A Fan Club That Kept the Flame Alive
Long before the internet made Disney fandom instantaneous — before message boards, before fan wikis, before the endless scroll of collector groups — there was The Mouse Club. Published out of the dedication of Edward and Beverly Tumbusch, this newsletter was the connective tissue of a dispersed but passionate community of Disney enthusiasts throughout the 1970s and 1980s. In an era when knowing what other collectors were buying, selling, or discovering required actual paper and a postage stamp, The Mouse Club was the heartbeat of the hobby.
This combined issue — bringing together Issues #59 and #60 in a single celebratory package — marks the newsletter's 10th Anniversary, a remarkable milestone for any independent fan publication. That milestone fell across the turn of the seasons, Winter 1989 into Spring 1990, a moment when the Disney collector world was beginning to feel the first stirrings of what would become a full-blown collecting boom in the decade to come. Holding this issue is holding a snapshot of the hobby just before everything changed.
Mickey in Disguise: The Cover That Tells a Story
The cover design alone makes this issue a treasure. Set against a vivid bright green background printed in crisp black ink, the illustration centers on one of the most beloved versions of Mickey Mouse: the 1930s pie-eyed design, that early, rounder, more innocent incarnation of the character that predates the gloved, confident Mickey of the postwar years. Here he appears wearing a paper bag disguise — a whimsical, self-aware visual joke that speaks directly to the collector community leafing through these pages. The stone archway framing the scene was drawn by an artist credited simply as "KEN," a reminder of how deeply personal and handcrafted these publications were.
The pie-eyed Mickey holds a special place in collector culture. He represents the earliest chapter of Disney history, the era of steamboats and black-and-white shorts, of a scrappy studio finding its voice. Vintage merchandise bearing that original Mickey design — the wide oval eyes, the simpler silhouette — commands deep affection precisely because it connects back to those origins. Featuring him on the 10th Anniversary cover was not accidental. It was a statement: we remember where this all began.
What The Mouse Club Meant to Collectors
The Tumbusch name is respected in Disney collecting circles. Edward and Beverly Tumbusch were among the foundational figures who helped establish Disney memorabilia as a serious collecting category worthy of documentation, research, and community. The Mouse Club newsletter served as a forum for sharing discoveries, trading leads on rare finds, and building the shared knowledge base that any collector community depends upon. In the absence of auction databases or price guides, these pages were how enthusiasts understood the market, identified variations, and connected with others who shared their passion.
A combined double-issue like #59/#60 was itself a special event — a gesture of celebration and gratitude toward a readership that had sustained the publication through a full decade. It suggests a community that had grown, evolved, and deepened over ten years of correspondence and shared enthusiasm.
Condition, Character, and the Estate Context
This copy presents beautifully for its age. The edges remain crisp, with only slight corner softness that speaks to careful storage rather than heavy use. A very minor spine ripple — the kind earned by being read and valued, not neglected — gives it the honest character of a document that actually mattered to someone. The bright green cover has held its color, and the black ink illustration retains strong contrast and detail.
This issue came to us as part of a larger Disney estate collection, assembled over decades by someone who understood that the story of Disney fandom is itself worth preserving. Pre-internet collector publications like The Mouse Club are increasingly scarce in any condition; finding a 10th Anniversary combined issue with this kind of presence is genuinely uncommon. For researchers, historians of fan culture, or collectors who remember receiving issues like this in the mail, it carries a weight that goes well beyond the printed page.
Whether you lived through this era of Disney collecting or are discovering it now, this newsletter is a primary document — handmade, community-driven, and irreplaceable.
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