Quote:
Originally Posted by mr2686
Anything for a friend, Mark! Seriously though, how is it that when I go through my stuff, I find maybe an extra Joe Cronin autograph I forgot I had, but when you look you pull out Mantles, Dimaggio's and now Koufax game used pants. Can you imagine if we were car collectors? "Oh, I forgot I had a 66 Chevelle SS in my garage" All kidding aside, are you going to display those at some point...maybe with some other Koufax items?
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Mike,
Here's the story.
In 1979, my mother and father were in a very serious car accident. They recovered well physically and got a settlement of $25K in damages. They took the money and purchased a large lot of sports cards and memorabilia with the intent of starting a business. According to them, the point was to give me something to do that would serve to keep me out of trouble, and to spend time with my dad.
From 1979 to 1991, my father and I ran a sports memorabilia business together. We had a store in Teaneck NJ for approx 6 years and went to probably 40 shows per year. In 1992, my schooling no longer allowed me to participate in the business and we closed the store. My father had polio and was unable to do it by himself. Plus, I don't think he really wanted to do it without his best friend.
We never made much money, because we kept so much of it in stuff. When we closed the store, everything went into a newly built, waterproof garage, that was built primarily for storage.
When I moved away for school, I had no place to take my entire collection, so it stayed at their house. I go back to my mom's home periodically, to help her clean up the house and will bring some stuff back here as I have room for.
I hope that explains it. That is why I "find" so much stuff.
What I have scanned on my photobucket site is a fraction of what I have in my home, and what I have in my home is a fraction of my entire collection.
My father passed away in 1995 and all the stuff we had in the store is still sitting in the garage.
I miss my Dad. We had some great times together. Going through this stuff reminds me of him quite a bit. That's part of the reason why I still do it.
Best,
Mark