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I just need to start out with the disclaimer that I'm not a dealer or much of a collector. My aquisitions stopped in the 1980's, and I've never purchased an autograph. Just collected them very casually starting as a kid.
I have a number of Milwaukee Braves autographs from the late 1950's and early 60's. My Great Aunt managed the team's office, and I went to a lot of games with her. I have a program from a World Series game I attended in 1958 with my family that has the signatures of every player of both the New York Yankees and the Milwaukee Braves. I collected the signatures with my Aunt, over the course of two games. I was 8. These are the autographs on it:
New York Yankees Players
Milwaukee Braves Players
Braves (Not Playing in the Game)
Equipment Managers
Trainer
Okay, here's my situation. I was ready to sell my Braves memorabilia last year—I need to give up my home and move into assisted living—so I checked into selling the program through an online auction house. I sent the item to them for an Autumn of 2010 auction, and was expecting a great outcome-but it was returned to me because all of the signatures couldn't be authenticated. I was stunned because I remember collecting them myself. The authenticity of the Yankees signatures, and almost all of the Brave's players was not in question, just a few of the Braves who were not playing in the Series-but were pictured in the program. What a buzzkill! My Aunt must have had someone in the club house finish them off so I'd have "every" signature.
Finally getting to my question: So, what do I do with it now? Do I dismantle the program and sell pages individually (it's in great shape, by the way)? Cut it up? I know it would be a shame, but I don't have any autograph commerce experience, and I don't know what's a reasonable way to market the good 60 or so signatures. I don't have authentication for the individual signatures that the auction house confirmed were good (and can't afford to get it).
If you have any advice, I'd love to hear it. You can see scans I made of the pages and a good description at my niece's website:
http://www.nowhousestudio.com/1958-World-Series-Program.html
My sincerest gratitude for any input you have for me!
Mark
Tags: 1958, aaron, braves, casey, duke, game, maas, mantle, program, series, More…stengel, world, yankees
@Louie: It worked for me. You still having problems?
@Mark: It's possible the auction house was incorrect, so hang in there while people look at it here. Which ones couldn't they authenticate?
It's a great piece of baseball history and it would be a shame to cut it up.
Louie: Hmm, here's that link again. Let me know if you still can't connect. http://www.nowhousestudio.com/1958-World-Series-Program.html
Steve: Thanks for your reply! They only had "concerns" about a couple of the signatures of Braves NOT playing in the series. They called them "club house" signatures. It is a great piece of history, and even after inspection of the scans, the auction house was thrilled to feature it. Until they weren't... I sold a similar piece on Ebay in 2009-a 1957 World Series program with 57 signatures. It sold for $2,900.00 with no certification. I originally listed this 1958 program on Ebay also (last Fall), but got a lot of feedback that it was "too big" an item for the Ebay audience, and that buyers would be suspicious because it wasn't certified. One Ebayer told me it just seemed too good to be real. So, I took it down from Ebay-where it had a starting bid of $1, 750.00, and checked around and signed on with an auction house.
I haven't been a Baseball fan since the Braves left Milwaukee, and I'm not much of an autograph collector, but I'd hate to think I'd have to cut-up the program to sell it. I don't even know how I'd do it because the pages are printed on both sides. It's a tough decision, because just about everything I own has to go.
Thanks for any advice!
Mark
It's strange that they passed on it over a few Braves club house autographs. There are many good sports auction houses with sales coming up in the next few months and consignments closing soon, so don't stop at just one. There's Hunts, Legendary, Heritage, Memory Lane...the list could go on and on. I would definitely get it into a sports auction and not a general autograph one. Was it a sports auction house you went to, or one with dedicated sports auctions?
DO NOT cut it up!!!
Regardless of the clubhouse signatures there is still a market out there for your item . Jsa and psa will still issue a Loa and list the clubhouse signatures . It was a common practice for the teams to do back then , it isnt considered a forgery in the industry as it was done non maliciously . If you would like help getting your item authenticated and possibly selling it let me know. You have Duke Maas on the program and that looks real. He was really really rare to get out of all that years Yankees and there is a big market for him alone.
Also Im not an expert on autographs just a collector and dealer. So the Mantle could be real .
What does it cost to authenticate an item like that?
What do you think it's worth if only a few of Braves who didn't play are clubhouse?
The mantle may be real . It it can go for over $1000 . If it is clubhouse probably about $600 . If its only the braves guys then Im sure no one will really care. I have a book on all the clubhouse signatures and team signed balls. Its at my office I can pull it out and take a look at to see which ones match up .
To the guy that owns the program send me a message , I can help you out I think .
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