The other day, I was reading the fascinating SABR Baseball Cards blog post by Andrew Aronstein on a pivotal meeting of baseball card collectors 50 years ago.
It was the precursor to annual baseball card conventions, I suppose, but on a much smaller scale. The total number of attendees fell well below the current CDC guidelines for crowds in our virus-ridden world.
Photos accompanied this great historic post and the most interesting thing about those pictures was how well-dressed the attendees were. Every person showed up in a suit-and-tie or at least a sport coat. Can you imagine that happening today? The clothing choices of current baseball card show goers alarms me nearly every visit. Find something without stains, buddy.
The post was another reminder of how life was a bit more formal a half a century ago.
Another example comes from baseball cards. I mentioned on this post (in fact, this entire post is a continuation of the theme of that post) that Topps used to include full names of players on the backs of its baseball cards. First name, middle name, last.
It did that through much of the 1950s and then picked it up again for the early 1970s, ending the practice after 1975 Topps. Donruss then acquired the tradition, providing full names for players on its card backs from its debut set in 1981 through its 1992 set.
To me, growing up with the '74 and '75 Topps sets and then later buying early '80s Donruss, discovering the full name of a player -- particularly when the player's first name didn't match the first name that you knew -- was one of the most interesting parts of the card back. (No wonder nobody cares about card backs anymore, no full names, no cartoons).
Those names have interested me ever since, just because can you imagine the alternate reality if we actually used a player's real first name?
Would Bake McBride be the lovable cult figure he is in baseball circles if people knew him as "Arnold McBride"?
Would "Mick The Quick" catch on if he was merely "John Rivers"?
Would we have as much fun if we only knew a baseball player named "Ralph LaCock"?
Would we feel good about Kevin Brown if he was "James Brown"?
And what would we know about Bo if Bo was actually "Vincent Jackson" on his baseball cards?
Thanks to family tradition, preference or happenstance we know the players by names other than their given names. That's why it's Ken Griffey and Ken Griffey Jr., not George and George Jr.
But seeing those full names on those baseball cards was a fascinating look into naming traditions and a tradition in of itself until Donruss abandoned the practice in 1993.
I broke down some of the players on those Topps and Donruss cards with "unfamiliar" first names and listed them by position. I limited it only to those mid-70s Topps sets and the '80s Donruss sets because that's what I collected when I was noticing full names.
You'll no doubt know many of these, but a few may throw you.
First Base
John Powell
Dudley Hargrove
Carroll Chambliss
Second Base
Jesus Trillo
Octavio Rojas
Rigoberto Fuentes
Elliott Wills
Shortstop
Russell Dent
Fredrick Auerbach
Colbert Harrah
Derrel Harrison
Third Base
Roberto Bonilla
Clell Hobson
Ronald Garrett
Catcher
John Dempsey
Gorrell Stinson
Fury Tenace
Leo Whitt
Nathan Ott
Bobby Moreland
Outfield
Carl Smith
William Morris
Daniel Staub
Arnold McBride
John Rivers
John Johnstone
George Griffey
George Griffey Jr.
James Thomas
Ralph LaCock
Walter McReynolds
Vincent Jackson
Johnnie Baker
Otis Gilkey
Designated Hitter
Pedro Oliva
Herman Davis
Starting pitcher
Lynn Ryan
Buford Champion
Ralph Caldwell
George Seaver
Wilfred Siebert
John Messersmith
Bertram Burris
Dewey Hoyt
Marcus Garland
William Clemens
Jose Martinez
James Brown
Charles Fernandez
Charles Terrell
Relief Pitcher
Howard Sutter
Frank McGraw
Albert Lyle
Henry Garber
There are good and bad parts to the world being much less formal than it was 50 years ago. Sometimes, I guess, you need to sacrifice interesting card backs to wear blue jeans.
Comments
Suits, cigarettes, and laughter.
As for dress code... I don't wear clothing with stains to shows. But some of my cargo shorts are well-worn and have a hole here and there. ;)