Miss Selfridge

Rare 1909 T206 & 1894 Brown University Baseball Fred Tenney Giants Beaneaters

Description: 32REFINV This is a must have for any baseball collector of early memorabilia. The set was purchased at auction near Boston, Mass many years ago. The auction included sports memborbilia going back to the 1870s. This auction was thought to come from a relative of Fred Tenney and includes: Original 1894 Brown University graduation class book handed out to family members upon entering "class day" ceremonies on June 15th, 1894. Fred Tenney is listed and played on the 1894 national champions baseball team and eventually moved right into professional baseball upon graduation. Check out the pics for details of the 9-page 5.5" x 6.5" booklet. Interesting enough, his teammate from Brown University in 1894, Gene Steer went on to play for the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1894 upon graduation as well. Tenney's first professional team was the Boston Beaneaters! This piece is extremely RARE and shows 2 teammates who went pro in 1894. ***no others found for sale****You will also recieve a Fred Tenney NY Giants 1909 T-206 Sweet Caporal baseball card (see pics as it was trimmed) You'll also receive a free bonus of Tenney!Frederick Tenney (November 26, 1871 – July 3, 1952) was an American professional baseball player whose career spanned 20 seasons, 17 of which were spent with the Major League Baseball (MLB) Boston Beaneaters/Doves/Rustlers (1894–1907, 1911) and the New York Giants (1908–1909). Described as "one of the best defensive first basemen of all time", Tenney is credited with originating the 3-6-3 double play and originating the style of playing off the first base foul line and deep, as modern first basemen do.[1][2] Over his career, Tenney compiled a batting average of .294, 1,278 runs scored, 2,231 hits, 22 home runs, and 688 runs batted in (RBI) in 1,994 games played. Born in Georgetown, Massachusetts, Tenney was one of the first players to enter the league after graduating college, where he served as a left-handed catcher for Brown University. Signing with the Beaneaters, Tenney spent the next 14 seasons with the team, including a three-year managerial stint from 1905–1907. In December 1907 Tenney was traded to the Giants as a part of an eight-man deal; after two years playing for New York, he re-signed with the Boston club, where he played for and managed the team in 1911. He played as Brown University's catcher for the 1893 and 1894 seasons. In 1894, the team had a 23–8 record and were selected as national champions by Harper's Weekly.[7] The night of his senior dinner, Tenney received a telephone message from Frank Selee, the manager of the Beaneaters, asking him to play a game for the team at catcher, due to the injuries of other players. In his MLB debut on June 16, 1894, Tenney had to be removed from the game in the fifth inning due to a fractured finger on his throwing hand from a foul tip. After Tenney had his finger addressed, James Billings, an owner of the Beaneaters, offered him a contract worth US$300 a month from that day.[9] Tenney, later writing about the day, stated: I thought they were trying to have a little joke with me, and I concluded that I could do a little kidding myself. So I thought I would call their bluff by asking for some advance money. I screwed up my courage and asked Mr. Billings whether, if I signed the contract at once, I could get some advance money. He asked how much I wanted, and I thought I would mention a big sum in order to call their bluff good and strong. So I said $150. He consulted with Mr. Conant, another Director, and said that I could have the money all right, and asked me how I would like to have it– cash or check. [...] I replied that I would take half cash and then half in check, and immediately he wrote out a check for $75, counted out $75 in cash, shoved the contract over to me to sign, laying the cash and check beside it. — Fred Tenney, The New York Times[9]He returned to the team a month later, and finished the year batting .395 in 27 games.[8] The following season, Tenney moved to the outfield due to an erratic throwing arm behind the plate, according to manager Selee.[8] For the season, he hit .272 in 49 games, while also playing minor league baseball for the New Bedford Whalers. In 1896, Tenney again caught and played outfield; offensively, however, Tenney hit .336 in nearly double the games from the previous year (88) despite playing in the minors for the Springfield Ponies.[10] In 1897, Tenney moved to first base to replace the aging Tom Tucker. According to Alfred Henry Spink, within two weeks of the move it was evident that Tenney had become "one of the finest first sackers that the game [had] ever seen."[11] On June 14, 1897, in a game against the Cincinnati Reds, Tenney turned the first 3-6-3 double play in MLB history.[12] Offensively, Tenney led MLB in plate appearances (646) and tied Duff Cooley, Gene DeMontreville, and George Van Haltren for the lead in at bats (566) as the Boston club became National League (NL) champions with a 93–39 record.[13][14] Boston again won the NL in 1898 while Tenney hit .328 with 62 RBIs. In 1899 he collected 209 hits, fifth most in MLB, and recorded 17 triples, good for fourth best in MLB.[15] In 1900 Tenney, at age 28, batted .279 over 112 games played.[16] He began a streak of seven consecutive seasons where he led the NL in assists in 1901; he holds the record for most seasons leading a league in assists, with eight, including one in 1899.[1] He was suspended for ten games for fighting Pittsburgh Pirates manager Fred Clarke in May 1902,[8][17] and finished the 1902 season with the second most sacrifice hits (29) in the majors, to go along with a .315 average.[10][18] Throughout the 1901–1902 seasons, Tenney received contract offers worth up to $7,000 ($206,248 in 2017) from St. Louis, Cleveland, and Detroit;[8] Tenney, however, decided to remain in Boston, and was named captain of the club in 1903.[1] For the season, he hit .313, with 41 RBIs and three home runs, as he led his team in walks (70) and had the best on-base percentage mark (.415) on the squad.[19] In 1904, Tenney again led his team in walks and on-base percentage, as he tied for the team lead in runs with Ed Abbaticchio.[20] He was named manager of the team in 1905, but did not receive additional pay; he was, however, offered a bonus if the team didn't lose money.[8] In 1905, Tenney tried to sign William Clarence Matthews, an African-American middle infielder from Harvard University, to a contract. Tenney later retracted his offer due to pressure from MLB players.[21] Defensively, he led the majors in errors committed by a first baseman and finished second in most putouts for any position.[22] Tenney led the 1906 Beaneaters to a 49–102 record. For the second straight year, the Boston team lost more than 100 games.

Price: 699.99 USD

Location: Absecon, New Jersey

End Time: 2024-11-29T00:11:16.000Z

Shipping Cost: 0 USD

Product Images

Rare 1909 T206 & 1894 Brown University Baseball  Fred Tenney Giants BeaneatersRare 1909 T206 & 1894 Brown University Baseball  Fred Tenney Giants BeaneatersRare 1909 T206 & 1894 Brown University Baseball  Fred Tenney Giants BeaneatersRare 1909 T206 & 1894 Brown University Baseball  Fred Tenney Giants BeaneatersRare 1909 T206 & 1894 Brown University Baseball  Fred Tenney Giants BeaneatersRare 1909 T206 & 1894 Brown University Baseball  Fred Tenney Giants BeaneatersRare 1909 T206 & 1894 Brown University Baseball  Fred Tenney Giants Beaneaters

Item Specifics

Restocking Fee: No

Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 14 Days

Refund will be given as: Money Back

Type: Sports Trading Card

Year Manufactured: 1894

Player: Fred Tenney

League: Major Leagues

Card Condition: Fair

2 piece RARE collection: 1894 Brown University Nat'l Champ & T-206

Product: Single

Modified Item: No

Series: T206

Sport: Baseball

Year: 1909

Era: Pre-WWII (Pre-1942)

Original/Reprint: Original

Professional Grader: Professional Sports (PSA)

Team: New York

Season: 1909

Card Manufacturer: Sweet Caporal

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