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About
The Collection: A History Of The Cards In The Russell Collection
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Among
the largest private collections of turn-of-the-century tobacco cards held
by a public institution in the United States, Senator Richard B. Russell's
boyhood baseball card collection is one of the hidden treasures of the
Richard B. Russell Library for Political Research and Study at the University
of Georgia.
The
Richard B. Russell, Jr. collection contains over one thousand baseball
cards produced by the American Tobacco Company during the years 1909-1911,
the height of the so-called dead-ball era. The majority of the cards come
from the T-206 "White Border" set, the largest tobacco card
set of the early 20th century and the one containing some of the most
prized cards in the collecting world. All of the cards were collected
by the aspiring "base ballist" Dick Russell beginning in 1909.
The cards were found among his other juvenilia when additional materials
came to the library in 1983.
The first
baseball cards manufactured for mass distribution were produced by competing
tobacco companies in the 1880s. The first tobacco cards were issued by
Goodwin & Co. of New York City in 1887. These were followed shortly
by cards produced by other manufacturers (Old Judge, Allen & Ginter,
and Mayo Cut Plug among them). The cards were used to advertise several
different types of tobacco products, with particular emphasis placed on
boosting cigarette sales. Most male smokers at this time enjoyed cigars
or pipe tobacco; cigarettes were considered effeminate. By using images
that would appeal to male consumers-female actresses and music hall performers,
boxers and baseball players-tobacco companies discovered that their card
inserts proved an effective form of advertising. This practice was so
successful that cards were included with other products such as candy
and gum. The first baseball cards featured black-and-white studio "action"
photographs of ballplayers simply glued to stiff cardboard backings. Other
sets featured full-color lithographs of the game's top stars. This first
era of baseball card production ended in the 1890s when James Buchanan
"Buck" Duke created the American Tobacco Company monopoly by
buying out his competitors. With no competition, there was no longer a
need to create new card issues, and baseball card production temporarily
ended.
The Golden Era of baseball card production began in 1909 with the American Tobacco
Company's release of the T-206 set, easily the largest mass-produced tobacco
card set up to this time. Threatened by increasing sales of Turkish tobacco,
and faced with monopoly-busting actions by the U.S. government, Duke's
American Tobacco Company sought to enhance sales of domestic tobacco through
an aggressive marketing campaign. The 525 cards and variants of the small
format (1 1/2" x 2 5/8") 1909-1911 T-206 or "White Border"
set form one of the most stylistically inventive and popular card issues
of all time. These cards all feature advertisements for a variety of tobacco
products made by Duke's monopoly, with one notable exception: a very rare
issue of a Ty Cobb portrait with the slogan "Ty Cobb, King of the
Smoking Tobacco World" on the reverse. Other scarce issues from this
set include the famous Honus Wagner card, an Eddie Plank issue, and an
array of variants and misprints, all of which make it nearly impossible
for collectors to complete the set. The Russell collection contains 497
different cards and variants from the T-206 set, an amazing accomplishment
for a juvenile collector and a testament to the tenacity of the young
Russell.
Other popular
sets produced by the American Tobacco Company during this period include
the T-205 "Gold Border" issue, a smaller quantity set featuring
beautiful full-color player portraits outlined in gold trim, and the T-210
"Red Border" series, a large set of minor league players depicted
in black-and-white photographs. Due to the numerous regional issues of
the latter series, complete collections of this set are difficult to amass.
The Russell collection contains numerous cards from each of these sets.
Turkish
cigarette companies also created cards to sell their product, and in the
process introduced some innovative designs and artwork. One notable set,
the Turkey Red (T-3) Cabinet cards, are handsomely painted large format
(8" x 5 3/4") cards that were available through the mail only
as premiums. The Russell collection includes four of these unusual cards.
In addition
to baseball cards, other subjects depicted in the Russell collection include
actresses, boxers, flags of the world, and animals.
This era
of tobacco card production came to an abrupt end with the beginning of
World War I. Imported tobacco products dried up when Turkey allied itself
with Germany, and with its main competition gone, the American Tobacco
Company halted production of baseball cards. Baseball cards would hereafter
be marketed to a juvenile audience by candy and gum companies.