Update at 8:06 p.m. ET. Card Sells For $80,000
The nearly 150-year-old
Brooklyn Atlantics
The buyer,
the Portland Press Herald reports
"It's such a small card for $80,000," he said after the sale. "It's unbelievable. Just holding it, my hands are trembling a little bit."
Here's more from the paper:
"LeBlanc said he bought the card as an investment for his 4-year-old son, Alex, who has health challenges that require stays in the hospital and many trips to doctors and therapists. Alex's mom died when he was born."
The card will go into a safe deposit box until LeBlanc decides to sell it.
Our original post:
Yard sale purchases can be hit or miss, but a Maine antiques picker's cheap booty may net him up to $100,000 at auction on Wednesday.
The New York Post reports
Troy Thibodeau, manager of the Saco River Auction Co. that's handling the sale,
told the Portland Press Herald
The Brooklyn Atlantics was an amateur team that won the National Association of Base Ball Players championship in 1861, 1864 and 1865. The team "usually crushed their competition, scoring two or three times more runs than their opponents," according to the Library of Congress.
The baseball card Hartford found differs from today's baseball cards because it's an original portrait of the team — nine players and their manager — mounted on a card, rather than the shot of just one player most people are familiar with these days. (This portrait on a card thing was de rigueur during the Civil War era, as we
learned last year
Some may recall that a
collection of baseball cards found in an Ohio attic
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