Welcome to our community

Be apart of something great, join today!

I have Acquired an Honus Wagner Rookie!

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

mouschi

Featured Contributor, Bridging the Gap, Senior Mem
May 18, 2012
3,105
170
First, let me say right off, no, I didn't purchase a T206 Honus Wagner. What I did pickup, however, predates the T206 by at least a decade *and* is significantly rarer! This was definitely an Indiana Jones moment for me.

200.gif


Let me introduce you to my newest piece: The 1899-00 M101-1 Sporting News Honus Wagner Rookie! I have only seen six others up for sale in auction houses this century, and half of them have significant amounts of it cut away. This is one of the finest examples of this premium insert to ever hit the market!

wags2.jpg


The funny thing is, I didn't even know this existed last month! I recently fell head over heals for the 1909-13 M101-2 Sporting News Supplements (the successor of the M101-1s), and was able to pick up my three favorites from the entire set. I love the sepia tone, the way the photographer captured each player, and the large format. They are fantastic conversation pieces and display beautifully.

m101-2.jpg


With as rare as the M101-2s are, the M101-1s are much rarer. They were created during the "dead period" of baseball cards. When the ATC (American Tobacco Company) formed in around 1890, there really wasn't a need to create any cards for advertising purposes, so with as wild as collecting was in the late 1880s, baseball cards nearly disappeared for a couple decades until 1909, aside from a couple issues. The M101-1 set was created right in the middle of this time period.

I was looking online through some people's Honus Wagner pieces in their collections, and noticed someone posted the Wagner rookie. It felt like I was casting my eyes on the Mona Lisa for the first time! How in the world could a private individual have something so magnificent as an Honus Wagner rookie - from the 19th century?! Shouldn't that be in a museum somewhere???

Merely knowing that Wagner had a 19th century issue rookie was thrilling to me. It fuses two key time periods - a time where the likes of Cap Anson and King Kelly ruled the diamond, and a time when Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth were household names. Honus Wagner was considered the best player on the planet before Cobb entered the scene, and this piece feels like it gives these two time periods some semblance of continuity. I always think of Wagner as an early 20th century guy, leading the Pirates to victory over Ty Cobb's Tigers in the 1910 World Series.

I reached out to the owner, and within a week, we were able to make a deal - the same time when Wagner's PSA 1 T206 broke a sales record again. Here it is, posed next to my Candy Wagner, the 1910 E90-2 Honus Wagner.

1_Untitled-11.jpg


If you don't know anything about the Candy Wagner, here is a little information for you.

wagnersmall.jpg


The E90-2 Candy Wagner is my favorite card of his by a long shot. I love that it utilizes the same Carl Horner portrait that the T206 has, and am a big sucker for the beautiful bright blue background. I was extremely excited to display it with the Wagner rookie. Unbeknownst to me until I started writing this article, I found out that the date I purchased the E90-2 Candy Wagner was exactly 120 years after the release date of the 1899 M101-1 Sporting News Honus Wagner! August 19th, 1899 - August 19th 2019! Talk about a connection!

Shown below are a few shots of how the Wagner rookie displays with some of my other large format pieces such as my 1888 Allen & Ginter album with set, 1909-13 M101-2s and part of my 1889 A35 Goodwin set (in case you missed it, these feature some of my custom work you can see by clicking here.)

Untitled-10.jpg


The more I get into displaying my collection, the more I realize how impressive larger format pieces are and how much I love them. They present beautifully and I get so much more enjoyment out of them than I do with many cards that just sit in a box.

1_Untitled-9.jpg


To think this cabinet once held the world's largest unique Jose Canseco baseball card collection, and later, a bunch of 1980's wax boxes. My, how times change!

So, there you have it, my 1899 Honus Wagner rookie card ... errr ... rookie :) While I still am dumbfounded that this piece isn't sitting in a museum, I'm super thankful to have it in my own personal collection to enjoy. It helps me to pretend I have a small museum of baseball history all to myself! It makes me want to party like it's 1899.

https://tanmanbaseballfan.com/2020/09/i-have-acquired-an-honus-wagner-rookie.html

 
Last edited:

Shaggy

Active member
Staff member
Administrator
Nov 6, 2019
372
99
Arizona
Holy crap Tanner. I'm in awe! Awesome write up and loved reading every minute of it. Thanks for also sharing it here on FCB!
 

mouschi

Featured Contributor, Bridging the Gap, Senior Mem
May 18, 2012
3,105
170
Holy crap Tanner. I'm in awe! Awesome write up and loved reading every minute of it. Thanks for also sharing it here on FCB!
Thanks! Are you the new sheriff in town? I've heard things!
 

Randy Shields

Well-known member
Aug 20, 2008
2,224
441
OH-IO
Really nice Tanner, and thanks for sharing. I hope for your sake that the craziness of card prices in today's day and age, which you eluded to with the recent sale of the Wagner PSA 1, spill over to these types of items as well.

There is a Lajoie that pwcc-vault, which is apparently a newer off-shoot of theirs, is offering for $4,500 obo. I'd have no idea what a reasonable price for this would or should be but I'm sure you would, and since you mentioned it in your video I thought I'd link it.

You might have already seen it but if not here you go:

https://www.ebay.com/itm/224143952260
 

mouschi

Featured Contributor, Bridging the Gap, Senior Mem
May 18, 2012
3,105
170
Really nice Tanner, and thanks for sharing. I hope for your sake that the craziness of card prices in today's day and age, which you eluded to with the recent sale of the Wagner PSA 1, spill over to these types of items as well.

There is a Lajoie that pwcc-vault, which is apparently a newer off-shoot of theirs, is offering for $4,500 obo. I'd have no idea what a reasonable price for this would or should be but I'm sure you would, and since you mentioned it in your video I thought I'd link it.

You might have already seen it but if not here you go:

https://www.ebay.com/itm/224143952260

Thank you, Randy! I think items like this are the hobby's "best kept secrets", in spite of their prices. I think they have a lot of room to grow. Thanks for the link to the Lajoie! I get googly eyed when I see it. For fun, I checked the sales data, and it looks like it sold at the same auction house, at the same time, as my Wagner! I think they were both entombed together for over a century, which is fun. In 2018, the Lajoie fetched a bit over $2,700, so given today's increase in value of vintage ephemera (and sports cards altogether) I don't think it is wildly out of the question, however, there is an obo for a reason. Regardless of who gets it (and what they buy it for), a pre-war / Lajoie collector would be sure to fall in love.
 

Members online

No members online now.

Latest posts

Top