Orioles Card "O" the Day

An intersection of two of my passions: baseball cards and the Baltimore Orioles. Updated daily?

Friday, January 2, 2009

Vintage Fridays: Hal Brown, 1961 Post #78

There's a lot to like about this card. In list form:

1. This is cut right off of the back of a box of Post cereal, circa 1961. As incredible as it is to hold a Topps card that is decades old, it's somehow more impressive to me to be in possession of a card like this. It's more of an artifact, something that kids (and their parents) were even less likely to preserve than a regular trading card.

2.As you can see, the previous owner was somewhat less than precise with their scissors. I can identify with that. The first day my mother picked me up from preschool, the teacher said, "Did you know that he can read?". The following day, she said, "Did you know that he can't use scissors?". Motor skills have never been my strong suit.

3. There's something charming about the phrase "Baseball Star Card". It sounds like it was translated to English by a non-native speaker. Alternately, it's trying to oversell itself. This is not just a baseball card...no! It's a baseball STAR card. Beat that, smart guy!

4. I really do like the unique design that Post used. Since they were printing the card right on the cereal box, they left the back blank. So they've squeezed the stats and the bio right on the front with the photo. It's one-stop shopping! Of course, this also means that they've cropped Hal Brown's picture such that his hands and elbows are cut off.

5. Speaking of the photo, there's the mysterious white square behind Hal's head. Is he posing in a tunnel, and the square is the light at the end? The world may never know.

6. Check out that 1960 stat line. What a year! He pulled his career won-lost record over .500, and walked only 22 batters in 159 innings. The modern-day O's would kill for that kind of control.

7. His bio uses the term "reliefer". Was that a common spelling at the time?

8. There are exactly eight stars separating the card number and the bio. How did they settle on that number?

9. If you check eBay, vintage Post cereal cards are cheap. I'll jump at a vintage card that hasn't been slobbered over by the speculative maven collectors.

2 comments:

Commishbob said...

Kevin... the Post cards are some of my very favorites. I collected them as a kid although I don't think any of the ones in my collection are those that survived from my youth. They came out for three seasons. The same cards came on the back of Jello boxes in the '62 and '63 versions (I think). PSA has a feature on the 1961 series here .

The Orioles checklist for Post 61-63 (there were a couple of variations and short prints):
1961 Post Orioles
#.68 Jim Gentile
#.69 Gus Triandos
#.70 Gene Woodling
#.71 Milt Pappas
#.72 Ron Hansen
#.73 Chuck Estrada
#.74 Steve Barber
#.75 Brooks Robinson
#.76 Jackie Brandt
#.77 Marv Breeding
#.78 Hal Brown
#.79 Billy Klaus
#.80 Hoyt Wilhelm

1962 Post Orioles
#.27 Jim Gentile
#.28 Marv reeding
#.29 Brooks Robinson
#.30 Ron Hansen
#.31 Jackie Brandt
#.32 Dick Williams
#.33 Gus Triandos
#.34 Milt Pappas
#.35 Hoyt Wilhelm
#.36 Chuck Estrada

1963 Post Orioles
#.57 Jim Gentile
#.58 Jackie Brandt
#.59 Brooks Robinson
#.60 Ron Hansen
#.61 Jerry Adair
#.62 Boog Powell
#.63 Russ Snyder
#.64 Steve Barber
#.65 Milt Pappas
#.66 Robin Roberts

Commishbob said...

eh, typing is not my strong suit. Marv "reeding" in the 62 checklist should be "Breeding".