SEATTLE, WA.- A 106-year-old baseball card one of perhaps a dozen of its type known to exist is expected to sell for as much as $200,000 in a sports and historical memorabilia auction slated for August 18 in Seattle.
What makes the T206 white-border Joe Doyle card rare and valuable is not the players pitching record he won only 21 games over five seasons its the erroneous caption on the front of the card that makes it special. Below the image of Doyle, the I.D. states that he played for New York of the National League, but in actuality the right-hander pitched for New York of the American League.
Once the error was discovered they pulled the (printing) plate, chipped off the National part, put the plate back on and continued making what experts believe was 99.9 percent of the run, said Grant Zahajko of
MBA Seattle Auction House.
Only a few of the error cards have surfaced over the years.
The card wasnt even known to the hobby until the 1990s after a collector named Larry Fritsch discovered it, and then he didnt tell anybody about the discovery for a while. I think he got his hands on three or four of them before it became public that there was an error-card variation, said Zahajko, an auctioneer who has been cataloging sports collectibles auctions at MBA Seattle for 15 years.
This is the first T206 Joe Doyle error card Zahajko has ever handled.
An elderly gentleman from the Midwest, who heard me talking about T206 cards on a podcast, called and mentioned that he had a whole album of antique baseball cards he wanted me to evaluate, said Zahajko.
The caller said that his paternal grandfather had assembled the scrapbook in November 1910. The present owner had inherited the scrapbook many years ago upon the death of his father.
Following the conversation, the man shipped the album to the Seattle auction house. There, Zahajko leafed through its pages and marveled over the rare sports cards that had been pasted onto its pages.
There was a Ty Cobb, a Walter Johnson, a lot of big names, said Zahajko, who had recently reviewed population reports from grading services that track the number of rare cards in existence.
Then I saw the Doyle error card, right in front of me, said Zahajko. I couldnt believe it.
The Joe Doyle error card is perhaps the scarcest of any from the white-border T206 baseball card series, which was produced from 1909 through 1911 for the American Tobacco Trust, manufacturers of Piedmont Cigarettes.
Zahajko has placed a conservative estimate of $100,000 to $200,000 on the card, which has been PSA authenticated and its condition graded 2.0 out of 10.
For the most part, the rare Honus Wagner and rare Ty Cobbs are going to vary in condition between 2 and 3 if theyve been handled or in albums, said Zahajko, adding that the Doyle error card suffers only from a minor bit of paper loss on the back, having been pasted into the scrapbook.
Fortunately for the owner, the card was attached using a water-soluble paste, which dissolved without causing any further damage, said Zahajko.
The top recorded price for such an error card, officially known as the T206 Piedmont Joe Doyle N.Y. Natl Hands Up, is $414,750. That particular card, which sold at a New Jersey auction house in 2012, was graded PSA 3 one point higher than the example being offered by MBA Seattle.
Its really hard to know what a card like this will bring. It could have all the rarity in the world but the player is not a big name. We just dont know whats more important to collectors who are at that level, said Zahajko. Coin collectors tend to lean toward rarity the number of coins known to exist but baseball cards can be driven sometimes by the (players) names.
In any event, the Joe Doyle, N.Y. Natl card is considered king of the error cards.
To the advanced collectors, if theyre going to have a complete set including all error cards, this is the toughest one of them all to find, said Zahajko.
MBA Seattle Auction Houses Aug. 18 sale will also include the balance of the Ohio baseball card collection consisting of mostly T205 and T206 issues.
In addition to the rare Joe Doyle error card, the auction contains trophies won by champion race car driver Joan Newton Cuneo (1876-1934). Cuneo was one of the most celebrated drivers in the country until women were banned from the sport in 1909.
Two trophies in the auction are from the 1909 Mardi Gras Speed Carnival, events Cuneo won shortly before she was barred from competing against men drivers.
Another silver-plated loving cup trophy was awarded to Cuneo in 1911 for recording a half-mile worlds record time for a woman, driving her Pope Hummer on the Long Island Parkway at the speed of 111.5 miles per hour.
The most impressive award is a Gorham sterling silver plaque presented by the Rainier Motor Company to Cuneo for posting a perfect score in the 1908 Glidden Tour, a prestigious endurance rally in which many early automobile manufacturers entered. The shield-shape plaque measures 16 by 13 1/2 inches. It is engraved with the inscription Perfect Score In The Glidden Tour of 1908 Being The First Woman Driver To Accomplish This In The History Of The Tour. Several engravings on the plaque picture the No. 15 Rainier car driven by Cuneo. The plaque is estimated at $40,000-$60,000.
Zahajko said that the trophies have been consigned by a granddaughter of Cuneo.
Her granddaughter figures somebody must have melted down the sterling silver trophies because there are a bunch of trophies in historical photos that no one can account for. What we have now are a few fabulous silver-plated trophies, he said, as well as the Gorham sterling plaque.
Absentee and Internet live bidding will be available through LiveAuctioneers.com.