I keep thinking he is one of the experts they kept showing in Ken Burns' Baseball miniseries from the 1990s - the authority figures that look to be at least in their late 70s or older that share an anecdote about an old-timey player and/or talk about the good old days.
I'm not sure how the card came to be to be - I assume it was a custom card printed professionally, so the cards can be casually passed around at various book signings and other events.I wasn't even really paying attention the the idea that it looks like it was signed on the back of the card - that's kind of a nice bonus. While it's not the strangest card printed, it's just not like a regular card - maybe having it in hand, takes me different places in my collecting mind.
5 comments:
Seaford is a town on Long Island. Looks like Honig is from the NY area, though I could not find anything specifically tying him to Seaford online, perhaps he went to high school there.
Very cool find. I think Big Leagues Cards were a type of "pay for your own card" deal. I have several different of guys that maybe never had an actual baseball card, or maybe they went on to be a coach or manager and wanted a card for that. I don't see them in my Standard Catalog of Baseball Cards.
Yeah, as above, Big League Cards was a custom printing service. People would buy them as gifts--you know, some kid in your family is in Little League, have a baseball card of them printed. Others as promotional giveaways. Like Big League Chew gum, it was promoted by Jim Bouton. There's a Washington Post article about them here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1987/02/19/when-success-is-in-the-cards/d06c5f15-21ab-44b5-af3d-ad3669d101a9/
Honig is a baseball author, known for "Baseball When The Grass Was Real". I'm guessing he had the card printed up for signings and such, if people didn't buy a book or didn't want the book signed.
I had seen a few cards with this same back before, but never knew what they were from. Thanks to your posting this, I, and everyone else now do :)
Terrific find.
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