Topps Minus Fifty: 1973 Winter Meetings Aftermath

This post covers a couple of deals which came in the wake of the 1973 Baseball Winter Meetings,

December 8, 1973

The Milwaukee Brewers traded Bob Heise to the St. Louis Cardinals for Tom Murphy.



Heise played just 3 games for the Cardinals before being shipped to the Angels in July.



As a kid I thought that Murphy’s turned-up collar was exceptionally strange, even more so when it turned up on his Traded card.  I guess it was cold in Candlestick that day.


December 11, 1973

The Chicago Cubs traded Ron Santo to the Chicago White Sox for a player to be named later, Ken Frailing, Steve Stone and Steve Swisher.



It was a long time before I noticed that Topps didn’t put a White Sox logo on Santo’s cap.


Rookie cards didn’t get updated in 1974 Topps Traded.



From the collar on the jersey – not to mention the shorter hair – it appears that the photo on the Traded card is from Stone’s time with the Giants (He was traded to the White Sox in November, 1972).

This is the last deal reflected in Topps Traded


BONUS

I’d once read that a trade had been worked out to send Ron Santo to the Angels, but Santo – using the newly-established 10 and 5 rule that gave veteran players the ability to veto trades – shot that one down.  A number of years ago I made a “multiverse” custom to imagine what such a Traded card might have looked like.

Topps Minus Fifty: 1973 Winter Meetings Day 5

This post covers the activities of December 7th, day five of the 1973 Baseball Winter Meetings. We’re taking a look at what was happening 50 years ago, viewed through the lens of what would get Topps updating their checklists, airbrushing their file photos, etc.

This would be the last official day of the Winter Meetings, by the way…

The Milwaukee Brewers purchased Felipe Alou from the Montreal Expos.



As mentioned in a previous post, Alou’s time with the Brewers would be short.  He’d have three hitless pinch-hit appearances before being released at the end of April.


The Boston Red Sox purchased Juan Marichal from the San Francisco Giants.



The New York Yankees purchased Bill Sudakis from the Texas Rangers.


These two photos are similar enough that I had to compare them to see if Topps didn’t just take the same photo, crop it tighter and then airbrush it (I was convinced otherwise by comparing items in the background, i.e. the pitcher’s mound is next to his hands in 1974 Topps and above his hands in 1974 Topps Traded)


The Texas Rangers purchased Cesar Tovar from the Philadelphia Phillies.



The Philadelphia Phillies purchased Eddie Watt from the Baltimore Orioles.



The Cleveland Indians traded Bill Flowers (minors) to the Pittsburgh Pirates for Bob Johnson.



The Boston Red Sox traded John Curtis, Mike Garman (No 74T) and Lynn McGlothen (no 74T) to the St. Louis Cardinals for Reggie Cleveland, Terry Hughes and Diego Segui.




Topps didn’t update the rookie cards in 1974 Traded, so Hughes stays with the Cardinals.



The Kansas City Royals traded Lou Piniella and Ken Wright (no 74T) to the New York Yankees for Lindy McDaniel.



Topps Minus Fifty: 1973 Winter Meetings Day 4

This post covers the activities of December 6th, day four of the 1973 Baseball Winter Meetings. We’re taking a look at what was happening 50 years ago, viewed through the lens of what would get Topps updating their checklists, airbrushing their file photos, etc.

The NL Owners rejected a Padres ownership bid for a local group that promised to keep the team in San Diego, and conditionally approved the sale of the team to the Danzansky group from Washington – provided that the $12 million lawsuit filed by the city of San Diego could be resolved within a 15 day window.

As is obvious through 21st century eyes, the lawsuit was not settled and the Danzansky bid would not go through. We still got Washington “Nat’l. Lea.” cards out of the chaos, though.


The Texas Rangers purchased Terry Crowley from the Baltimore Orioles.


Crowley would never play for the Rangers, having been sold to the Reds during spring training. It’s mildly interesting that Topps didn’t touch the orange and black collar on Crowley’s jersey.


The New York Yankees purchased Jim Mason from the Texas Rangers.



The Chicago Cubs traded Randy Hundley to the Minnesota Twins for George Mitterwald.




The Houston Astros traded Jim Wynn to the Los Angeles Dodgers for David Culpepper (minors) and Claude Osteen.



As a collector of Jim Wynn, I feel the need to point out that Wynn was a two-time All-Star for the Dodgers, while Osteen’s All-Star appearances were in the past.



To complete an August 1973 deal which sent infielder Billy Grabarkiewitz to the Phillies, Denny Doyle was sent to the California Angels for Aurelio Monteagudo and Chris Coletta (minor leagues).

If this trade sounds familiar to you, you may have read my prior post about how Denny Doyle ended up with the Angels in the 1974 Topps set even though he officially didn’t get traded until we were within the window for 1974 Topps Traded.



Monteagudo wouldn’t pitch for the Phillies, his final MLB appearance had been in 1973.

Topps Minus Fifty: 1973 Winter Meetings Day 3

This post covers the activities of December 5th, day three of the 1973 Baseball Winter Meetings. We’re taking a look at what was happening 50 years ago, viewed through the lens of what would get Topps updating their checklists, airbrushing their file photos, etc.

The Detroit Tigers purchased Luke Walker from the Pittsburgh Pirates.


The Los Angeles Dodgers traded Willie Davis to the Montreal Expos for Mike Marshall.




The Los Angeles Dodgers traded Pete Richert to the St. Louis Cardinals for Tommie Agee.




Agee was released by the Dodgers before the season began and never played in the Majors again.

Topps Minus Fifty: 1973 Winter Meetings Day 2

This post covers the activities of December 4th, day two of the 1973 Baseball Winter Meetings. We’re taking a look at what was happening 50 years ago, viewed through the lens of what would get Topps updating their checklists, airbrushing their file photos, etc.

The Kansas City Royals traded Kurt Bevacqua, Ed Kirkpatrick and Winston Cole (minor leaguer, No 74T card), to the Pittsburgh Pirates for Nelson Briles and Fernando Gonzalez.



Bevacqua, who is most famous in hobby circles for his 1976 card showing him as the BUBBLE GUM BLOWING CHAMP, would get sent back to the Royals in a July 1974 deal for a minor leaguer and cash.




Gonzalez would get sold to the Yankees in May, 1974. #16 behind him is Al Oliver.



The Baltimore Orioles traded Merv Rettenmund, Junior Kennedy (no 74T) and William Wood (minor leaguer) to the Cincinnati Reds for Ross Grimsley and Wallace Williams (minor leaguer)




I’ll bet the Topps artists hated trying to duplicate the Orioles’ cartoon bird.

Topps Minus Fifty: 1973 Winter Meetings Day 1

This is the start of a new series or an evolution of another, depending on how you want to look at it.  I’m having enough fun with my “This Week In 1974 Topps” series that I decided I didn’t want to stop just because I’m running out of transactions which factored into the 1974 Topps checklist.

As a new ongoing series, it’s a look at whatever was happening 50 years ago on this day, week or month, but viewed through the lens of what would get Topps updating their checklists, airbrushing their file photos, etc.

For much of this week I’m going to take a quick look at the 1973 baseball winter meetings which took place in Houston from December 3rd through 7th, 1973.  All but one of the cards in the 1974 Topps Traded insert set are based on transactions which took place at the winter meetings, so we’ll be seeing a lot of those cards.

I’m also going to look at other news that’s happening, such as the proposed move of the San Diego Padres to Washington, D.C.

But as for December 3rd, the first day of the meetings, the main activity was the Rule V draft (which would not affect 1974 Topps) and a few trades.

The Detroit Tigers traded Fred Scherman and cash to the Houston Astros for Jim Ray and Gary Sutherland.





The Atlanta Braves traded Ron Schueler to the Philadelphia Phillies for Barry Lersch and Craig Robinson.




Lersch would never pitch for the Atlanta Braves;  he’d spend most of the season with the Triple-A Richmond Braves and was sold to the Cardinals on September 14th.  On September 21st he’d come into the 6th inning of a game against Chicago where the Cubs were already leading 7-0.  Over an inning and a third, Lersch would give up 3 hits, 5 walks and 6 runs in what would prove to be his last Major League outing.



NOTE:  Baseball Reference says that the following two deals occurred on November 3rd, but numerous sources reference the deal as becoming official on December 3rd, so I’m going with that.

The Cleveland Indians traded pitcher Jerry Johnson to the Houston Astros for Cecil Upshaw.

Jerry Johnson didn’t appear in 1974 Topps after 39 largely ineffective appearances for the Indians in 1973.  He’d be back in Topps in 1975, 1976 and 1978.



Upshaw would pitch in just 7 games for Cleveland before being traded to the Yankees in a 7-player deal which brought Chris Chambliss and Dick Tidrow to the Bronx.


The Chicago Cubs traded Bob Locker to the Oakland Athletics for Horacio Pina.



Bob Locker’s Traded card did not feature the greatest airbrush job ever, Topps used a photo they had on file from Locker’s stint with the A’s from 1970 to 1972. As it turned out, he wouldn’t pitch at all in 1974 due to an elbow injury and would go back to the Cubs in the deal that sent Billy Williams to Oakland in October 1974. This is the only card of Locker which shows him in the uniform that the A’s started wearing in 1972.


1980 Topps Superstar Photo Cards (plus Weigh-In #80)

In 1980 Topps tested out a new baseball issue that collectors generally know, even if they call it different names… Even Topps couldn’t quite get consistent in the naming of this set.

People commonly refer to this set as “1980 Topps Supers” or “1980 Topps 5×7”.  The sell sheet and packaging call it “Baseball Superstars Photo Cards”… but the hanger packs used the singular “Superstar” instead of the plural “Superstars”.  Either way, it’s kind of an awkward name for a set, which is why I suspect most people just call them “Supers”.

If you’re not familiar with this set, each card is roughly four times the size of a standard baseball card.  The front is meant to look like an autographed photo and the back has minimal information.

If you asked me a year ago I would’ve said that the 1980 set was a gray back set while the differently-named-but-basically-the-same 1981 Topps Home Team Giant Photo Cards set was white backs… but in researching this post I found out that the 1980 cards came out first with white backs and then gray backs. Here’s an image of the white back Seaver card (which I borrowed off of TCDB).

Very similar, but the white backs use blue ink and have no Topps logo.

Although I couldn’t find any definitive information, it seems to me that Topps tested the white backs in 1980 and later issued the gray backs in 1981, perhaps early in the year.  Maybe they wanted to see if the cards would sell better if they were cheaper.

The white-backed cards were sold in packs of 1 card each or in hanger packs of 3-cards each. I lifted this image from an eBay listing:

These packs had a 1980 copyright on the back and also a mail-in offer for the complete set.

The gray backs were issued 5 cards per pack and at first the same header cardboard was used with a sticker on the front to note the change to 5 cards…

…And another sticker on the back to obscure the mail-in offer.

The version I’m familiar with is a re-done version that has a 1981 copyright, a UPC code (which was absent from the first) and the current Topps logo which was first used in 1981.  Here’s a header I’d saved from a pack I bought at the time.

If you’re curious, the price tag on mine (as well as the eBay pack above) is from Woolco, a discount department store chain which would shut down in the US a couple of years later.  I got a bunch of mine at Woolco (which I want to say was in the Walt Whitman Mall in Huntington Station, NY)

Getting back to the actual cards, here’s a comparison of a Photo Card with a standard card, just to give you an idea of the size (roughly a 4:1 ratio there):

Also worth noting is that most of the cards have a blue facsimile autograph but some cards, like Mike Schmidt’s has a black facsimile.

The set isn’t hugely popular, as is the case with most oversized sets.  Me, I’ve always loved big cards so I was in on it from the start.

As I mentioned, people have different names for these cards but I found out that even “5×7″ isn’t completely accurate, because the cards are actually 4-7/8″ x 6-7/8”.

Topps also issued 1980 “Photo Cards” sets for the NFL and The Empire Strikes Back… and a few years ago I discovered that O-Pee-Chee put out a set of 1980-81 Hockey Photo Cards.  That 24-card set didn’t include all 21 of the NHL teams from the day…  The Whalers, North Stars and Penguins are missing while some other teams had multiple cards.

Did anyone else collect these when they were new?  Anyone else dig oversized cards?


And now it’s time for my quarterly Weigh-In (which, for the second time in a row, is way overdue).

For those wondering what the deal is with a “Weigh-In”, here is my official Mission Statement:

Posting updates on the organizing and streamlining of my collection gives me a look at the big picture, keeps me honest and helps with motivation and/or guilt.

Changes in the 3rd quarter of 2023 (from 7/1/2023 to 9/30/2023):

Net change in the collection: +208 (507 added, 299 removed)
Net change to the # of cards in the house: +546 (619 came in, 73 went out)

I keep putting off getting my unwanted cards together for a trip to Goodwill, but there needs to be a trip in my future.  I think I’ve probably said this in most of my Weigh-Ins over the past year or two.

Totals since I started tracking on 10/16/2011:
Total # of cards purged from the collection, to date: 17,405
Net change to the collection, to date: +8,720

Total # of cards which have left the house, to date: 56,436
Net change to the number of cards in the house, to date: -10,938

Whenever I don’t feel like I’m making progress, the fact that over 56,000 cards have gone out of my house over the past dozen years kinda blows my mind a bit.

Size of the collection:
Number of individual cards tracked in my Access database: 75,636
Number of cards that make up the sets flagged as completed in my Access database: 10,639
…which means I’ve got at least 86,329 cards in my collection.

Money spent on cards:
This does not count money spent on show admission, shipping, supplies, etc.

1st quarter, 2023: $169.07
2nd quarter, 2023: $235.65
3rd quarter, 2023: $176.74

Average per month for 2023 (up through September):  $45.82
Average per month for 2022: $40.51
Average per month for 2021: $35.64
Average per month for 2020: $76.66
Average per month for 2019: $80.38
Average per month for 2018: $79.03
Average per month for 2017: $43.63
Average per month for 2016: $36.11

I didn’t track my spending before 2016. In 2016 and 2017 I didn’t go to many card shows because there weren’t any local shows, and I made the 5 hour round trip to a regional card show only once or twice a year.

I thought this number would be even lower than it was.  I’ve in the doldrums lately because I prefer buying cards in person but there’s no convenient LCS, nothing I want in retail stores and the card shows I go to appeal mostly to the slab crowd.

Size of my MS Access card database:
I track my collection in a Microsoft Access database of my own creation. There’s quite a bit of work involved in keeping it up-to-date, so I like to satisfy my own curiosity by finding out how much information is currently in my database.

My database currently contains 1,061 set definitions and 265,451 card definitions (An increase of 14 sets and 5,142 cards since the last weigh-in).

It’s important to point out that this is merely the number of sets and cards which are represented within my database; Although I have no cards from 1949 Bowman, that set represents 1 set definition and 240 card definitions.

My Oldest Cards For Each Team: Part 5 – National League East

The thought behind this series is very simple: “What is the oldest cards for each team in my collection?”

I’m breaking these down by the current Major League Baseball divisions. I’m also including first cards of relocations and rebrandings. In the first post, I featured my oldest cards for the Brooklyn Dodgers and the Los Angeles Dodgers.

And now, let’s get on with the National League East!

Philadelphia Phillies – 1953 Bowman Color Del Ennis
This was a recent impulse buy… solely because I liked it and it didn’t put a significant dent in my card show budget.  Relatively cheap 1953 Bowman will often inspire such impulse purchases.



Milwaukee Braves – 1956 Topps Johnny Logan
Unfortunately I don’t have any Boston Braves cards – I probably should remedy that.  My oldest Braves cards are two from the 2nd series of 1956 Topps.  Del Crandall is part of a “managers from my childhood, but as players” collection (although I don’t usually need much reason to acquire 1956 Topps cards).

Atlanta Braves – 1966 Topps blah
The Braves moved to Atlanta for the 1966 season and this is the only Braves card I have from the 1st series of 1966 Topps.

This is the 3rd “Rookie Stars” card for Jim Beauchamp (he was a Colt .45s/Astros Rookie Star in 1964 and 1965) and the 2nd for Dick Kelley (1964 Braves Rookie Stars for him)



New York Mets – 1962 Topps Casey Stengel
Even though I’ve been a Mets fan since 1974, I got a relatively late start on my 1962 Mets team set, mainly because the cards are so very MEH. Wood grain borders and airbrushed/capless photos make these cards hard for me to love. Casey Stengel makes up for a lot of that, though.



Montreal Expos – 1969 Topps Maury Wills
I’ve got more Expos from the 5th through 7th series of 1969 Topps (6 cards) than I do from the first four series (5 cards) and Wills is the only one from the 1st Series. That’s all about real Expos uniforms in the later series vs. cheap games played in the early series.

Washington Nationals – 2005 Topps Heritage Tony Batista
I don’t remember which sets came out when in 2005, the first year of Nationals baseball, but Tony Batista’s Nationals uniform is photoshopped, so I’ll go with “pretty early” on this one.



Florida Marlins – 1993 Topps Team Stadium Club Jeff Conine
TEAL!  TOO! MUCH! TEAL!

Simply adding a black bill to the teal cap was a huge improvement by itself.

Today I Am Thankful For Affordable 1970s Oddball Sets

Over the past year or two I’ve been feeling like the hobby is leaving me behind.  I honestly don’t get a rush from pulling a hit (or gambling in general, even when I win).  I don’t delight in having something that other people don’t have.  I’m not into high-end cards or graded cards.  I just want to acquire cards and enjoy them.

So at my recent postcard show I picked up seven Cleveland Indians postcards which all turned out to be from the same team-issued 1974 set (one can’t really tell from the postcard itself which year they’re from, I’m mainly relying on TCDB).

You might ask why someone who’s not an Indians/Guardians fan would acquire these.  I asked that myself that same question even while I was handing money over to the dealer.

After a moments reflection, I realized that it’s not about the team, it’s about the players and the 1970s.  When I reframed this set from “1974 Indians postcard set” to “Affordable oddball set issued during my childhood”, it made a lot more sense to me.

…and just an aside, I believe the “affordable” part would go out the window if I try to go after the 1975 Indians Update set which includes the first card of any type featuring HOFer Dennis Eckersley… but I’m nowhere near the set-chasing stage anyway.

So let’s take a look at the postcards!

Within the hobby Dave Duncan might be best known for appearing on a cool card in 1975 Topps… one which unfortunately was meant to feature fellow catcher Larry Haney.  Duncan also got his own card in 75T.

Fred Beene was acquired from the Yankees in a 7-player transaction on April 26, 1974 and that gives us a little insight into when this set was made.  Beene recently achieved favored status within the Shlabotnik world after I discovered that he’s a pitcher who’s my height (5’9″).

The Indians acquired Jim Perry in a three-team trade during spring training – he appears in 1974 Topps with an airbrushed Tigers cap – and it made Jim and his younger brother Gaylord teammates for the first time in their pro careers.

Leron Lee had been picked up on waivers towards the end of spring training.  He appears in 1974 Topps with the Padres.

Oscar Gamble’s Afro had not yet achieved it’s famous size.

Ossie Blanco appeared in 34 games with the 1970 White Sox and 18 games with the 1974 Indians, and batted below the Mendoza line for his career. He never appeared on a Topps card.  (BTW, there are some really nice shots of Cleveland Municipal Stadium in the background of these cards)

This is Alan Ashby’s first card of any sort, he wouldn’t appear on a Topps card until 1976. Ashby had cups of coffee in 1973 and 1974 before sticking in the Majors in 1975.

So with these postcards I now have 9 of the 34 postcards in the 1974 set.  Will I chase the whole set?  I’m still not sure, but I’m at least at a point where I start to think “Hm, should I chase the whole set?”



Wishing a happy and healthy Thanksgiving to all of my readers (and everyone else for that matter)

Postcard Show! 2023 Edition

For the fourth time – but the first since 2019 – I attended a somewhat-local postcard show that pops up once a year. I always have fun at these shows, even though I generally don’t buy a whole lot when I’m there. It’s just a generally fun experience just to look through the many thousands of postcards there.

Most of my readers are sports card collectors, so let me tell you what it’s like to attend a postcard show.

When you first walk in, a postcard show looks similar to a sports collectibles show.  You’ve got dealers behind folding tables, and on the tables are cardboard storage boxes somewhat like monster boxes.  You’ll see customers standing or sitting in front of the boxes, thumbing through cards.

When you walk up to a table, however, you’ll immediately notice a difference in organization.  Rather than being divided by year or by sport, postcards are most commonly divided into two major categories: Location and Topic.  Within those categories they’re subdivided into countless sub-categories.

“Location” is pretty much what you’d expect from postcards… They’re generally those postcards which represent a particular landmark or city, and dealers usually have them organized by state and city/town (or by country if they offer up international postcards).

“Topic” boxes are organized based on what appears on the postcard… It could by types of artwork, U.S. presidents, churches, different types of animals, railroad stations, advertising, airplanes, restaurants, celebrities, holidays and so on.

The thing is that there’s no standardized method of organizing so different dealers will organize their inventory in different ways. Let’s say I decided to collect places I visited on school field trips as a boy on Long Island, and today I’m specifically looking for postcards of Sagamore Hill, Teddy Roosevelt’s former residence which later became a national historic site. I might look for postcards like this under Locations > New York > Long Island, but you could also find these postcards under Topic > Presidents > Theodore Roosevelt. I think the postcards would be more likely to be filed under “Presidents” but there’s a decent chance that the cards could show up under either or both. It’s best to talk to the dealer when you are looking for something specific… or even to generally discuss what you’re looking for.  I’ve found that dealers are often very accommodating if you tell them you’re new to this hobby.

Another good reason to talk to the dealer is because many of them also have collectibles which aren’t postcards.  While chatting with one dealer I mentioned that I collected baseball cards and she brought me their “sports binder” which was full of all kinds of interesting ephemera – ticket stubs, wire photos, pogs, stickers, etc.

That same dealer also had an impressive inventory of View-Master reels, which was awfully tempting (but the last thing I needed to do is start ANOTHER collection).

If you’re going to a show for the first time it’s good to get an idea of what you might want to look for when you get there.  There’s often plenty of sports-related postcards to look through, but it’s just fun to look through the various categories.

One thing I did before this show was to look through my non-sports cards as a way of categorizing where my interests might lie. I’ve got plenty of cards with cars and trains on them, so this time I went looking for similar postcards.

You can also do what I always do, and that’s to just visually scan the dividers in the boxes to see what might look interesting.

Another hint, one I overheard from another collector, is to expect that cards might be inadvertently misfiled and to look in nearby categories to see if anything interesting got misplaced.  Dealers do try to keep their inventory organized, but if you’ve been to any sort of collectibles show then you know how this goes.  I was looking for postcards in the “Sports – Winter” category and all of a sudden I was looking at cards which had international currency depicted on them.  After a moment of confusion I reealized that someone had taken all of the “Stamps and Coins” postcards – the category alphabetically after “Sports – Winter” – and put the postcards back in front of that category’s divider instead of behind it.  I told the dealer about it, and she was very appreciative that I had. Someone else coming after me could have come looking for Stamps and Coins postcards and found a divider with nothing behind it.

Finally, keep in mind that what you’re looking for could fall under multiple categories. There are often different sections for “Sports” (depicting the games and the athletes) and “Stadiums/Ballparks”.

OK, with all of that said, let’s get into what I got this year.

I bought a number of baseball postcards… Most of them are from the same set and will be featured in another post coming soon, but I got this postcard for my Cal Ripken Jr. binder. When I got home I looked it up on TCDB and found it’s a 1993 Barry Colla postcard.

The other sports-related postcard I’ll share in this post is a card for my cricket collection, but also one which made me snicker like a 9-year-old.

After looking through sports I started looking through the “Autos” section while not really having anything specific in mind.  I found out that there are postcards to highlight specific models that were current at the time, it seems like it was there for dealers to have on display, maybe along with the printed brochures.

I bought two which featured cars that had been in my family in the 1970s.

My dad used to commute to work in a Ford Pinto, though I can’t remember if it was a 1971 like the car in this postcard, but it pretty much looked the same (except Dad’s was chocolate brown). That Pinto was also the car that my older siblings used when they learned how to drive a stick.  I never learned myself;  I’m the youngest and I think my father had had enough of teaching the manual transmission by the time my turn came (and I didn’t care enough to object).

My mom drove a 1976 Ford Granada which became *my* first car when I graduated college.

The postcard shows a 1977 model, but if there’s a significant difference between this 1977 and my 1976 I can’t tell. My car was very similar to this postcard representation, a red sedan. The two main differences were that 1) my car had a red vinyl roof on it and 2) my car had a smashed driver’s side turn signal in the front (not my fault, I promise you).

Lately I’ve been doing a little chasing after 1955 Topps Rails and Sails cards, and a blog post by Nick Vossbrink inspired me to look for postcards of trains.  This pair of locomotives from the New York Central line wasn’t exactly what I had in mind, but it was good enough for a start. For the record, this was filed under “Railroads”.

I was hoping to find some baseball Exhibit cards and struck out, but I also looked for celebrity Exhibit cards (“Movie Stars” at one table, “Famous People” at another). I was surprised to find one of Arlene Francis who may have been included for her stage and screen acting, but I got it because she’s easily my favorite panelist from watching many re-runs of “What’s My Line?”… The original Sunday night version hosted by John Charles Daily, not the pale imitation daytime version which followed.

If you watch any videos of “What’s My Line?” where the Mystery Guest is a baseball player, Arlene was often right on them… She was a New York Giants fan and knew the players well.  Go find the episode from 1954 where Willie Mays was the Mystery Guest, she makes quick work out of identifying him.

A side note… as part of a last pass through the show I found an Exhibit of Mary Tyler Moore from around the time of The Dick Van Dyke show. It wasn’t a great picture and I decided to pass for several reasons and now I kind of regret that.  I’m finding that, for me, postcard shows result in more “I should have gotten that” regrets than “Why did I get this?” regrets…  Something I’ll keep in mind next November.

If you’ve read my prior posts about postcard shows (and if you haven’t you can read them all here) you’ll know that after baseball my biggest postcard chase involves the 1964 New York World’s Fair, which I attended as a baby – I have photographic proof! –  but obviously don’t remember first-hand. My memories are of the various structures which survived the years and became part of pop culture (most notably these days in the first Men in Black movie).

If you’ve seen Men In Black you might recognize the observation towers from the New York State Pavilion. These used to intrigue me when we drove past the site while going to visit relatives in Astoria, Queens.

Just like I enjoy baseball scorecards which have been used, I also enjoy postcards which were used for their intended purpose. This one was mailed to Roanoke, Virginia and while the message on it isn’t all that exciting (“This is really a big place”) the 4 cent Lincoln stamp and the postmark are cool.

The Unisphere, a stainless-steel sculpture representing the globe, was the centerpiece of the World’s Fair and also still stands on the former fair site.

This postcard features a sculpture called “The Rocket Thrower”.  I don’t remember this one specifically, but it apparently still stands as well.  This postcard has a scalloped edge, although my scanner software tried to crop it out.

This postcard (also scallop edged) shows the fair’s Monorail which – I just found out – was built by American Machine and Foundry (AMF) who are now more famous as the company that makes bowling alley equipment.  The Monorail was taken down after the fair so I don’t remember it, but this is just too cool and “1960s Futuristic” to leave behind.


On the way out of the show I grabbed a bunch of flyers for upcoming shows, not because I had plans to attend but because I wanted to share it with anybody who might be curious to check out one of these shows.

  • Postcard & Paper Show – Phoenix, AZ – January 12, 2024
  • Stamp & Postcard Show – Nashville, TN – March 9-10, 2024
  • Postcard Show – Lancaster, PA – March 22-23, 2024
  • Postcard & Vintage Paper Show – Greenwood, IN – April 6, 2024
  • Antique Advertising, Books, Comic Books, Postcards, Photography & Paper Show – Allentown, PA – April 27-28, 2024 (For what it’s worth, one dealer I was chatting with spoke highly of this show – “Worth the trip” she said)
  • Stamp, Postcard & Coin Show – Huntsville, AL – June 1-2, 2024

I suspect there are more shows than these, but I don’t know of a good online show directory to point you towards.

If you’ve gotten this far in my post then I’m thinking you’ll find it worthwhile to attend one of these shows… Maybe you wouldn’t want to travel as far as I did, but if it’s local to you then definitely go check one out.