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1923-1979
Yankees Home Game |
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Schedule Index |
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NEW GROUP ! |
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NY Yankees Grandstand &
Bleachers ticket stubs Collecting |
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KeyMan
Collectibles |
NEWSLETTER |
January 2016 |
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Dating Yankees Stadium/Grandstand &
Bleacher |
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David Shakir |
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Ticket Stubs
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By David Shakir |
Along
with Dan Busby, David Shakir
has compiled an extensive
study on accurately dating New
York Yankee, Stadium
Admission, Grandstand, and
bleacher ticket stubs. From
1923-1948, these
tickets were
printed with just the game
number. The
date for the game
scheduled was not
included. Once the correct
year is established,
combined with a method for correctly
attributing the game number to
the actual game played, collectors can now
purchase special
event, and player
milestone tickets with
confidence. David is
also a PSA Consultant
on Undated NY Yankees
Tickets. |
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Ask
David: Direct your questions or feedback, about New York
Yankees, Stadium/Grandstand or Bleacher ticket stubs to David Shakir
theshak13@gmail.com You can also contribute
to this on going study by sending David scans of your ticket
stubs, both front and back. |
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About the Study |
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From 1923-1979 the New York Yankees did
not include dates on regular season,
Stadium Admission, Grandstand, and
Bleachers tickets. As a ticket stub
collector of player milestones, I
needed to know if the
Stadium/Grandstand stubs I had or
buying were correctly dated, and
attributed to a specific game. I teamed
up with Dan Busby, who also has a large
ticket collection, had the same
questions, and also wanted to get to
the bottom of correctly dating the
stubs.
Focusing our attention to the
1933-1948 era, Dan Busby, and I
compared contrasting tickets in our two
collections and other available images.
We systematically grouped tickets by
the NY Yankees Presidents name, ticket
design, printing company, legal information
and wording printed on the front and
back of tickets. We also noticed slight
differences in tax information and
disclaimers.
Some tickets had the same price and ticket stock color for consecutive
years. We then came to the conclusion
that the series letters placed under
the game number were used to
differentiate tickets from the previous
year.
Series letters were used so that the ticket collectors at the various
turnstiles at the stadium could tell if
tickets with the same game numbers from
the previous year was being used. The
significance of the capital letter
underneath the game number enabled them
to determine that.
Not all tickets of this era had the series letter, however those without a letter can
be attributed to one specific year
based on style/color/verbiage. The rest
of the tickets all included a series
letter. The letters range from "A" to
"L," but without an "I." Why there are
no "I" tickets, we do not know. Perhaps it was because the
number "1" and the letter "I" are so
similar.
While there are some slight variations of color shading, tickets
attributed to specific years do have
distinctively colored ticket stock.
Stadium Admission and bleacher tickets
were printed on different colored
ticket stock.
Method for Attributing Game No.
Game No.'s were given to the printer as soon as schedules were known so
any Home Game printed schedule would
match the Game day ticket so each game
was given a game number 1-77, the dated
tickets and undated tickets each having
the same game number .
By having the home game Schedules and by giving each game scheduled its
specific game # 1-77, we then can
determine which games were never played
and which games were makeup games and
played as double Headers. Official
schedule double headers count as two
game numbers as the number of the first
game was used for admittance to both
games. However, separate game admission
for a Holiday Double Header was common
in the 1920's, and two separate ticket
No.'s were used for admittance to each
game. This happened in 1925, 1932,
1933, 1934, 1935
and 1936.
It is important to remember that all the National Baseball game Reference
websites Showing games played, results
and box scores, only show actual
official games played, so counting down
the home games listed will give you an
inaccurate date for your numbered
ticket.
You can use the
New York Yankees Home Schedule on
this website to find the actual Home
Game No., and date for any NY Yankees
game played, to see if you are lucky enough to
have a key game, which is one of the
main reasons that make this part of the
hobby so much fun.
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The Findings of this study have also
been nationally published on the PSA
website
Unlocking the Mystery of Undated Yankee
Tickets in the 1933-1947 Era |
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KEYMAN COLLECTIBLES
RELATED RESOURCES |
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NEW YORK YANKEES GRANDSTAND TICKET STUB
DATING GUIDE HOME |
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