1844.20: Difference between revisions

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|Sources=<p>John Thorn, FB Posting, 3/1/2022.&nbsp; The announcement of the event appears in the <em>New York Herald</em> on February 8, 1844.</p>
|Sources=<p>John Thorn, FB Posting, 3/1/2022.&nbsp; The announcement of the event appears in the <em>New York Herald</em> on February 8, 1844.</p>
|Warning=
|Warning=
|Comment=<p>[1] Another candidate as first baseball card is a group photo of the "Mutual (Green Stockings) B.B. Club of New York," evidently printed as on a souvenir ticket to a 1865 benefit for Harry and Sam Wright.&nbsp;</p>
|Comment=<p>[1] Another candidate as first baseball card is a photo of Sam Wright (with a cricket bat) and his son Harry, evidently used as on a souvenir ticket to a 1866&nbsp; benefit for the Wrights.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Voigt writes "To finance the affair, a 25-cent admission charge was asked, and all comers were also encouraged to part with an extra 25 cents for a souvenir ticket . . . . Wright was more interested in his cash cut, which came to $29.65."&nbsp; David Vincent Voigt,&nbsp;<span style="text-decoration: underline;">American Baseball</span> (University of Oklahoma Press, 1966), p. 28.</p>
<p>Voigt writes "To finance the affair, a 25-cent admission charge was asked, and all comers were also encouraged to part with an extra 25 cents for a souvenir ticket . . . . Wright was more interested in his cash cut, which came to $29.65."&nbsp; David Vincent Voigt,&nbsp;<span style="text-decoration: underline;">American Baseball</span> (University of Oklahoma Press, 1966), p. 28.</p>
<p>John points out that this event can be mainly viewed as a cricket event. Three games were planned as part of the affair, and two were cricket games.&nbsp; A base ball game was to follow, but it was rained out.</p>
<p>John Thorn points out that this event can be mainly viewed as a cricket event. Three games were planned as part of the affair, and two were cricket games.&nbsp; A base ball game was to follow, but it was rained out.</p>
<p>[2] Gary Passamonte observes: "This debate has raged on for many years.&nbsp; I believe the 1886 Old Judge N167 set would be the first undisputed group of baseball cards.&nbsp; All earlier possibilities have detractors with good points."&nbsp;</p>
<p>[2] Gary Passamonte observes: "This ["first base ball card"] debate has raged on for many years.&nbsp; I believe the 1886 Old Judge N167 set would be the first undisputed group of baseball cards.&nbsp; All earlier possibilities have detractors with good points."&nbsp;</p>
<p>[3] For more on the Magnolia Club, see his 2011 article at&nbsp;<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://ourgame.mlblogs.com/magnolia-ball-club-predates-knickerbocker-af50771cd24b" target="_blank">https://ourgame.mlblogs.com/magnolia-ball-club-predates-knickerbocker-af50771cd24b</a>.&nbsp; In John's&nbsp;<span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball in the Garden of Eden</span>&nbsp;(Simon and Shuster, 2011), pp 89-95, he describes his 2007 discovery of the club -- and the card.&nbsp; "[The ticket] cost a dollar , and, given its enamel-coated card stock and its commissioned rather than stock imagery, was likely intended to be saved as a memento of the event.&nbsp; The baseball scene on the card reveals three bases with stakes (not wickets), eight men in the field, a pitcher with an underarm delivery, possibly base-stealing . . . . This is, from all appearances, the original Knickerbocker game, and that of the New York Base Ball Club. . . . This ticket was the first depiction of men playing baseball in America, and it may be, depending upon one's taxonomic conventions, the first baseball card.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>[3] For more on the Magnolia Club, see his 2011 article at&nbsp;<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://ourgame.mlblogs.com/magnolia-ball-club-predates-knickerbocker-af50771cd24b" target="_blank">https://ourgame.mlblogs.com/magnolia-ball-club-predates-knickerbocker-af50771cd24b</a>.&nbsp; In John's&nbsp;<span style="text-decoration: underline;">Baseball in the Garden of Eden</span>&nbsp;(Simon and Shuster, 2011), pp 89-95, he describes his 2007 discovery of the club -- and the card.&nbsp; "[The ticket] cost a dollar , and, given its enamel-coated card stock and its commissioned rather than stock imagery, was likely intended to be saved as a memento of the event.&nbsp; The baseball scene on the card reveals three bases with stakes (not wickets), eight men in the field, a pitcher with an underarm delivery, possibly base-stealing . . . . This is, from all appearances, the original Knickerbocker game, and that of the New York Base Ball Club. . . . This ticket was the first depiction of men playing baseball in America, and it may be, depending upon one's taxonomic conventions, the first baseball card.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
|Query=<p>Is it time to further define "baseball card"?&nbsp;</p>
|Query=<p>Is it time to define "baseball card" a bit more narrowly in declaring a first??&nbsp;</p>
|Source Image=Magnolia Club ticket 1844
|Source Image=Magnolia Club ticket 1844.jpeg
|External Number=
|External Number=
|Submitted by=John Thorn
|Submitted by=John Thorn

Revision as of 09:01, 3 March 2022

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The First Baseball Card, Arguably?

Salience Peripheral
Tags Antedated Firsts, Ball in the Culture
City/State/Country: New York, NY, United States
Game Base Ball
Immediacy of Report Contemporary
Age of Players Adult
Text

"What's the first baseball card?  (I say it's the invitation to the Magnolia Club's First Annual Ball ball in February 1844.)"

 

[Image to be added below, once Protoball gets help with this task.  The Magnolia Club card/ticket appears on the right side in the image.] 

Sources

John Thorn, FB Posting, 3/1/2022.  The announcement of the event appears in the New York Herald on February 8, 1844.

Comment

[1] Another candidate as first baseball card is a photo of Sam Wright (with a cricket bat) and his son Harry, evidently used as on a souvenir ticket to a 1866  benefit for the Wrights. 

Voigt writes "To finance the affair, a 25-cent admission charge was asked, and all comers were also encouraged to part with an extra 25 cents for a souvenir ticket . . . . Wright was more interested in his cash cut, which came to $29.65."  David Vincent Voigt, American Baseball (University of Oklahoma Press, 1966), p. 28.

John Thorn points out that this event can be mainly viewed as a cricket event. Three games were planned as part of the affair, and two were cricket games.  A base ball game was to follow, but it was rained out.

[2] Gary Passamonte observes: "This ["first base ball card"] debate has raged on for many years.  I believe the 1886 Old Judge N167 set would be the first undisputed group of baseball cards.  All earlier possibilities have detractors with good points." 

[3] For more on the Magnolia Club, see his 2011 article at https://ourgame.mlblogs.com/magnolia-ball-club-predates-knickerbocker-af50771cd24b.  In John's Baseball in the Garden of Eden (Simon and Shuster, 2011), pp 89-95, he describes his 2007 discovery of the club -- and the card.  "[The ticket] cost a dollar , and, given its enamel-coated card stock and its commissioned rather than stock imagery, was likely intended to be saved as a memento of the event.  The baseball scene on the card reveals three bases with stakes (not wickets), eight men in the field, a pitcher with an underarm delivery, possibly base-stealing . . . . This is, from all appearances, the original Knickerbocker game, and that of the New York Base Ball Club. . . . This ticket was the first depiction of men playing baseball in America, and it may be, depending upon one's taxonomic conventions, the first baseball card.  

 

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Query

Is it time to define "baseball card" a bit more narrowly in declaring a first?? 

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Source Image
Submitted by John Thorn
Submission Note FB posting of 3/1/2022.



Comments

<comments voting="Plus" />