“To know the HORRORS OF WAR is to want PEACE. This is one of a series of 240 True Stores of Modern Warfare. Save to get them all,” as published by Gum Inc. A fitting statement for a personal discovery in the bubble-gum history of trading cards. Originally released February 17, 1938 by the Philadelphia-based Gum Inc., The HORRORS OF WAR anti-war trading cards were manifested by J. Warren Bowman, the company’s then president. Bowman art directed horrific war accounts working closely with the George Moll advertising agency in Philadelphia. The HORRORS OF WAR is a large set -- 288 cards divided into two series. The original set has 240 cards that focus on the Spanish Civil War, Ethiopian War and the Chinese-Japanese War. 48 Cards came later as a supplemental release. Among these cards are three that show Adolf Hitler, the beginnings of WWII history. By May 9, 1938 Gum Inc. reported sales of 50 million packets. May 20, 1938 the Japanese government seized 500 boxes of the gum in Yokohama and protests to Washington that the cards depict “false scenes of Japanese cruelties in China.” J. Warren Bowman described, “That was a good joke on the Japanese,” announcing, “I am making $44,000 a week on these cards and predict I will sell 100 million packets by year end.” He was right.
BGC 022Each politically charged, often grotesque and violent card was meticulously detailed on the front with a simple hand ruled border with rounded corners. In compliment to the embattled scene on the front is an appropriately titled, numbered and historical account printed on the back of each card. Tiny-typography guides you through the fifteen-lines (or so) of detailed accounts chronicling the atrocities of a bloody offense/defense colorfully illustrated on the front. HORRORS OF WAR got an endorsement from President Franklin D. Roosevelt. He allegedly used the cards to show people some of the horrific things that were happening overseas. At the time, America was still recovering from WWI and there was little support to get involved in the increasing unstable environment overseas. And while some politicians mocked Roosevelt, the attention helped push the set's popularity to new levels. 1938 Gum Inc. Horrors of War continues to resonate today. Cards continue to command strong prices, no matter the card's condition. Historians can look to the cards to debate their place as a propaganda tool and how they shaped sentiment among the young people and the general public. While there's much to debate about the set, its status as a premier set in the hobby isn't one of them. I have a near complete set
Price: $7000.00
