The Morning Call (Sunday)

A TIP OF THE BALLCAP TO No. 7

Fans can buy a share of Yankees great Mickey Mantle’s childhood home for just $7

- By Debra Kamin

Long before he was switch-hitting for the New York Yankees, a young Mickey Mantle was taking swings against his righthande­d father and his left-handed grandfathe­r in front of a shed next to his family’s humble 670-square-foot house in tiny Commerce, Oklahoma. More often than not, the young slugger would knock the pitches clear over the house’s roof. Sometimes he’d smack line drives into the side of the rusted shed, where visible dings in the walls remain to this day.

Recently, fans of the “Commerce Comet,” arguably the most beloved Yankee of all time, were given the opportunit­y to own a piece of Mantle’s childhood home for just a few dollars — $7 to be precise.

Rally, a collectibl­es company that offers buyers fractional ownership in everything from sports cars to classic comic books, is getting into the real estate game. The company purchased the two-bedroom house, which sits at 319 S. Quincy St. in Commerce, for $175,000 in 2022. It replaced the roof and expanded the porch. Inside, thanks to careful preservati­on from previous owners, the home resembles a time capsule from the blue-collar 1930s, with a washboard in the kitchen and sagging red sofas.

The sale comprises 47,000 ownership shares for $7 apiece (valuing the house at $329,000). The amount is both a nod to Mantle’s iconic No. 7 jersey and to the number of times he led the Yankees to the World Series championsh­ip.

Mantle is the greatest claim to fame for Commerce, a sleepy former mining town along Route 66 with fewer than 3,000 residents. The city’s average home price is just shy of $60,000, according to Zillow, and aside from Mantle’s childhood home, its top attraction­s are the Hitch-N-Post flea market and Dairy King, a mom-andpop joint serving hamburgers, ice cream and cookies emblazoned with “Route 66” from inside an old-time gas station. A bronze statue of Mantle welcomes visitors on Mickey Mantle Boulevard at the edge of town.

Michael Hart, Commerce’s city administra­tor and previously its mayor, was raised in the house next door and remembers, as a child in the 1980s, playing in a sandbox with a neighbor when a woman walked up and asked if they knew the history of their street.

“Growing up, I was in and out of the house all the time, just running circles in that place,” he said. “It’s interestin­g that people from all over the world are now going to be so focused on Commerce. It’s a small town and not a ton goes on here, so to have this focus potentiall­y headed our way is a neat opportunit­y.”

Rally was founded in 2016 and this summer opened a brick-and-mortar museum in New York to showcase some of its rarest collectibl­es, including a 1780 letter signed by George Washington, a Marilyn Monroe print by Andy Warhol and the skull of a 60 million-year-old triceratop­s. For its first foray into real estate, said co-founder and chief product officer Rob Petrozzo, Mickey Mantle’s childhood home made sense.

“We wanted something that really could be considered a collectibl­e as much as it is considered real estate. And the most collectibl­e names in sports and in collecting history is Mickey Mantle,” Petrozzo said in a phone interview.

Indeed, Mantle, who died in 1995 at age 63, has been as valuable to the collectibl­es industry as he was to the Yankees. After retiring in 1969, the Hall of Famer made countless appearance­s and signed thousands of autographs at sports convention­s. In 2022, a Mantle rookie card became the most valuable piece of sports memorabili­a ever sold at auction, notching $12.6 million.

Petrozzo, a New York native and die-hard Yankees fan, said the home’s value lies in its story. “The genesis of Mickey Mantle’s career started here,” he said. “For us and for our end users, that is exactly what we look for in any asset. It is real estate, but it’s also a collectibl­e.”

About 2,200 of the 47,000 total shares have been set aside for residents of Commerce, who will receive them as gifts from the company. Shareholde­rs will later be able to vote on what to do with the property.

Rally said in a news release that potential future uses of the home include turning it into a museum or national landmark, or adding a baseball diamond to the yard for Little League players in Commerce. Should these future plans for the home produce profits, shareholde­rs will receive quarterly dividends.

 ?? AP FILE ?? New York Yankees star outfieldde­r Mickey Mantle poses Yankee Stadium in April 1961.
AP FILE New York Yankees star outfieldde­r Mickey Mantle poses Yankee Stadium in April 1961.
 ?? RALLY ?? Furniture in Mickey Mantle’s two-bedrom, one-bathroom childhood home in Commerce, Oklahomea.
RALLY Furniture in Mickey Mantle’s two-bedrom, one-bathroom childhood home in Commerce, Oklahomea.
 ?? RALLY ?? Mickey Mantle’s two-bedroom, one-bathroom childhood home is located in Commerce, Oklahoma.
RALLY Mickey Mantle’s two-bedroom, one-bathroom childhood home is located in Commerce, Oklahoma.
 ?? RALLY ?? An old stove in Mantle’s childhood home.
RALLY An old stove in Mantle’s childhood home.

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