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Description

Early lumber from an ascendant legend!

1953 Mickey Mantle Game Used Bat, PSA/DNA GU 8.5 From The Steven Lane Collection. This was the year that Mickey Mantle coined the term, "tape measure home run," or, rather, it was Yankees press secretary Red Patterson who chased down the young center fielder's first long ball of the 1953 season to where it stopped in the backyard of a Washington, DC home 565 feet from home plate of Griffith Stadium. It was a fitting way for the future Hall of Famer to mark his two-year MLB anniversary on April 17, 1953, the first of twenty-one homers he'd launch that season en route to a second All-Star Game appearance and third World Championship.

Presented is a signature model Hillerich & Bradsby K55 dating to the dawning era of one of the greatest careers in baseball history. Any 1953 Mantle bat will inevitably remind us of the $324,000 price realized for a World Series bat from that year which Heritage auctioned in May 2024. The small "dimple" imperfection at the 10 o'clock position of the center brand is apparent on both 1953 bats, a trait unique to that vintage that allowed the experts at PSA/DNA to assign the gilded vintage.

Game use is outstanding with repaired grain checking on the back barrel and a multitude of ball marks and stitch impressions on both sides of the barrel to document the Mick's switch-hitting style. Cleat marks and blue rack streaks also appear, and the finish has been brushed with a light coating of urethane. Handle is uncracked.

Length of thirty-five inches (35") and current weight of thirty-two ounces (32.1 oz.) are consistent with Mantle's entry in the professional bat ordering records (PBOR) for May 28th. LOA from PSA/DNA, GU 8.5.


More Information: The Steven Lane Collection

Steven Lane is a 69-year-old, semi-retired divorce attorney living in New Orleans. While his occupation has been the law, his passion has always been baseball. More specifically, the New York Yankees. Over the past six decades, he has amassed one of the largest private collections of Yankees-related memorabilia south of Cooperstown, New York. And this August, Heritage Auctions is proud to present Part Two of his massive collection.

"My daughter really has no interest in most of it," explained Lane, "so I thought it was time to share this incredible collection with other people who could appreciate it."

Lane's collection consists of thousands of items with heavy emphasis placed on the late, great Mickey Mantle. There are authentic, high-end pieces he's obtained through private transactions, and there are items he's acquired directly from the Mantle family. Asked to break it all down by category, he said: "Ten percent autographs, twenty percent cards and seventy percent memorabilia."

This second edition focuses exclusively on The Commerce Comet with some of the most unique Mantle items that exist. Including: Mantle's earliest known signed photograph, penned by a 7 year old Mantle on the back of his 4th grade class photo; the earliest known Mantle signed ball, autographed after his first minor league game and The Mick’s personal copy of his 1953 contract with the Yankees.

The Beginning
Born and bred in Brooklyn, Lane was introduced to baseball by his father, Lawrence. They attended their first Yankees home game together in 1961. Steven was immediately hooked. The Dodgers and Giants had both left town for the West Coast, and the Mets had yet to debut, so the Yankees were the only game in town.
The '61 campaign also marked the season that Mantle and Yankees teammate Roger Maris were locked in their collective pursuit of Babe Ruth's single-season home run record of 60, which the Bambino set in 1927. Even though Maris eventually broke Ruth's record with his 61st home run on the final day of the season, it was Mantle who earned Lane's allegiance.

"I hate to say it, but I was one of those people who felt Mantle had been with the Yankees all those years and if you read the papers back then they kind of painted Maris as this bad guy and what right did he have to break Ruth's record. I mean, Mickey had overcome all these injuries over so many years with the team, so I took Mantle's side and I've always been a Mantle fan."

He's been acquiring Yankees memorabilia ever since but it all started with Topps baseball cards. Initially he was buying wax packs at the corner store or getting boxes of Topps cards from his grandfather. But over time, his emphasis moved toward Mantle in particular.

"I started with baseball cards but as I got a job and my income level increased, I was able to buy higher-priced items. At some point - and I'm not exactly sure it was a conscious decision - I decided to move from cards to memorabilia, really before anybody else was collecting any of this stuff.

"And I'm not going to say it was planned, but I started to realize I was unknowingly tracing Mickey Mantle's entire life from essentially when he was about seven or eight years old up until he died [August 13, 1995]. And I just kept filling it in over time."

Meeting Mickey
Lane met Mantle on a few occasions, the first of which took place at a first of its kind Baseball Fantasy Camp in Florida in 1985. It was there that he secured his first Mantle signature directly from The Mick.
"I had Mickey sign a baseball for me," he said. "It wasn't even a ball I purchased, but I ended up having that same ball signed by Hank Aaron, Willie Mays and Joe DiMaggio. It's easily the most treasured personal item I have in the collection. I didn't pay a penny for it, but that was my first serious memorabilia item. It still means the world to me."
He also met Mantle in 1989 and again in 1994. During their last meeting, at which Lane shared a personal pic of the two, Mickey told Lane that he should attend Mantle's upcoming Fantasy Camp the next year. Unfortunately, Mantle died before that could happen, but Lane's dream of acquiring more Mantle memorabilia continued to grow.

Writing the Book
In late 2022, based on his love of Mantle and the slugger's Hall of Fame career, Lane released a hardcover book entitled Mickey Mantle: A Life in Memorabilia. It chronicles his extensive collection of Mantle collectibles but also pays tribute to Mickey's 18 years in the major leagues.

"My book is a museum in a book," said Lane. "People who could never have possession of these items can now flip through the book and see these one-of-a-kind pieces that have only been in the hands of, to a great extent, Mickey Mantle, members of the Mantle family, or me."

Starting in May, collectors will have the chance to obtain many of these coveted artifacts. In addition to the Mantle cards going up for bid, Lane is excited to see collector reaction surrounding a beautiful 1978 New York Yankees World Series Trophy he obtained.

"I'd like to mix it up so that there are things that are attainable for everyone," he said "We've got autographed bats, balls, yearbooks, you name it.

"I go to baseball card shows and to The National every year and I've seen, over the past five years, an increasingly younger crowd, some of whom are familiar with Mantle and some of whom are not. But his name is the one name that is always out there and I just feel like now is the time to share it. I know there are people out there who would like to have these items."


Auction Info

Auction Dates
August, 2025
23rd-24th Saturday-Sunday
Bids + Registered Phone Bidders: 35
Lot Tracking Activity: N/A
Page Views: 721

Buyer's Premium per Lot:
22% of the successful bid per lot.

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