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-   -   Rare Shoeless Joe Jackson autograph (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=201313)

gregr2 02-09-2015 06:02 AM

Rare Shoeless Joe Jackson autograph
 
http://www.foxsports.com/mlb/story/s...or-100k-020815

jgmp123 02-09-2015 09:03 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gregr2 (Post 1377839)

Lol...:eek:

packs 02-09-2015 10:35 AM

Something I'd buy for a dollar.

bender07 02-09-2015 10:44 AM

I saw these the other day in the HA auction. Just doesn't add up for me. Interested in hearing the experts chime in on these.

khkco4bls 02-09-2015 10:52 AM

did Joe all of a sudden learn how to write that day:eek:

RichardSimon 02-09-2015 11:04 AM

A very large and reasonably neat signature AND INSCRIPTION,,,in my opinion very typical of Joe Jackson. NOT !! :D:D:confused::confused:

packs 02-09-2015 11:06 AM

The inscriptions on the photos is noted as being in the hand of the photographer, for what it's worth.

shelly 02-09-2015 12:03 PM

The autograph from the photographer is worth the same as the Joe Jackson signature:eek:.

Klrdds 02-09-2015 12:59 PM

In comparing this signature to my Joe Jackson auto ( I own his signed 1945 South Carolina driver's license ) and checking those on the PSA autograph facts site I have no confidence in this piece. IMO it is just too neat and too perfect for something signed by Joe, especially signed in 1911 when his career was just beginning to take off and getting the recognition that comes with that. His handwriting at that time would, in my opinion , be as "rough " and unformed as ever since he was young and not accustomed to signing anything he would not have to. A young illiterate man I can't fathom signing that neatly, when his other signatures from the rest of his career/life are not that smooth looking.
I would not bid on it ...I maybe wrong , but I would not let the lure of this photo suck me in.

Runscott 02-09-2015 01:27 PM

The article makes it sound like PSA assessed the prints themselves as from the same period as the autographs (1911). PSA is pretty good about getting print age correct.

Heritage uses the term "ironclad provenance" to describe the Mathewson signature. Since they came from the same scrapbook, the Jackson must have the same ironclad provenance: "Bowen's husband, Bill, first saw the scrapbook about 10 years ago. It was stored in a barn near Cleveland and belonged to a couple whose family was friends with Frank W. Smith, a photographer with the Plain Dealer newspaper."

I think it's really neat how this stuff gets found in barns.

http://dyn2.heritagestatic.com/lf?se...oduct.chain%5D

David Atkatz 02-09-2015 01:28 PM

That "Jackson" is just as good as the rest of the signatures in the grouping. Did you see the "Mathewson"?

shelly 02-09-2015 01:32 PM

It reminds me of those nine Ruth picture that also came from a photographer. They where taken down and never heard from again.

Klrdds 02-09-2015 01:38 PM

All this stuff is found in barns in pristine condition after years....I leave something in my garage for 2 weeks and it looks like crap.
I guess these barns are just cleaner and more climate controlled in Ohio!!:):)

packs 02-09-2015 01:44 PM

Very strange that there are more than a few Joe Jackson's being auctioned off in relatively short periods of time. Goldin has the 1919 ball right now. Heritage has this photo. What took them so long to come out of hiding? And why at the same time?

Runscott 02-09-2015 01:45 PM

The Black Sox ball has been auctioned before.

packs 02-09-2015 01:58 PM

The same one? I found only one other listing of a 1919 ball from a Legendary auction in 2000 but it lists Gleason and Risberg as being on the sweet spot.

drcy 02-09-2015 02:01 PM

If memory serves me correctly, a Net54 board memory actually did find a very rare five figure mid 1800s salt print photo of baseball pioneers in a barn or similar building. He had recently purchased the land and was refurbishing the building. The photo was unsigned. The photo was real and museum quality, and, in that case, barn provenance didn't add anything to the value. If anything it would have subtracted, with most collectors preferring something more glamorous and historical. Only with modern fakes does having been "found in grandma's cabinet drawer" (the old baseball card cliche) or "back of a garage next to a pile of empty paint cans" add to the resale value. If a genuine 1914 Cracker Jack Ty Cobb or Old Judge Cap Anson card was really discovered in a grandmother's cabinet, I'd bet $5 the experienced seller wouldn't mention the provenance it at sale or say "No, seriously. I'm seriously not kidding you."

chaddurbin 02-09-2015 03:31 PM

well a binder-ful of e300s were found in the trash can, and hundreds of pristine e98s were kept in tincans, so anything can happen. i would hope PSA would be extra careful when this hoard with joe jax/matty/lajoie pristine photos/sigs came into their lap. this wouldn't be just grad's job, hope he'd be consulting keating and their photo expert etc.

and shelly the ruths you are speaking of were in REA right? the ones that were signed for the movie star and authenticated by JSA? i don't remember were those pulled? i thought rob rolls with his authenticator and leans on their "expertise"(which is spence).

Runscott 02-09-2015 03:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by packs (Post 1378040)
The same one? I found only one other listing of a 1919 ball from a Legendary auction in 2000 but it lists Gleason and Risberg as being on the sweet spot.

The same ball, but I can't find it. I also cannot find the one you are describing.

The only Jackson-signed ball I could find that looked even halfway possible is this one off the Jackson website.

GrayGhost 02-09-2015 03:43 PM

No way joe is good.yech

milkit1 02-09-2015 04:34 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Here is his signed draft card. I say real. The whole "he couldnt sign" nonsense has been blown completely out of proportion. He very obviously could sign. My guess was he was embarrassed by how poorly he wrote and mostly just avoided doing it.
Attachment 178455

shelly 02-09-2015 05:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chaddurbin (Post 1378088)
well a binder-ful of e300s were found in the trash can, and hundreds of pristine e98s were kept in tincans, so anything can happen. i would hope PSA would be extra careful when this hoard with joe jax/matty/lajoie pristine photos/sigs came into their lap. this wouldn't be just grad's job, hope he'd be consulting keating and their photo expert etc.

and shelly the ruths you are speaking of were in REA right? the ones that were signed for the movie star and authenticated by JSA? i don't remember were those pulled? i thought rob rolls with his authenticator and leans on their "expertise"(which is spence).

Yes REA and psa did authenticate them.
What I found insulting is that they take them down and never say psa made a mistake.:mad:

Runscott 02-09-2015 05:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by milkit1 (Post 1378118)
My guess was he was embarrassed by how poorly he wrote and mostly just avoided doing it.

You are really going out on a limb there.

milkit1 02-09-2015 05:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Runscott (Post 1378134)
You are really going out on a limb there.

Yes as opposed to saying he never signed anything when he obviously did. Lol

Runscott 02-09-2015 05:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by milkit1 (Post 1378136)
Yes as opposed to saying he never signed anything when he obviously did. Lol

Did someone really say that he 'never' signed :confused:

Sorry, I missed that - if you were kicking a moron, I apologize for having a slight laugh at your expense :) Please carry on.

sb1 02-09-2015 05:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by milkit1 (Post 1378118)
Here is his signed draft card. I say real. The whole "he couldnt sign" nonsense has been blown completely out of proportion. He very obviously could sign. My guess was he was embarrassed by how poorly he wrote and mostly just avoided doing it.
Attachment 178455

Um.........he signed the card at the bottom, he did not fill out the info. Two entirely different hands at work. His actual signature at the bottom of the draft card looks nothing like the photo . AND I know next to nothing about autographs.


Edited to say photo instead of ball.

rats60 02-09-2015 05:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by milkit1 (Post 1378118)
Here is his signed draft card. I say real. The whole "he couldnt sign" nonsense has been blown completely out of proportion. He very obviously could sign. My guess was he was embarrassed by how poorly he wrote and mostly just avoided doing it.
Attachment 178455

Then his autograph must have really deteriorated in the five years between when he signed that photo and that draft card.

Bugsy 02-09-2015 05:55 PM

Is the photo itself a legit Type 1? It would really take some stones to try faking an autograph on a several thousand dollar piece when the fake signature could have been added to something of lesser value. I don't have a take on the authenticity of the signature, but could you imagine someone trying to fake a Jackson signature on a real 1915 Joe Jackson Cracker Jack?

milkit1 02-09-2015 05:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sb1 (Post 1378152)
Um.........he signed the card at the bottom, he did not fill out the info. Two entirely different hands at work. His actual signature at the bottom of the draft card looks nothing like the ball. AND I know next to nothing about autographs.



I'm not referring to the ball just the photo.

Quote:

Originally Posted by rats60 (Post 1378157)
Then his autograph must have really deteriorated in the five years between when he signed that photo and that draft card.


Deteriorated and sloppy are two different things. Squeezing his name on to the bottom of a draft card and having free reign on a 5x7 photo could certainly cause a sloppier autograph for an already sloppy autographer. That's the other thing I never understood is people assuming that one autograph has no variations? I signed my name twice a day on my timesheet and cant tell you how many times each one looks significantly different. These (the photo and the draft card) are far from significantly different.

milkit1 02-09-2015 05:57 PM

Theonly thing I find suspicious is having two different teams from two different leagues signed on these photos.. I assume the photographer would have had to get the photos developed and then come back and have them signed so even the two teams playing an exhibition game seems unlikely?

vintagesportscollector 02-09-2015 06:07 PM

I know nothing of autographs, so no intent to throw fuel on the fire, but I will say that I have the worst handwriting of anyone I know, and I am admittedly embarrassed and uncomfortable with my signature. It has changed significantly over the years and today varies notably fom signing to signing. I recall purchasing one of my homes and filling out all the mortgage and legal documents, and the lawyer asked me to do it all again because my signatures varied so much. :rolleyes: To me the photo and draft card are not that significantly different, or at least reasonable that the same person could have done them.

Runscott 02-09-2015 06:09 PM

Sean, I was wondering the same thing. First thought was that a lot of these players never made the team (Giants or Indians), so he would had to have gotten the prints made quickly, just to find the players again to sign. Maybe he took them at the beginning of spring training (March), was covering just these two teams, and got them developed over a few days. He would have kept a negative logbook of some sort, so if they were still around after the prints were developed, it shouldn't have been a problem.

Whoever was asking about print dating - read the earlier posts.

Runscott 02-09-2015 06:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sb1 (Post 1378152)
Um.........he signed the card at the bottom, he did not fill out the info. Two entirely different hands at work. His actual signature at the bottom of the draft card looks nothing like the ball. AND I know next to nothing about autographs.

Scott, I think I confused the issue by posting pics of the ball.

Here are all the legal documents I could gather, that show his signature - the close-up is from his will. I don't think the one on his contract (with Comiskey), or the 1949 license are authentic, but I'm no Jackson autograph expert. All pics are from Blackbetsy.com:

vintagetoppsguy 02-09-2015 06:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by milkit1 (Post 1378166)
Squeezing his name on to the bottom of a draft card and having free reign on a 5x7 photo could certainly cause a sloppier autograph for an already sloppy autographer.

I don't know a lot about autographs, but I definitely agree with this statement. I write large, typically have a large signature. Whenever I sign my name on a check, it looks a lot different than when I sign my name to another type of document. The reason is, is that the "J" in my last name tends to have a large bottom loop. Well, since there isn't much room at the bottom of a check, I have to modify the "J" to make it fit the check (otherwise it runs off the bottom).

vintagesportscollector 02-09-2015 06:17 PM

49 license clearly not his signature....(edit) oh you pointed that out already Scott.

sb1 02-09-2015 06:19 PM

I meant photo. my mistake, the documents you provide are the same as the draft card.

Runscott 02-09-2015 06:19 PM

If the Heritage photo is real, it's the only signed Joe Jackson photo in existence.

I think there are enough authentic Jackson signatures to compare it to, even if you toss out all the baseballs.

Runscott 02-09-2015 06:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by vintagesportscollector (Post 1378184)
49 license clearly not his signature....(edit) oh you pointed that out already Scott.

That's his wife's signature, which is funny since it says 'Usual Signature'. She usually signed for him, so I guess it made sense.

Wow - I'm learning.

Mark17 02-09-2015 06:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by milkit1 (Post 1378170)
Theonly thing I find suspicious is having two different teams from two different leagues signed on these photos.. I assume the photographer would have had to get the photos developed and then come back and have them signed so even the two teams playing an exhibition game seems unlikely?

New York had teams in both leagues - it would be easy to take pics of the Giants at the Polo Grounds, then get some shots of the team visiting the Highlanders...

But then where would the connection to the Cleveland barn come from?

What strikes me as odd are the following two quotes that don't seem to fit together:

"The family offered to sell the scrapbook five years ago to Bowen's husband because they knew how much he treasured the 60 photos. The price tag: $15,000."

"A collector all his life, he appreciated its history and connection to his hometown. Not knowing the book's sky-high value, they never locked it up or worried about keeping it out of sight. "It wasn't an investment," she said."

So, I ask myself, who pays $15,000 for 60 pictures without doing a little research? For that matter, who SELLS 60 pictures for $15k without doing research? And how is that expenditure not an investment? Also, how does a guy who's been "a collector all his life" not know Joe Jackson signatures are quite rare and valuable?

It just sounds odd. I'm not an autograph guy, but should the two "J"s be so different, with the second being so wide? and the "s" on his last name looks more well-formed than images I've seen of his signature. But I don't know anything about that, it's the story I don't quite buy.

David Atkatz 02-09-2015 06:23 PM

The '49 license was obviously proxy-signed by Kate. I don't know who signed the contract--except that it wasn't Jackson.

Runscott 02-09-2015 06:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark17 (Post 1378189)
New York had teams in both leagues - it would be easy to take pics of the Giants at the Polo Grounds, then get some shots of the team visiting the Highlanders...

But then where would the connection to the Cleveland barn come from?

It was Spring Training - March. The teams might have been right next to each other. I'm sure someone around here can find out where the two teams had spring training in 1911.

The 'discovery' part of the story sounds like hogwash.

canjond 02-09-2015 06:34 PM

Years ago, didn't one of the big auction houes sell a Joe Jackson signed photograph? From what I remember, the signature had been traced over because of Jackson poor handwriting, and subsequently a conservator removed the "traced over" portion leaving the original signature intact?

Runscott 02-09-2015 06:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by canjond (Post 1378202)
Years ago, didn't one of the big auction houes sell a Joe Jackson signed photograph? From what I remember, the signature had been traced over because of Jackson poor handwriting, and subsequently a conservator removed the "traced over" portion leaving the original signature intact?

You could be right - I based my comment on Heritage's claim :eek:

Mark17 02-09-2015 06:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Runscott (Post 1378193)
It was Spring Training - March. The teams might have been right next to each other. I'm sure someone around here can find out where the two teams had spring training in 1911.

The 'discovery' part of the story sounds like hogwash.

Doesn't the inscription say: Alexandria, May 1911?

In any case, the photos could've been taken in spring training, or in some town (Like Alexandria, VA) as the teams were working their way north to start the season, later developed, and then the sigs could've been obtained as I mentioned - sometime when Cleveland and the Giants were both in NY, hence the May inscription.

I'm sure the Giants spring training facility is mentioned in The Glory of Their Times, maybe with regards to the stories about Charles "Victory" Faust joining the team down there.

Mark17 02-09-2015 06:50 PM

The Heritage description for the other photos in the collection says:

"The majority of the photographs were snapped at Cleveland's 1911 spring training grounds of Alexandria, Louisiana.."

shelly 02-09-2015 06:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Runscott (Post 1378134)
You are really going out on a limb there.

I think it is time for you guys to see the new hauls of shame site. It is about Joe and I know you do not like Nash but this is really interesting.
http://haulsofshame.com/blog/?p=19597#more-19597

canjond 02-09-2015 07:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by shelly (Post 1378221)
I think it is time for you guys to see the new hauls of shame site. It is about Joe and I know you do not like Nash but this is really interesting.
http://haulsofshame.com/blog/?p=19597#more-19597

Well the purported Jackson signed photo I recalled seeing is the one referenced as having sold in a Sotherby's auction in 1999.

milkit1 02-09-2015 07:24 PM

2 Attachment(s)
The two teams from different states and leagues thing is pretty weird unless there were other teams signed as well? I just did a comparison on the Ted Easterly and think it is authentic. Of course a good forger could do what I just did too but I think its good.

Attachment 178513

Attachment 178514

milkit1 02-09-2015 07:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark17 (Post 1378209)
Doesn't the inscription say: Alexandria, May 1911?

In any case, the photos could've been taken in spring training, or in some town (Like Alexandria, VA) as the teams were working their way north to start the season, later developed, and then the sigs could've been obtained as I mentioned - sometime when Cleveland and the Giants were both in NY, hence the May inscription.

I'm sure the Giants spring training facility is mentioned in The Glory of Their Times, maybe with regards to the stories about Charles "Victory" Faust joining the team down there.

Very good point regarding them possibly playing together in the same location during spring training

Mark17 02-09-2015 07:53 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by milkit1 (Post 1378239)
Very good point regarding them possibly playing together in the same location during spring training

I think I was wrong about that. In The Glory of Their Times, Fred Snodgrass says, after McGraw offered him a contract for the 1908 season:

"Well, as you can well imagine, I was on that train four days later, going to marlin Texas...The Giants had bought a piece of property in marlin, Texas, a town of about 4,000 or 5,000 people, and had constructed a bal, park there for spring-training purposes...We trained there every spring I was with the Giants, which was until 1915..."

Unfortunately for the theory, marlin is about 300 miles due west of Alexandria, LA.


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