Tuesday, June 3, 2014

1964


I just completed the 1964 Topps baseball set. 

I was born in August 1957, so I was just turning seven in 1964.  I did not collect baseball cards at that age.  I started the set about 30 years ago when I traded a 1965 (duplicate) Steve Carlton Rookie Card for a bunch of commons from 1959, 62, 63, and 64.  So I had about 75 cards from 1964 to start with.  Completing the set took about a year.  I don’t look for mint.  Excellent condition (rating 5 out of 10 at PSA) cards are fine with me.  I don’t like creases, but slightly weak corners don’t bother me.  It’s truly a nice looking set; I have trouble picking a favorite 60’s set between 1964 and 1967.


 

As a boy, watching the older boys on my street collect cards inspired me to get into it.  In 1960, when I was three, we moved into a new development in North Jersey.  There were scores of children in the neighborhood, but a couple of kids stick out on my memory.  There was a family up the street that had moved from Virginia.  They had two boys, Mark and Paul, who were around three to five years older than me.  Their father had built them a tree fort.  Wanting to play in that fort, I used to wander up the street looking for them and occasionally, I would find them.  They liked to play “Civil War” which somehow made the whole thing very interesting to me because of their accents. They had toy guns and confederate hats and they seemed like the coolest kids I had ever met.  Mark had a collection of 1962 Topps Civil War News cards that he would bring out from time to time.  I was fascinated by the color and the explicit pictures on the cards. As we looked at the cards, we would talk about them – and then try to depict them while playing civil war.

 

We used to march around their yard with guns on our shoulders.  They taught me what an “about face” was.  I was no more than 5 or 6 years old at the time so I was learning things I had never heard about before.  I was enthralled by everything they told me.  I was young enough to be having trouble telling my right from my left.  Paul, the older boy, placed a half-sized comb in the right seat pocket of my dungarees (does anyone still call them that these days?).  He said, “when we say right face, remember the comb in your pocket.”  After that, I never had trouble with left and right again, even without the comb. 

There was another boy, Peter, who lived in the house behind me.  He was about three years older than me.  He had a Marx Civil War toy set.  I would always pester him to bring it outside so we could play war.  And when he did, it was a kid-magnet.  Kids would see us playing and come running to find out what was so interesting.  If we didn’t know them, we got to know them.  If they got bored, they left.  We would heave “dirt bombs” at each other’s soldiers to determine which ones were dead.  Of course, we made our own sound effects – and played until we were exhausted.  Peter always wanted to be “the South.”




 

The basement of Peter’s house was a treasure trove.  To enter the basement, you had to go through storm door like this:

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His father had built a match-box sized town complete with a working railroad.  We weren’t allowed to play with it too much because it was fragile.  The street lights and house lights actually worked.  There were depots, silos, and gas stations.  There were also American, Japanese, and Nazi WWII airplane models hanging from the ceiling.  There were models of Frankenstein, Dracula, and the Mummy – assembled and painted.  Peter also had a Marx WWII American v. Nazi army-man set that we played with often (again, complete with dirt bombs and sound effects).  Half the basement was finished – and in the finished side, there was a drum set.  Peter could play “Wipeout” on his drums and we all thought that was awesome.  The basement was a menagerie of interesting things to see; it was a treat just to stand and look at it all.

I soon had an extensive collection of Leslie Match Box cars.  The cars were all numbered, and I remember going to the pharmacy (Stan Beck’s in Florham Park, NJ) to look at the display case and pick a new one for my collection.  Stan Beck himself would come and open a locked cabinet to retrieve my selection.  I always thanked him when he handed me the little box. I wanted him to know how much I appreciated him keeping them all there for me.  Although tempted, I do not intend to collect Match Box cars or Marx Civil War pieces.


 

 

When my father was young, he used to spend the summer at the Jersey shore with his cousin, George.  They stayed in a house in Manasquan, NJ on the Shark River and swam in the river on hot summer days.  George earned a PhD in Physics and taught at Princeton.  My dad was a Research Scientist for Thiokol Engineering, Becton Dickinson, and later with Johnson & Johnson.  I remember one time when I was around the age of seven or eight we went to visit George and his family. As I recall they had two children, a boy and a girl.  The girl (high school age – forget her name) had a pet snake which completely freaked me out.  And they had a son, Dickie, who was about four years older than me.  We played with Dickie’s Civil War Army men – the one inch (Airfix) soldiers.    

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Over the past 10 years I have established a collection of Airfix Civil War figures – over 2,500 pieces.  I look forward to one day sharing them with grandchildren. 

These older boys had an undeniable influence on me.  Peter wasn’t very much into sports – or sports cards.  But he did collect non-sports cards.  Like Mark, he had his own collection of Topps’ Civil War News along with a variety of other cards.  To name a few:  James Bond cards, Batman cards, Addams Family cards, (WWII) War Bulletin cards, Green Beret cards, Rat Patrol cards, JFK cards, Beatles cards, and Man From U.N.C.L.E. cards.  Occasionally, as a diversion from baseball cards, I collect non-sports cards.  I have a few Beatles cards from different issues.  I have some Batman cards and complete sets of McHale’s Navy and Gomer Pyle.  Cost wise, these cards are on a par with sports cards.  One nice attribute is you don’t have to worry about paying large sums for “Hall of Famers.”   There is an occasional “pricey” rare card, but nothing rivaling a Mantle card.  For example, an Addams Family 66 card set in decent shape (Excellent +) goes for about $350-$400 or about $5-$6 per card.  That’s on par with most baseball card sets.  Other sets (McHale’s Navy) are much cheaper. 

Recently I had a once-in-a-lifetime experience.  I was up in Minnesota and my wife and I had some time to kill before heading to the airport and so we stopped in St. Paul to look at a few antique stores. (At the corner of Selby and Fairview.) I spotted a stack of cards sitting on a desk.  The stack was about two inches high.  It was a mix of 1965 Philadelphia Gum James Bond cards (62 of 66 cards), 1966 Philadelphia Gum James Bond “Thunderball” cards (about 30), and Man From U.N.C.L.E. cards (about 40).  Even if you value them at an extremely conservative $2.00 each, you’ve got $264 value.  I asked the guy how much for the cards…..he says, “how about $6.00?”  That’s SIX American dollars.  SIX DOLLARS!  I dream about these kinds of things happening, but the never do….or rarely do….or maybe it’s just once in a lifetime. 

Reflecting back on all of this makes me think about why all this brought such joy to me as a child…and why it still does.  Like most collectors, the chase is exciting for me. It always has been.  More than that, I liked the numbering of the cards, putting them in order and trying to complete a set.  I never completed a set as a kid, and to do so now provides a sense of satisfaction and closure.  I also enjoyed categorizing – by team or alphabetically for sports.  For the Beatles I would sort by Paul, John, Ringo and George; then by combinations, then all four together.   I did the same with the Match Box cars.  They were numbered, they had boxes, and they could be sorted and organized. The cards were a nickel-a-pack back then.  I would enjoy doing the math to determine how many packs I could afford.  Then I would go to the store and decide which kind of cards I would purchase.  For the most part, baseball won out.  When NJ added a sales tax it became a little more complex to make sure I accounted for added expense.  In college I majored in Accounting.  I became a CPA – and am now the CFO for a company in North Carolina.  I have always enjoyed sorting out numbers, categorizing numbers, and presenting the numbers in a way that tells the story of the business.  Did I collect cards because I’m an organization freak?  Or am I an organization freak because I collected cards? Either way, the penchant for organizing details has facilitated a career and a hobby for me.