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1916 "Shoeless Joe" Jackson Signed Voucher....
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The Chicago White Sox legend purchases a home in Georgia
1916 "Shoeless Joe" Jackson Signed Voucher. He was six years old when his family moved to Brandon Mill on the outskirts of Greenville, South Carolina, a company town centered around a textile factory where he worked twelve-hour shifts as a "linthead," sweeping the floors as the machinery whirred and clanged around him. It was a life punctuated by hard work and very limited funds, with education one of the many luxuries the Jackson family was unable to afford. Though the mill's baseball team would ultimately prove to be the key that would unlock the door to a better life for "Shoeless Joe," his lack of education is often cited as a root cause of his banishment from the game he loved as he fell victim to corrupt forces demanding his participation in the destructive 1919 "Black Sox" scandal.Even the most casual collector of sports memorabilia is aware that Jackson's autograph stands as one of the hobby's "Holy Grails," the vast gulf between supply and demand fueled by the legendary slugger's illiteracy and his supreme baseball relevance respectively. Typically Jackson would avoid signing autographs whenever possible, allowing his wife to tend to those duties when possible, and only assuming them himself when legal matters demanded.
Here we encounter just such an instance, providing one enterprising hobbyist the opportunity to elevate his collection to a level that few others could match. This rarest of baseball autographs was coaxed from Jackson in the course of a transaction relating to the purchase of a new home in Savannah, Georgia, a chapter well documented in Donald Gropman's biography of Jackson, "Say It Ain't So, Joe!: The True Story of Shoeless Joe Jackson."
He writes, "Ever since his season with the Savannah Indians in 1909, Joe had thought of moving to Savannah. Then his little sister Lulu got married and moved there. Finally, in 1916, Joe and [his wife] Katie bought a house on the Savannah waterfront for ten thousand dollars. His mother and little sister Gertrude came to live with them, but Joe and Katie were only there during the off season."
This purchase came during an anxious time for the star slugger, whose underwhelming first partial season in Chicago left many sportswriters wondering if Jackson's best days were behind him. Perhaps buoyed by the support of the club, validated by team secretary Harry Grabiner's guarantee of payment, to be deducted directly from Jackson's salary, Shoeless Joe rebounded with a brilliant 1916 campaign, leading the American League with twenty-three triples and 293 total bases. Only with the scandal of the 1919 World Series and his banishment from the game at the close of the 1920 season would Jackson's fortunes again falter.
The voucher, promising payment of $500 to the "Savannah Realty Investment Corporation," is completed entirely in type (short of a notation in an unknown hand at lower left), with Jackson providing only the 8/10 black fountain pen signature at lower right in his clumsy, childlike scrawl. The voucher itself survives marvelously, with light toning and minor edge wear remaining well clear of the autograph and causing little visual distraction. It should be noted that this is the only Jackson voucher (of the three known that relate to this transaction) upon which the signature is not obscured by bank stamping or cancellation holes. Bank's endorsement signatures appear on verso. Full LOA from PSA/DNA. Full LOA from James Spence Authentication.
More information about "Shoeless Joe" Jackson.
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