Last week I blogged about how my prized autographs had been largely obliterated by time. I wasn’t planning to get any autographs when I went to those long ago concerts of The Byrds, Buffalo Springfield, and John Denver; I had just gone to listen to the music. However when the opportunity arrived to meet those guys, I scrambled through my wallet to find something that they could sign their autographs on. What I found were some cards for various things that were blank on the back, so that is what I had them sign.
Last week when I studied those cards where the autographs occurred, I happened to turn them over and I found it interesting, because they told of some of the things that I kept in my wallet back then.
Perhaps the most interesting to me was the back of the card that featured David Crosby’s autograph. It was my old Bob Schaad Record Club card, something that I had totally forgotten about. I remembered the name Bob Schaad, but little else. Bob Schaad had a record store in downtown Evansville, my home town. I don’t remember much about the store, but evidently I was a member of their Record Club.
It looks like if I bought ten record albums, I got a whopping $.98 off of my next album. Back in the 1960’s albums were very expensive, especially for a teen like me, who didn’t have a lot of money, so it would have been a big bonus to get 98 cents off, after buying ten.
This Record Club card tells another story. See the two “X’’s over the stamps. After I got David Crosby’s autograph on the other side of the card, I certainly didn’t want to turn it in when I became eligible for the free album, so I must have taken the card into Bob Schaad’s and explained the problem, and they marked the two “X”s over the stamps to indicated they were no longer valid, then they gave me a new card, with the same amount of stamps, so I could still get my $.98 discount, and at the same time keep my David Crosby autograph.
The other cards that I had gotten autographs on the back of, were:
A 1963 Driver’s Education Certificate so I could be taught how to drive at my high school when I was 15 years old.
A high school “Letterman’s Pass” (I was on the track team). The pass allowed me to get into all of my high school’s “home” games.
My college student ID and also my college library card.
At my age, I have been enjoying looking back at the life I lived, and certainly, seeing these sixty year old artifacts that I used to carry around in my wallet, stimulated some long buried memories.
Take a look at my paintings: davidmarchant2.ca