoice until paid. Any invoice not paid when due will bear a three percent (3%) late fee on the invoice amount or three percent (3%) of any installment that is past due. If the Auctioneer refers any invoice to an attorney for collection, the buyer agrees to pay attorneys fees, court costs, and other collection costs incurred by Auctioneer. If Auctioneer assigns collection to its in-house legal staff, such attorneys time expended on the matter shall be compensated at a rate comparable to the hourly rate of independent attorneys. 28. In the event a successful Bidder fails to pay any amounts due, Auctioneer reserves the right to sell the lot(s) securing the invoice to any underbidders in the Auction that the lot(s) appeared, or at subsequent private or public sale, or relist the lot(s) in a future auction conducted by Auctioneer. A defaulting Bidder agrees to pay for the reasonable costs of resale (including a 10% sellers commission, if consigned to an auction conducted by Auctioneer). The defaulting Bidder is liable to pay any difference between his total original invoice for the lot(s), plus any applicable interest, and the net proceeds for the lot(s) if sold at private sale or the subsequent hammer price of the lot(s) less the 10% sellers commissions, if sold at an Auctioneers auction. 29. Auctioneer reserves the right to require payment in full in good funds before delivery of the merchandise. 30. Auctioneer shall have a lien against the merchandise purchased by the buyer to secure payment of the Auction invoice. Auctioneer is further granted a lien and the right to retain possession of any other property of the buyer then held by the Auctioneer or its affiliates to secure payment of any Auction invoice or any other amounts due the Auctioneer or affiliates from the buyer. With respect to these lien rights, Auctioneer shall have all the rights of a secured creditor under Article 9 of the Texas Uniform Commercial Code, including but not limited to the right of sale. In addition, with respect to payment of the Auction invoice(s), the buyer waives any and all rights of offset he might otherwise have against the Auctioneer and the consignor of the merchandise included on the invoice. If a Bidder owes Auctioneer or its affiliates on any account, Auctioneer and its affiliates shall have the right to offset such unpaid account by any credit balance due Bidder, and it may secure by possessory lien any unpaid amount by any of the Bidders property in their possession. 31. Title shall not pass to the successful Bidder until all invoices are paid in full. It is the responsibility of the buyer to provide adequate insurance coverage for the items once they have been delivered to a common carrier or third-party shipper. Delivery; Shipping; and Handling Charges: 32. Buyer is liable for shipping and handling. Please refer to Auctioneers website www.HA.com/common/shipping.php for the latest charges or call Auctioneer. Auctioneer is unable to combine purchases from other auctions or affiliates into one package for shipping purposes. Lots won will be shipped in a commercially reasonable time after payment in good funds for the merchandise and the shipping fees is received or credit extended, except when third-party shipment occurs. 33. Successful international Bidders shall provide written shipping instructions, including specified customs declarations, to the Auctioneer for any lots to be delivered outside of the United States. NOTE: Declaration value shall be the item(s) hammer price together with its buyers premium and Auctioneer shall use the correct harmonized code for the lot. Domestic Buyers on lots designated for third-party shipment must designate the common carrier, accept risk of loss, and prepay shipping costs. 34. All shipping charges will be borne by the successful Bidder. On all domestic shipments, any risk of loss during shipment will be borne by Heritage until the shipping carriers confirmation of delivery to the address of record in Auctioneers file (carriers confirmation is conclusive to prove delivery to Bidder; if the client has a Signature release on file with the carrier, the package is considered delivered without Signature) or delivery by Heritage to Bidders selected third-party shipper. On all foreign shipments, any risk of loss during shipment will be borne by the Bidder following Auctioneers delivery to the Bidders designated common carrier or third-party shipper. 35. Due to the nature of some items sold, it shall be the responsibility for the successful bidder to arrange pick-up and shipping through third-parties; as to such items Auctioneer shall have no liability. Failure to pick-up or arrange shipping in a timely fashion (within ten days) shall subject Lots to storage and moving charges, including a $100 administration fee plus $10 daily storage for larger items and $5.00 daily for smaller items (storage fee per item) after 35 days. In the event the Lot is not removed within ninety days, the Lot may be offered for sale to recover any past due storage or moving fees, including a 10% Sellers Commission. 36. The laws of various countries regulate the import or export of certain plant and animal properties, including (but not limited to) items made of (or including) ivory, whalebone, turtleshell, coral, crocodile, or other wildlife. Transport of such lots may require special licenses for export, import, or both. Bidder is responsible for: 1) obtaining all information on such restricted items for both export and import; 2) obtaining all such licenses and/or permits. Delay or failure to obtain any such license or permit does not relieve the buyer of timely compliance with standard payment terms. For further information, please contact Ron Brackemyre at 800-872-6467 ext. 1312. 37. Any request for shipping verification for undelivered packages must be made within 30 days of shipment by Auctioneer. Cataloging, Warranties and Disclaimers: 38. NO WARRANTY, WHETHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, IS MADE WITH RESPECT TO ANY DESCRIPTION CONTAINED IN THIS AUCTION OR ANY SECOND OPINE. Any description of the items or second opine contained in this Auction is for the sole purpose of identifying the items for those Bidders who do not have the opportunity to view the lots prior to bidding, and no description of items has been made part of the basis of the bargain or has created any express warranty that the goods would conform to any description made by Auctioneer. Color variations can be expected in any electronic or printed imaging, and are not grounds for the return of any lot. NOTE: Auctioneer, in specified auction venues, for example, Fine Art, may have express written warranties and you are referred to those specific terms and conditions. . 39. Auctioneer is selling only such right or title to the items being sold as Auctioneer may have by virtue of consignment agreements on the date of auction and disclaims any warranty of title to the Property. Auctioneer disclaims any warranty of merchantability or fitness for any particular purposes. All images, descriptions, sales data, and archival records are the exclusive property of Auctioneer, and may be used by Auctioneer for advertising, promotion, archival records, and any other uses deemed appropriate. 40. Translations of foreign language documents may be provided as a convenience to interested parties. Auctioneer makes no representation as to the accuracy of those translations and will not be held responsible for errors in bidding arising from inaccuracies in translation. 41. Auctioneer disclaims all liability for damages, consequential or otherwise, arising out of or in connection with the sale of any Property by Auctioneer to Bidder. No third party may rely on any benefit of these Terms and Conditions and any rights, if any, established hereunder are personal to the Bidder and may not be assigned. Any statement made by the Auctioneer is an opinion and does not constitute a warranty or representation. No employee of Auctioneer may alter these Terms and Conditions, and, unless signed by a principal of Auctioneer, any such alteration is null and void.
42. Auctioneer shall not be liable for breakage of glass or damage to frames (patent or latent); such defects, in any event, shall not be a basis for any claim for return or reduction in purchase price. Release: 43. In consideration of participation in the Auction and the placing of a bid, Bidder expressly releases Auctioneer, its officers, directors and employees, its affiliates, and its outside experts that provide second opines, from any and all claims, cause of action, chose of action, whether at law or equity or any arbitration or mediation rights existing under the rules of any professional society or affiliation based upon the assigned description, or a derivative theory, breach of warranty express or implied, representation or other matter set forth within these Terms and Conditions of Auction or otherwise. In the event of a claim, Bidder agrees that such rights and privileges conferred therein are strictly construed as specifically declared herein; e.g., authenticity, typographical error, etc. and are the exclusive remedy. Bidder, by non-compliance to these express terms of a granted remedy, shall waive any claim against Auctioneer. 44. Notice: Some Property sold by Auctioneer are inherently dangerous e.g. firearms, cannons, and small items that may be swallowed or ingested or may have latent defects all of which may cause harm to a person. Purchaser accepts all risk of loss or damage from its purchase of these items and Auctioneer disclaims any liability whether under contract or tort for damages and losses, direct or inconsequential, and expressly disclaims any warranty as to safety or usage of any lot sold. Dispute Resolution and Arbitration Provision: 45. By placing a bid or otherwise participating in the auction, Bidder accepts these Terms and Conditions of Auction, and specifically agrees to the dispute resolution provided herein. Consumer disputes shall be resolved through court litigation which has an exclusive Dallas, Texas venue clause and jury waiver. Non-consumer dispute shall be determined in binding arbitration which arbitration replaces the right to go to court, including the right to a jury trial. 46. Auctioneer in no event shall be responsible for consequential damages, incidental damages, compensatory damages, or any other damages arising or claimed to be arising from the auction of any lot. In the event that Auctioneer cannot deliver the lot or subsequently it is established that the lot lacks title, or other transfer or condition issue is claimed, In such cases the sole remedy shall be limited to rescission of sale and refund of the amount paid by Bidder; in no case shall Auctioneers maximum liability exceed the high bid on that lot, which bid shall be deemed for all purposes the value of the lot. After one year has elapsed, Auctioneers maximum liability shall be limited to any commissions and fees Auctioneer earned on that lot. 47. In the event of an attribution error, Auctioneer may at its sole discretion, correct the error on the Internet, or, if discovered at a later date, to refund the buyers purchase price without further obligation. 48. Dispute Resolution for Consumers and Non-Consumers: Any claim, dispute, or controversy in connection with, relating to and /or arising out of the Auction, participation in the Auction. Award of lots, damages of claims to lots, descriptions, condition reports, provenance, estimates, return and warranty rights, any interpretation of these Terms and Conditions, any alleged verbal modification of these Terms and Conditions and/or any purported settlement whether asserted in contract, tort, under Federal or State statute or regulation shall or any other matter: a) if presented by a consumer, be exclusively heard by, and the parties consent to, exclusive in personam jurisdiction in the State District Courts of Dallas County, Texas. THE PARTIES EXPRESSLY WAIVE ANY RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY. Any appeals shall be solely pursued in the appellate courts of the State of Texas; or b) for any claimant other than a consumer, the claim shall be presented in confidential binding arbitration before a single arbitrator, that the parties may agree upon, selected from the JAMS list of Texas arbitrators. The case is not to be administrated by JAMS; however, if the parties cannot agree on an arbitrator, then JAMS shall appoint the arbitrator and it shall be conducted under JAMS rules. The locale shall be Dallas Texas. The arbitrators award may be enforced in any court of competent jurisdiction. Any party on any claim involving the purchase or sale of numismatic or related items may elect arbitration through binding PNG arbitration. Any claim must be brought within one (1) year of the alleged breach, default or misrepresentation or the claim is waived. This agreement and any claims shall be determined and construed under Texas law. The prevailing party (party that is awarded substantial and material relief on its claim or defense) may be awarded its reasonable attorneys fees and costs. 49. No claims of any kind can be considered after the settlements have been made with the consignors. Any dispute after the settlement date is strictly between the Bidder and consignor without involvement or responsibility of the Auctioneer. 50. In consideration of their participation in or application for the Auction, a person or entity (whether the successful Bidder, a Bidder, a purchaser and/or other Auction participant or registrant) agrees that all disputes in any way relating to, arising under, connected with, or incidental to these Terms and Conditions and purchases, or default in payment thereof, shall be arbitrated pursuant to the arbitration provision. In the event that any matter including actions to compel arbitration, construe the agreement, actions in aid or arbitration or otherwise needs to be litigated, such litigation shall be exclusively in the Courts of the State of Texas, in Dallas County, Texas, and if necessary the corresponding appellate courts. For such actions, the successful Bidder, purchaser, or Auction participant also expressly submits himself to the personal jurisdiction of the State of Texas. 51. These Terms & Conditions provide specific remedies for occurrences in the auction and delivery process. Where such remedies are afforded, they shall be interpreted strictly. Bidder agrees that any claim shall utilize such remedies; Bidder making a claim in excess of those remedies provided in these Terms and Conditions agrees that in no case whatsoever shall Auctioneers maximum liability exceed the high bid on that lot, which bid shall be deemed for all purposes the value of the lot. Miscellaneous: 52. Agreements between Bidders and consignors to effectuate a non-sale of an item at Auction, inhibit bidding on a consigned item to enter into a private sale agreement for said item, or to utilize the Auctioneers Auction to obtain sales for non-selling consigned items subsequent to the Auction, are strictly prohibited. If a subsequent sale of a previously consigned item occurs in violation of this provision, Auctioneer reserves the right to charge Bidder the applicable Buyers Premium and consignor a Sellers Commission as determined for each auction venue and by the terms of the sellers agreement. 53. Acceptance of these Terms and Conditions qualifies Bidder as a client who has consented to be contacted by Heritage in the future. In conformity with do-not-call regulations promulgated by the Federal or State regulatory agencies, participation by the Bidder is affirmative consent to being contacted at the phone number shown in his application and this consent shall remain in effect until it is revoked in writing. Heritage may from time to time contact Bidder concerning sale, purchase, and auction opportunities available through Heritage and its affiliates and subsidiaries. 54. Rules of Construction: Auctioneer presents properties in a number of collectible fields, and as such, specific venues have promulgated supplemental Terms and Conditions. Nothing herein shall be construed to waive the general Terms and Conditions of Auction by these additional rules and shall be construed to give force and effect to the rules in their entirety. Rev. 3-23-11
State Notices: Notice as to an Auction in California. Auctioneer has in compliance with Title 2.95 of the California Civil Code as amended October 11, 1993 Sec. 1812.600, posted with the California Secretary of State its bonds for it and its employees, and the auction is being conducted in compliance with Sec. 2338 of the Commercial Code and Sec. 535 of the Penal Code. Notice as to an Auction in New York City. These Terms and Conditions of Sale are designed to conform to the applicable sections of the New York City Department of Consumer Affairs Rules and Regulations as Amended. This sale is a Public Auction Sale conducted by Heritage Auction Galleries, Inc. #41513036. The New York City licensed auctioneers are: Sam Foose, #095260; Kathleen Guzman, #0762165; Nicholas Dawes, #1304724; Ed Beardsley, #1183220; Scott Peterson, #1306933; Andrea Voss, #1320558, who will conduct the Sale on behalf of Heritage Numismatic Auctions, Inc. (for Coins and Currency) and Heritage Auction Galleries Inc. (for other items). All lots are subject to: the consignors rights to bid thereon in accord with these Terms and Conditions of Sale, consignors option to receive advances on their consignments, and Auctioneer, in its sole discretion, may offer limited extended financing to registered bidders, in accord with Auctioneers internal credit standards. A registered bidder may inquire whether a lot is subject to an advance or a reserve. Auctioneer has made advances to various consignors in this sale. On lots bearing an estimate, the term refers to a value range placed on an item by the Auctioneer in its sole opinion but the final price is determined by the bidders.
Notice as to an Auction in Texas. In compliance with TDLR rule 67.100(c)(1), notice is hereby provided that this auction is covered by a Recovery Fund administered by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation, P.O. Box 12157, Austin, Texas 78711 (512) 463-6599. Any complaints may be directed to the same address. Notice as to an Auction in Ohio: Auction firm and Auctioneer are licensed by the Dept. of Agriculture, and either the licensee is bonded in favor of the state or an aggrieved person may initiate a claim against the auction recovery fund created in Section 4707.25 of the Revised Code as a result of the licensees actions, whichever is applicable.
These Terms and Conditions of Sale are designed to conform to the applicable sections of the New York City Department of Consumer Affairs Rules and Regulations as Amended. This sale is a Public Auction Sale conducted by Heritage Auction Galleries, Inc. #41513036. The New York City licensed auctioneers are: Sam Foose, #095260; Kathleen Guzman, #0762165; Nicholas Dawes, #1304724; Ed Beardsley, #1183220; Scott Peterson, #1306933; Andrea Voss, #1320558, who will conduct the Sale on behalf of Heritage Numismatic Auctions, Inc. (for Coins and Currency) and Heritage Auction Galleries Inc. (for other items). All lots are subject to: the consignors rights to bid thereon in accord with these Terms and Conditions of Sale, consignors option to receive advances on their consignments, and Auctioneer, in its sole discretion, may offer limited extended financing to registered bidders, in accord with Auctioneers internal credit standards. A registered bidder may inquire whether a lot is subject to an advance or a reserve. Auctioneer has made advances to various consignors in this sale. On lots bearing an estimate, the term refers to a value range placed on an item by the Auctioneer in its sole opinion but the final price is determined by the bidders.
Additional Terms & Conditions: SPORTS COLLECTIBLES AUCTIONS
SPORTS COLLECTIBLES TERM A: Signature Auctions are not on approval. No certified material may be returned because of possible differences of opinion with respect to the grade offered by any third-party organization, dealer, or service. No guarantee of grade is offered for uncertified Property sold and subsequently submitted to a thirdparty grading service. There are absolutely no exceptions to this policy. Under extremely limited circumstances, (e.g. gross cataloging error) a purchaser, who did not bid from the floor, may request Auctioneer to evaluate voiding a sale; such request must be made in writing detailing the alleged gross error, and submission of the lot to the Auctioneer must be pre-approved by the Auctioneer; A bidder must notify the appropriate department head (check the inside front cover of the catalog or our website for a listing of department heads) in writing of such request within three (3) days of the mail bidders receipt of the lot. Any lot that is to be evaluated must be in our offices within 30 days after Auction. Grading does not qualify for this evaluation process nor do such complaints constitute a basis to challenge the authenticity of a lot. AFTER THAT 30-DAY PERIOD, NO LOTS MAY BE RETURNED FOR REASONS OTHER THAN AUTHENTICITY. Lots returned must be housed intact in the original holder. No lots purchased by floor Bidders (including those Bidders acting as agents for others) may be returned. Late remittance for purchases may be considered just cause to revoke all return privileges. SPORTS COLLECTIBLES TERM B: Auctions conducted solely on the Internet THREE (3) DAY RETURN POLICY. All lots paid for within seven days of the Internet-only Auction closing are sold with a three (3) day return privilege. You may return lots under the following conditions: Within three days of receipt of the lot, you must first notify Auctioneer by contacting Client Service by phone (1-800-872-6467) or e-mail (Bid@HA.com), and immediately mail the lot(s) fully insured to the attention of Returns, Heritage, 3500 Maple Avenue, 17th Floor, Dallas TX 75219-3941. Lots must be housed intact in their original holder and condition. You are responsible for the insured, safe delivery of any lots. A non-negotiable return fee of 5% of the purchase price ($10 per lot minimum) will be deducted from the refund for each returned lot or billed directly. Postage and handling fees are not refunded. After the three-day period (from receipt), no items may be returned for any reason. Late remittance for purchases revokes all Return privileges. SPORTS COLLECTIBLES TERM C: Bidders who have inspected the lots or had the opportunity to Inspect the lots prior to any Auction will not be granted any return privileges. SPORTS COLLECTIBLES TERM D: Sportscards sold referencing a third-party grading service are sold as is without any express or implied warranty. Certain warranties may be available from the grading services and the Bidder is referred to them for further details: Professional Sports Authenticator (PSA), P.O. Box 6180 Newport Beach, CA 92658; Sportscard Guaranty LLC (SGC) P.O. Box 6919 Parsippany, NJ 07054-6919; Global Authentication (GAI), P.O. Box 57042 Irvine, Ca. 92619; Beckett Grading Service (BGS), 15850 Dallas Parkway, Dallas TX 75248. SPORTS COLLECTIBLES TERM E: On any lot presented with a Letter of Authenticity (LOA) issued by Auctioneer or its Heritage affiliates, that warranty inures only to the original purchaser (as shown in Auctioneers records) Purchaser. Purchaser may not transfer the rights afforded under the LOA and it is null and void when Purchaser transfers or attempts to transfer the lot. The LOA warranty is valid from date of the auction in which Purchaser was awarded the lot to four (4) years after its purchase. The LOA warranty is valid as to its attribution to the person or entity described or to the lots usage, e.g. game worn. Claim procedure: Purchaser must contact the Auctioneer prior to submission of the lot as to his intent to make a claim and arrange secure shipment. If a lots authenticity is questioned by Purchaser within the warranty period, Purchaser must present with the claim, authoritative written evidence that the lot is not authentic as determined by a known expert in the sports field. If Auctioneer concurs that the lot is not as represented, Purchaser shall be refunded their purchase price. If the Auctioneer denies the claim, the Purchaser may file the dispute with the American Arbitration Association with locale in Dallas, Texas, before a single arbitration under expedited rules. The LOA does not provide for incidental or consequential damages or other indirect damages. Any lot sold with a certificate of authenticity or other warranty from an entity other than Auctioneer or Heritages affiliates is subject to such issuing entitys rules and such conditions are the sole remedy afforded to purchaser. For information as to third party authentication warranties the bidder is directed to: PSA/DNA, P.O. Box 6180 Newport Beach, CA 92658 (800) 325-1121. James Spence Authentication (JSA), 2 Sylvan Way, Suite 102 Parsippany, NJ 07054 (888) 457-7362; or as otherwise noted on the Certificate. SPORTS COLLECTIBLES TERM F: Bidders who intend to challenge authenticity or provenance of a lot must notify Auctioneer in writing within thirty (30) days of the Auctions conclusion. In the event Auctioneer cannot deliver the lot or subsequently it is established that the lot lacks title, provenance, authenticity, or other transfer or condition issue is claimed, Auctioneers liability shall be limited to rescission of sale and refund of purchase price; in no case shall Auctioneers maximum liability exceed the high bid on that lot, which bid shall be deemed for all purposes the value of the lot. After one year has elapsed, Auctioneers maximum liability shall be limited to any commissions and fees Auctioneer earned on that lot. SPORTS COLLECTIBLES TERM G: Auctioneer shall not be liable for any patent or latent defect or controversy pertaining to or arising from any encapsulated collectible. In any such instance, purchasers remedy, if any, shall be solely against the service certifying the collectible. SPORTS COLLECTIBLES TERM H: Due to changing grading standards over time, differing interpretations, and to possible mishandling of items by subsequent owners, Auctioneer reserves the right to grade items differently than shown on certificates from any grading service that accompany the items. Auctioneer also reserves the right to grade items differently than the grades shown in the prior catalog should such items be reconsigned to any future auction. SPORTS COLLECTIBLES TERM I: Although consensus grading is employed by most third-party services, it should be noted as aforesaid that grading is not an exact science. In fact, it is entirely possible that if a lot is broken out of a plastic holder and resubmitted to another grading service or even to the same service, the lot could come back with a different grade assigned. SPORTS COLLECTIBLES TERM J: Certification does not guarantee protection against the normal risks associated with potentially volatile markets. The degree of liquidity for certified collectibles will vary according to general market conditions and the particular lot involved. For some lots there may be no active market at all at certain points in time. For wiring instructions call the Credit department at 1-800-872-6467 or e-mail: CreditDept@HA.com
Rev. 1-21-11
Shippers that Heritage has used are listed below. However, you are not obligated to choose from the following and may provide Heritage with information of your preferred shipper.
Navis Pack & Ship
161 Pittsburgh St Dallas, TX 75207 Ph: 972-870-1212 Fax: 214-409-9001 Navis.Dallas@GoNavis.com
It is the Third Party Shippers responsibility to pack (or crate) and ship (or freight) your purchase to you. Please make all payment arrangements for shipping with your Shipper of choice. Any questions concerning Third Party Shipping can be addressed through our Client Services Department at 1-866-835-3243. Successful bidders are advised that pick-up or shipping arrangements should be made within ten (10) days of the auction or they may be subject to storage fees as stated in Heritages Terms & Conditions of Auction, item 35.
Steve Ivy Jim Halperin Greg Rohan Leo Frese Warren Tucker Todd Imhof Michael Moline
21509OTH
D A L L A S | N E W Y O R K | B E V E R LY H I L L S | S A N F R A N C I S C O | PA R I S | G E N E VA
Coast to Coast
3 U.S. Locations to Serve You
DALLAS
3500 Maple Avenue Dallas, Texas 75219 214.528.3500 Hours: Mon-Fri: 9:00 AM CT - 5:00 PM CT Saturday: 9:00 AM CT - 1:00 PM CT
NEW YORK
212.486.3500
445 Park Avenue (at 57th Street) New York, New York 10022 Hours: Mon-Fri: 10:00 AM ET - 6:00 PM ET Saturday: 10:00 AM ET - 3:00 PM ET
BEVERLY HILLS
310.492.8600
9478 West Olympic Boulevard Beverly Hills, California 90212 Hours: Mon-Fri: 9:00 AM PT - 5:00 PM PT Saturday: By Appointment
Annual Sales Exceed $700 Million 600,000+ Online Bidder-Members 3 5 0 0 M a p l e Av e n u e D a l l a s , Te x a s 75219 8 0 0 - 872- 6 4 67
D A L L A S | N E W Y O R K | B E V E R LY H I L L S | S A N F R A N C I S C O | PA R I S | G E N E VA
V I N TAG E & C O N T E M P O R A RY P H OTO G R A P H Y NOVEMBER 19, 2011 | DALLAS | LIVE & ONLINE
ANNIE LEIBOVITZ Magic Johnson, Los Angeles, 1989 Gelatin silver 13-1/8 x 13-3/8 in. Est. $3,000/5,000 HA.com/5077-14002
ANNIE LEIBOVITZ Michael Jordan, New York, 1991 Gelatin silver 10-1/8 x 8-1/4 in. Est. $3,000/5,000 HA.com/5077-14001
For a free auction catalog in any category, plus a copy of The Collector's Handbook (combined value $65), visit HA.com/CATB21813 or call 866-835-3243 and reference code CATB21813.
Inquiries, 800-872-6467: Ed Jaster, ext. 1288 or EdJ@HA.com Rachel Peart, ext. 1625 or RPeart@HA.com
Annual Sales Exceed $700 Million 600,000+ Online Bidder-Members 3 5 0 0 M a p l e Av e n u e D a l l a s , Te x a s 75219 8 0 0 - 872- 6 4 67
D A L L A S | N E W Y O R K | B E V E R LY H I L L S | S A N F R A N C I S C O | PA R I S | G E N E VA
Heritage presents The Estate Auction, a multi-category ne and decorative art auction offering a great variety of quality property for every taste and budget coming directly from estates and private collections.
From the Estate of Kenneth Kendall, Los Angeles, California: WILLIAM HAMILTON, Portrait of Sarah Siddons as Zara, circa 1784, oil on canvas, 50 x 40 in., Sold for $23,900 (Estimate $9,000/12,000) HA.com/5062*64015
From the Ray and Clare Stern Estate: A pair of French Louis XV style marble and gilt bronze ninelight candelabra, Sold for $4,780 (Estimate $2,500/3,500) HA.com/5065*66065
For a free auction catalog in any category, plus a copy of The Collector's Handbook (combined value $65), visit HA.com/CATC21813 or call 866-835-3243 and reference code CATC21813.
From the Estate of a New York Antiques Dealer: Two Chiparus patinated gilt bronze and ivory gures of girls, sold for $6,573 (Estimate $2,000/3,000) HA.com/5065*66193
From the Ray and Clare Stern Estate: A Chickering reproducing baby grand piano in art case, Boston, Massachusetts, circa 1930-1935, 5 feet 4 in., Sold for $10,755 (Estimate $5,000/8,000) HA.com/5065*66068
Inquiries (800) 872-6467: Decorative Arts Tim Rigdon, ext. 1723 or TimR@HA.com Paintings Ariana Hartsock, ext. 1283 or ArianaH@HA.com East Coast Nick Dawes, ext. 1605 or NickD@HA.com West Coast Carolyn Mani, ext. 1677 or CarolynM@HA.com
Annual Sales Exceed $700 Million 600,000+ Online Bidder-Members 3 5 0 0 M a p l e Av e n u e D a l l a s , Te x a s 75219 8 0 0 - 872- 6 4 67
D A L L A S | N E W Y O R K | B E V E R LY H I L L S | S A N F R A N C I S C O | PA R I S | G E N E VA
Seeking consignments of Art of the American West and Texas Art for our fall auctions! Deadline to consign: September 3.
BIRGER SANDZN Late Moon Rising (Wild Horse Creek), 1923 Oil on canvas 36-1/4 x 48-1/4 in. Sold for $262,900 HA.com/5062*64233 JULIAN ONDERDONK Bluebonnets at Sunrise, 1917 Oil on artists board 9 x 12 in. Sold for $107,550 HA.com/5044*67018
Contact: Kirsty Buchanan Consignment Director Art of the American West 800-872-6467, ext. 1741 or KirstyB@HA.com
For a free auction catalog in any category, plus a copy of The Collectors Handbook (combined value $65), visit HA.com/ CATD21813 call 866-835-3243 and reference code CATD21813.
Annual Sales Exceed $700 Million 600,000+ Online Bidder-Members 3 5 0 0 M a p l e Av e n u e D a l l a s , Te x a s 75219 8 0 0 - 872- 6 4 67
D A L L A S | N E W Y O R K | B E V E R LY H I L L S | S A N F R A N C I S C O | PA R I S | G E N E VA
TX & NY Auctioneer license: Samuel Foose 11727 & 0952360. Heritage Auction Galleries CA Bond #RSB2004175; CA Auctioneer Bond: Leo Frese #RSB2004176. These auctions are subject to a 19.5% buyers premium.
Upcoming Auctions
August 19-21, 2011 Dallas
Bid Online at HA.com/7048
Free catalog and The Collectors Handbook ($65 Value) for new clients. Please submit invoices of $1000+ in this category, from any source. Include your contact information and mail to Heritage, fax 214-409-1425, email CatalogOrders@HA.com, or call 866-835-3243. For more details, go to HA.com/FCO.
Annual Sales Exceed $700 Million | 600,000+ Online Bidder-Members 3500 Maple Avenue | Dallas, Texas 75219 | 800-872-6467 | HA.com/Guitar
D A L L A S | N E W Y O R K | B E V E R LY H I L L S | S A N F R A N C I S C O | PA R I S | G E N E VA TX & NY Auctioneer license: Samuel Foose 11727 & 0952360. Heritage Auction Galleries CA Bond #RSB2004175; CA Auctioneer Bond: Leo Frese #RSB2004176. These auctions are subject to a 19.5% buyers premium. 21630
Monroe by
This auction includes a stunning collection of early Marilyn Monroe photographs by Richard C. Miller along with signicant items related to Elvis, the Beatles, Paul Newman, Jimi Hendrix and dozens of others.
HA.COM/7038
Available for online bidding
Free catalog and The Collectors Handbook ($65 value) for new clients. Please submit auction invoices of $1,000+ in this category, from any source. Include your contact information and mail to Heritage, fax 214-4091425, email CatalogOrders@HA.com, or call 866835-3243. For more details, go to HA.com/FCO.
A n n u a l S a l e s E x c e e d $ 7 0 0 M i l l i o n | 6 0 0 , 0 0 0 + O n l i n e B i d d e r- M e m b e r s
Department Specialists
Comics & Comic Art
HA.com/Comics Ed Jaster, Ext. 1288 EdJ@HA.com Lon Allen, Ext. 1261 LonA@HA.com Barry Sandoval, Ext. 1377 BarryS@HA.com Todd Hignite, Ext. 1790 ToddH@HA.com
Historical
Fine Art
Illustration Art
HA.com/Illustration Ed Jaster, Ext. 1288 EdJ@HA.com Todd Hignite, Ext. 1790 ToddH@HA.com
Civil War
HA.com/CivilWar Dennis Lowe, Ext. 1182 DennisL@HA.com
Historical Manuscripts
HA.com/Manuscripts Sandra Palomino, Ext. 1107 SandraP@HA.com
Rare Books
HA.com/Books James Gannon, Ext. 1609 JamesG@HA.com Joe Fay, Ext. 1544 JoeF@HA.com
Space Exploration
HA.com/Space John Hickey, Ext. 1264 JohnH@HA.com Michael Riley, Ext. 1467 MichaelR@HA.com
Texana
HA.com/Historical Sandra Palomino, Ext. 1107 SandraP@HA.com
Texas Art
HA.com/TexasArt Atlee Phillips, Ext. 1786 AtleeP@HA.com
Jewelry
Movie Posters
HA.com/MoviePosters Grey Smith, Ext. 1367 GreySm@HA.com Bruce Carteron, Ext. 1551 BruceC@HA.com
Sports Collectibles
HA.com/Sports Chris Ivy, Ext. 1319 CIvy@HA.com Peter Calderon, Ext. 1789 PeterC@HA.com Derek Grady, Ext. 1975 DerekG@HA.com Mike Gutierrez, Ext. 1183 MikeG@HA.com Lee Iskowitz, Ext. 1601 LeeI@HA.com Mark Jordan, Ext. 1187 MarkJ@HA.com Chris Nerat, Ext. 1615 ChrisN@HA.com Jonathan Scheier, Ext. 1314 JonathanS@HA.com
Timepieces
HA.com/Timepieces Jim Wolf, Ext. 1659 JWolf@HA.com
Natural History
HA.com/NaturalHistory
Wine
HA.com/Wine Frank Martell, Ext. 1753 FrankM@HA.com Poppy Davis, Ext. 1559 PoppyD@HA.com
Numismatics
HA.com/Coins
Services
Appraisal Services
Credit Department
Marti Korver, Ext. 1248 Marti@HA.com Eric Thomas, Ext. 1241 EricT@HA.com
Noah Fleisher, Ext. 1143 NoahF@HA.com HA.com/Estates Mark Prendergast, Ext. 1632 MPrendergast@HA.com Karl Chiao, Ext. 1958 KarlC@HA.com Shaunda Fry, Ext. 1159 ShaundaF@HA.com
Rare Currency
HA.com/Currency Len Glazer, Ext. 1390 Len@HA.com Allen Mincho, Ext. 1327 Allen@HA.com Dustin Johnston, Ext. 1302 Dustin@HA.com Michael Moczalla, Ext. 1481 MichaelM@HA.com Jason Friedman, Ext. 1582 JasonF@HA.com Brad Ciociola, Ext. 1752 BradC@HA.com
Locations
Dallas (World Headquarters) 214.528.3500 800.872.6467 3500 Maple Ave. Dallas, TX 75219
D A L L A S | N EW Y OR K | BEV ER LY H I L L S | PA R IS | GENEVA
Corporate Officers
R. Steven Ivy, Co-Chairman James L. Halperin, Co-Chairman Gregory J. Rohan, President Paul Minshull, Chief Operating Officer Todd Imhof, Executive Vice President Leo Frese, Managing Director-Beverly Hills Kathleen Guzman, Managing Director-New York
U.S. Rare Coin Auctions U.S. Rare Coins U.S. Rare Coins U.S. Coin ANA U.S. Rare Coins World & Ancient Coin Auctions World Coin World Coin World Coin Online Rare Currency Auctions Currency Fine & Decorative Arts Auctions Fine Silver & Vertu Heritage Dcor Illustration Art Modern & Contemporary Art Texas Art American, Western & European Art Art of the American West Lalique and Art Glass Vintage & Contemporary Photography Decorative Arts & Design Jewelry, Timepieces & Luxury Accessory Auctions Watches & Fine Timepieces Handbags & Luxury Accessories Fine Jewelry Vintage Movie Posters Auctions Vintage Movie Posters Comics Auctions Comics & Original Comic Art Comics & Original Comic Art Music & Entertainment Memorabilia Auctions Music, Celebrity & Hollywood Memorabilia Vintage Guitars & Musical Instruments Vintage Guitars & Musical Instruments The John Wayne Collection Music, Celebrity & Hollywood Memorabilia Vintage Guitars & Musical Instruments Historical Grand Format Auctions Arms & Armor Online Arms & Armor Jerry Weist Collection (Books) Rare Books Historical Manuscripts Art of the Americas Arms & Armor Americana & Political Arms & Militaria, Including Civil War Texana Space Exploration Vintage Sports Collectibles Auctions Vintage Sports Collectibles Vintage Sports Collectibles Natural History Auctions Natural History Fine & Rare Wine Fine & Rare Wine
Location Rosemont Long Beach Pittsburgh Baltimore Location Long Beach New York Dallas Location Long Beach Location Dallas Dallas New York Dallas Dallas Dallas Dallas New York New York Dallas Location New York Dallas Dallas Location Dallas Location Dallas Beverly Hills Location Dallas Dallas Dallas Los Angeles Dallas Arlington Location Dallas Dallas Beverly Hills Beverly Hills Beverly Hills Dallas Dallas Dallas Dallas Dallas Dallas Location Rosemont Dallas Location Beverly Hills Location Beverly Hills
Auction Dates August 11-12, 2011 September 7-11, 2011 October 13, 2011 November 20-22, 2011 Auction Dates Sept. 7-10 & 12, 2011 January 1-2, 2012 January 10, 2012 Auction Dates Sept. 7-10 & 12, 2011 Auction Dates September 26, 2011 September 27, 2011 October 22, 2011 October 26, 2011 November 5, 2011 November 9, 2011 November 5, 2011 November 19, 2011 November 19, 2011 Fall 2011 Auction Dates November 18, 2011 December 5, 2011 December 5, 2011 Auction Dates November 18-19, 2011 Auction Dates August 17-19, 2011 November 10-12, 2011 Auction Dates July 29-30, 2011 August 19-21, 2011 September 16-18, 2011 October 3-6, 2011 December 2-4, 2011 October 14-16, 2011 Auction Dates July 30, 2011 August 21, 2011 September 12, 2011 September 12-14, 2011 September 12-14, 2011 September 16-17, 2011 September 18, 2011 November 12, 2011 December, 2011 March 10, 2012 January 2012 Auction Dates August 4, 2011 November 10-11, 2011 Auction Dates January 8, 2012 Auction Dates September 10, 2011
Consignment Deadline Closed July 29, 2011 September 2, 2011 October 9, 2011 Consignment Deadline Closed November 5, 2011 November 5, 2011 Consignment Deadline July 23, 2011 Consignment Deadline July 25, 2011 July 26, 2011 August 19, 2011 August 24, 2011 September 3, 2011 September 3, 2011 September 10, 2011 September 17, 2011 September 17, 2011 September 1, 2011 Consignment Deadline September 17, 2011 October 8, 2011 October 1, 2011 Consignment Deadline September 27, 2011 Consignment Deadline Closed September 27, 2011 Consignment Deadline Closed Closed July 27, 2011 Closed October 10, 2011 August 23, 2011 Consignment Deadline Closed Closed July 22, 2011 July 22, 2011 July 22, 2011 July 26, 2011 July 28, 2011 September 21, 2011 September 1, 2011 January 18, 2012 October 1, 2011 Consignment Deadline Closed September 19, 2011 Consignment Deadline October 1, 2011 Consignment Deadline August 8, 2011
All dates and auctions subject to change after press time. Go to HA.com for updates.
Auctioneers: Samuel Foose: TX 11727; CA Bond #RSB2004178; FL AU3244; GA AUNR3029; IL 441001482; NC 8373; OH 2006000048; MA 03015; PA
AU005443; TN 6093; WI 2230-052; NYC 0952360; Denver 1021450; Phoenix 07006332. Robert Korver: TX 13754; CA Bond #RSB2004179; FL AU2916; Heritage Weekly internet Coin auCtions Begin and end every Sunday & Tuesday of each week at 10 PM CT. GA AUNR003023; IL 441001421; MA 03014; NC 8363; OH 2006000049; TN 6439; WI 2412-52; Phoenix 07102049; NYC 1096338; Denver 1021446. Teia HERITAGE MONTHLY INTERNET WORLD COIN AUCTIONS Begin and end the second Tuesday of each month at 10 PM CT. Baber: TX 16624; CA Bond #RSB2005525. Ed Beardsley: TX Associate 16632; NYC 1183220. Nicholas Dawes: NYC 1304724. Marsha Dixey: TX 16493. Chris Heritage tuesDay internet CurrenCy auCtions Begin and end every Tuesday at 10 PM CT. Dykstra: TX 16601; FL AU4069; WI 2566-052; TN 6463; IL 441001788; CA #RSB2005738. Jeff Engelken: CA Bond #RSB2004180. Alissa Ford: CA Bond #RSB2005920. Leo Frese: CA Bond #RSB2004176; NYC 1094963. Shaunda Fry: TX 16448; FL AU3915; WI 2577-52; CA Bond #RSB2005396. Kathleen Heritage Weekly internet ComiCs auCtions Begin and end every Sunday at 10 PM CT. Guzman: NYC 0762165. Stewart Huckaby: TX 16590. Cindy Isennock, participating auctioneer: Baltimore Auctioneer license #AU10. Carolyn Mani: CA Heritage Weekly internet movie Poster auCtions Begin and end every Sunday at 10 PM CT. Bond #RSB2005661; Bob Merrill: TX 13408; MA 03022; WI 2557-052; FL AU4043; IL 441001683; CA Bond #RSB2004177. Cori Mikeals: TX 16582; CA Heritage Weekly internet sPorts auCtions Begin and end every Sunday at 10 PM CT, with extended bidding available. #RSB2005645. Scott Peterson: TX 13256; NYC 1306933; IL 441001659; WI 2431-052; CA Bond #RSB2005395. Tim Rigdon: TX 16519. Michael J. Sadler: Heritage Weekly internet WatCH & jeWelry auCtions Begin and end every Tuesday at 10 PM CT. TX 16129; FL AU3795; IL 441001478; MA 03021; TN 6487; WI 2581-052; NYC 1304630; CA Bond #RSB2005412. Eric Thomas: TX 16421; PA AU005574; Heritage Weekly internet vintage guitar & musiCal instrument auCtions Begin and end every Thursday at 10 PM CT. TN 6515. Andrea Voss: TX 16406; FL AU4034; MA 03019; WI 2576-052; CA Bond #RSB2004676; NYC #1320558. Jacob Walker: TX 16413; FL AU4031; WI 2567-052; IL 441001677; CA Bond #RSB2005394. Peter Wiggins: TX 16635. (Rev. 5-15-11) Heritage Weekly internet rare books auCtions Begin and end every Thursday at 10 PM CT. HERITAGE MONTHLY INTERNET WINE AUCTIONS Begin and end the second Thursday of each month at 10 PM CT
Upcoming Auctions
7-6-11