Just to show what a total newbie I am; Are the courts on this deck also the predecessor to the Bicycle courts, or Bee and Hoyle too? Or are all those developed parallel to eachother?
It's not such a n00b question. The only dumb question is the one you don't ask because you were afraid of looking like a n00b. EVERYONE was a n00b once - we're sympathetic.
Tom mentioned that this was Russell Morgan and Company's second deck series, numbered 202 - the first was the Tigers #101 deck. It was printed in 1881, while the first Bicycle deck, which was brand #808, came out four years later. Bees were already in production with their originating company, New York Consolidated Card Co., as of somewhere between 1820-1840, I think 1823. The Hoyle brand for playing cards didn't come into existence until the 1920s, though I believe it was around for a few hundred years prior as a brand name for game rule books, including cards.
So court-wise, this shares more of a heritage with the Bicycle deck than the others. I recalled that some of the brands Russell Morgan sold before and soon after becoming USPC were more deluxe editions and had better printing details, more colors, etc., while others were more for a budget audience and were more simply printed, having as few as two or three colors. I'd guess that Sportsmans were toward the higher end of the quality spectrum.
Trivia: if I'm not mistaken, Bee is USPC's oldest brand still in print, though it was originally in print by a former competitor that later became their subsidiary. I think Bicycle's the second oldest, but I'm not 100% certain as I don't know the age of the Tally-Ho deck.