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| BOSTON - Police were called to guard the condemned home of a reclusive man whose death led to the discovery of a valuable collection of vintage sports cards.
The collection, stored in 400 to 500 boxes in John F. Hessian's home in Boston's Roslindale section, included cards of such long-ago baseball stars as Ted Williams, Mickey Mantle, Willie Mays and Roberto Clemente. Hessian also had football and hockey cards dating to the 1940s in a collection police estimate could be worth up to $1 million, according to a report published Thursday in the Boston Herald. "This is like Fort Knox inside," said Michael Wiseman of Aftermath Cleaning Co., which was hired to tear through piles of trash 6-feet high to reach the cards. Hessian, 83, lived alone in the home his entire life, until a neighbor discovered him dead there on Jan. 2. Four truckloads of the cards were removed from the house last week. Hessian also had some valuable cards stored in a safe deposit box in an unknown location. Hessian is survived by two cousins who are left to hunt for a will or determine who inherits the card collection. |
----------Comcast.net strange news
Wahoo, can you imagine what those cards are worth? I'm not a huge card collector, mainly coin collection here but I can just imagine what the price value on those cards would be. I mean think of a card that is in mint condition what was released back when Ted Williams, Mickey Mantle, Willie Mays and Roberto Clemente were hitting home runs and earning the world series trophy.
