Michigan Football Program Auction (and What it Means to Me)
This is going to be long. It will contain a lot of elements that are probably only personally important and may at times be only slightly related to the title of the Diary. So, I apologize in advance for that (but, hey, it's a diary), and offer up front a link to the auctions. It begins with Lot 261 and ends with 290. Contained within is the greatest collection of Michigan Football programs in the world. More extensive than even the Bentley Historical Library. Even if you have no intention of bidding, it is a fascinating look at a collection that, for at least a few more days, I can proudly claim is a party of my family.
This post has three purposes, I suppose. First, I would like to recognize and honor my father's uncle for compiling this amazing collection. Secondly, as mentioned above, I want to share the digital likeness of the collection to those interested in Michigan football enough read diary entries composed by complete strangers on a blog dedicated to a collective passion. Finally, I'd like to simply mark this as a somber turning point in my relationship with Michigan Football (or rather, Michigan Football's relationship with me). Note: that last point has nothing to do with on-field results.
The reason I am here now, typing this, is because my father carried me into Michigan Stadium on his shoulders before I was able to walk up all those steps myself and continued to bring me along for the following 16 years. The reason he did that was because his father did the same for him.
My grandfather and his brother had been going to games for 60+ years each until their minds and bodies failed to allow them to continue. Throughout this time, my great-uncle took up collecting programs. I'm not sure if he started with the intent of amassing a Michigan Football Program Collection and in the process branched out into other sports and events, or if he started with a broad focus and decided to pay particularly close attention to the Michigan Football programs. Either way, he ended up with a program collection to rival any other, private or public. A couple of stories to illustrate just how impressive it is:
- There are only two copies of this program known to be in existence. At one point, he had both of them. He gave the other to a friend of his who also collected programs, and that friend still has it.
- I remember walking through Crisler, probably about 15 years ago now, and they always had those somewhat cheesy museum-like display cases in the concourse. There was one with the Little Brown Jug and a program from the game where that legend was born. The University borrowed that program from my great-uncle.
- He had duplicates of many of his programs. On one occassion, someone inquired about a 1950s Red Wings/Maple Leafs program, and since my great-uncle had two of them, he was willing to sell. They had not yet discussed a price when gentleman came to his house to pick up and pay for the program. My great-uncle allowed the man to name his own price, which he did, at "seven fifty." He wrote a check and left. My great-uncle was shocked when he looked at the check and saw $750.00, as he was happy to let the guy buy it for $7.50.
December 3rd, 2008 at 12:49 AM ^
Sorry, I know that first link is not working. I'm not able to edit it because this site keeps flagging my edits as spam. Anyways, you can still use the link posted, just type 261-290 in the search box and hit search.
December 3rd, 2008 at 8:42 AM ^
http://live.mastroauctions.com/index.cfm?Action=DisplayContent&ContentN…
awesome collection, btw
December 3rd, 2008 at 9:02 AM ^
cool stuff. I love that every single game program has a cigarette ad on the back.
December 3rd, 2008 at 10:10 AM ^
Great post! Its a shame that the collection has to be sold!
It would be nice if all of those could have been compiled into a coffee table book of some sort! I would buy one!
December 3rd, 2008 at 2:44 PM ^
The auction house did put together a catalog documenting all of these. They are supposed to send a few to us...it might be worth a shot contacting them and seeing if you could get one that way.
December 3rd, 2008 at 12:17 PM ^
The cover art for the 5 home games for the great 1925 season is amazing--especially compared with the programs for the Wisconsin and Illinois road games.
http://live.mastroauctions.com/index.cfm?action=DisplayContent&ContentN…
Michigan State (image #1)
Indiana (image #3)
Navy (image #11)
Ohio State (image #13)
Minnesota (image #15)
I particularly like the last 2. I had seen that OSU one before--that must have been a cold drive for the Buckeye fans--but the Minnesota one, with the players running out of the West entrance of Yost Field House toward Ferry Field, is is new to me.
Thanks for posting this.
December 3rd, 2008 at 1:35 PM ^
I agree that more needs to be done to reproduce the old program covers. I know the M Den sells a monthly calendar with historical covers, but either making individual prints for sale or compiling them in a book would be excellent.
In an unrelated/random item: pictures 17 and 19 in the 1922 programs list Michigan home games as being on Central Time as opposed to Eastern Time. I can't find anything that shows Michigan being on central time and then years down the road changing to eastern. Hmm.
http://live.mastroauctions.com/index.cfm?action=DisplayContent&ContentN…
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