What was the first signed card you acquired?
What was the first signed tobacco card you acquired?
Was there a specific moment when you decided to steer your collection in the direction it has ultimately taken?
When did you decide “I’m going to get as many signed T206s as I can?”
How many signed pre-war cards are you able to add in a given year? Has it varied over the years? I’m assuming it has gotten tougher as they have all dried up (thanks to you, haha)?
Do you have a favorite card in your collection?
Do you have one or more favorite stories of how you acquired certain cards?
Did you make any fun trades along the way?
With all the amazing stuff in your collection, is there anything else left to search for? Are there any “white whales” you are still after?
Because your collection is so advanced, do you find yourself getting bored in periods of time when you aren’t able to add anything new?
If so, do you have any other things you collect to pass the time?
Do you have any big plans for the future with your collection such as showing it in a museum or anything like that?
That meeting with the collector in NC sounds amazing. Is there any more you can tell us about that meeting? Like what kinds of stuff he had, or stories he might’ve told you? I know you may not want to say too much in the interest of keeping his anonymity, but if you can tell any stories, I’d love to hear them.
It was crazy from a travel perspective – flying from NYC to Charlotte to have him (a complete stranger) pick me up at the airport and take me to his house to look at baseball cards. Ever since I started speaking with Jeff Morey in 2007, I have had a tiny little want ad in his “The Autograph Review” or “TAR” mailing. In December, a guy who also subscribes to TAR found out about the NC guy’s collection and connected me for a finder’s fee. The NC guy is maybe in his mid 60s, a dentist, with a passion for baseball and music autographs. Most of his stuff he bought at auction or in old baseball card catalogs over the past 30 years. Most of his signed pre-war (he had Cobb, Cy Young, Tris Speaker) were obvious fakes, but he had struck a little gold now and again — he had bought the M116 Wagner from a memorabilia shop in Texas in the early 90s. What he didn’t sell to me, and what was authentic, he consigned to Robert Edward Auctions. He made over $100,000 in the April 2017 REA, mostly driven by some sick early, pre-Ringo Beatles autographs. He has a bunch of lesser items still being listed in the October REA. And a few smaller lots were listed in Sterling Sports Auctions.
Is there anything that I didn’t think to ask, but you think people would be interested to know?