Vintage Set Needs

Sunday, March 9, 2014

There had to be a better way.....


.....to remove this card from the case it was sealed in. I could have used my little eyeglass repair kit screwdriver like I did a few weeks ago to get my Billy Pierce Red Heart card from it's plastic crypt. But since that ended up putting a gouge in the top border of that sweet card I figured this time I'd just leave it to the Postal Service employees. And they came through in high style!




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And here is the result!


Nice, yes?

On Saturday I pulled that envelope out of the mailbox and something seemed amiss. The envelope was scarred and filthy. I have a little blade I use (carefully) for opening envelopes and I always make sure that whatever is inside is safely away from the side I'll slice. But when I gave this one a squeeze I didn't like the result. Whatever it was was obviously in pieces. So, with much trepidation I cut it open and out spilled ...well...this:


That's a Billy Pierce Chicago's Greats card btw. Hell, I don't even know much about the origin of this set other than the Standard Catalog of BBC states that it was issued in conjunction with a card show in the Windy City in 1976. There were 24 unnumbered cards in the set which sold for $2 or in uncut sheet form for $6.

Here is what it looked like in the listing. Why anyone would go to the trouble to get it graded is beyond me but what the heck, I wanted it so I bought it.


Hey, it's a GEM MINT 10!!!! OK, not so much anymore. The card actually came through it's little ordeal without too much damage. At least it didn't get torn or cut. It does have some creases, though. They are not easy to see in my pics but they are there. They run from bottom left to top right. Picture a fairly thin card that you pressed against the side of a large ribbed crushed tomato can, the kind you see at Costco.

It'll be fine in the binder. Hell, I have worse cards in several PCs, including Pierce. So I'll live to collect another day. I can't blame the seller. The card should have been safe in the case I guess. Maybe they could have written 'fragile' or something but I don't think that would have kept that envelope from falling under the wheels of whatever truck did the deed.

Just for fun here are a couple of other pics. In this one showing the back I think the creases are more visible than the others.





And finally the card as scanned and the reverse. Try to spot the creases.



Welcome to my Pierce binder Gem Mint 10 Chicago's Greats Billy Pierce!!

8 comments:

  1. Wow. I"m surprised the card wasn't shredded to a pulp. It shows that awful things can happen to a package in the mail.I've had a few of those real dirty packages and wonder how they can get so filthy in the short time they are in the mail.

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    1. Considering how thin that card stock is I'm amazed as well. I've gotten some mail that had been placed in those plastic ziplock kinda bags with a notice that said 'sorry, we screwed the envelope over' but it was never a card envelope.

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  2. I heard about a guy's collection that was in hurricane Katrina. The only things that survived were his graded cards. You'd think it could survive the USPS.

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    1. From the mailing date, Feb 25 (which is when I got the 'Its shipped' notice as well) it took ten days via 1st class mail. That's a bit longer than I'd expect but it came out of the Chicago area so the weather might have had something to do with that.

      I guess there is a chance the sender backed over it in his driveway and sent it anyway but blaming the Post Office is more fun.

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  3. Wow. I've taken a hammer to these and seen less damage. Can't imagine what the USPS did to do this much damage. Glad you're able to stay positive... not sure I would be able to.

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    1. I just started Spring Break week, it will take a lot to spoil my mood!

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  4. That's shattered into almost small fragments! WoW You were really lucky the 'cage' took all the rage.

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    1. ..."the 'cage' took all the rage."...


      ha ha. I like that one. Did you make that up?

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