The Real Jake: Colonel Jacob Ruppert: the Man Who Built the Yankee Empire / Part 2
Also Read The 1927 New York Yankees,Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig and Company: How Murderers' Row Shaped Baseball All About Baseball's Greatest team - - the New York Yankees
The Real Jake Colonel
Rupperts End Game with the
Yankees
By Harvey Frommer
In the tenth year of the Great Depression, Colonel Jacob
Ruppert, was one of the few who prospered big time
while the economy of the nation collapsed.
Part of that prospering came from his business acumen - -the good
sense to buy New York City property at depression prices like the former
Bank of United States Building, at Fifth and Forty-fourth in 1931, the Commerce
Building, at Third and Forty-fourth, in 1932, a competing brewery in an area
bounded by Second and Third Avenues, and Ninety-second and Ninety-fourth
Streets, just east of his own.
By 1935, all his property holdings had more than doubled in value.
As the decade of the 30s neared its end, his real estate holdings were valued
at $30 million, his total estate at double that amount.
He
still
had the world by a string. Then the string snapped.
Strangely and sadly, the normally vigorous Colonel
attended
just two games at Yankee Stadium during the 1938 season. He followed his
beloved Yankees from a sickbed, listening to games on the radio for the first
time. So impressed was he by the mediums fit with baseball that he
arranged for all Bronx Bomber home games to be broadcast on radio. That was
his final official act.
On Friday morning January
13, 1939, the master builder of the New York Yankees
empire passed away at his home from complication
from phlebitis. He was 71 years old.
Aside from close relatives
and medical attendants, the last person to see
Ruppert alive was Babe
Ruth. At 7 P.M. on January 12th,
the Colonel was in an oxygen tent where he had been for several hours. After
removal from the tent the first thing he said, according to his nurse, was:
"I want to see the Babe."
The
dying man opened his eyes, reached out his hand to the Big Bam.
He murmured only one word, "Babe."
Ruth said: "It was the only time in his life he ever called me Babe
to my face."
On Monday
January 16, 1939, the procession that resembled a state funeral started out
from the Ruppert apartment on 93rd Street
in Manhattan. More than 4,000 jammed inside the historic St. Patricks
Cathedral including brewers, public dignitaries, the bosses of the Tammany
and Bronx Democratic machines, more than 500
Ruppert employees, fans and
family.
Lou Gehrig, Babe Ruth,
Yankee manager Joe McCarthy, general manager Ed Barrow, farm system director
George Weiss, members of the 1939 team including Tommy
Henrich and Johnny Murphy, chief scout Paul
Krichell, Boston Red Sox manager Joe Cronin and
Chicago White Sox manager Jimmie Dykes, star players like
Honus Wagner and Eddie Collins all were in
attendance.
More than 10,000 people were outside the Cathedral. The service ran
for about an hour. The family was represented by one brother, two sisters,
two nephews, and four nieces. They sat in the front left pew. Dignitaries
Mayor Fiorello H. LaGuardia, United States Senator
Robert E Wagner, former New York State governor Al Smith sat in
the front right
pew.
Honorary pallbearers included Baseball Commissioner Judge
Kenesaw Mountain Landis, Yankee manager Joe McCarthy,
Ed Barrow, Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Yankee farm system director George M. Weiss,
Senator Robert F. Wagner, Al Smith, President of the American
League
William Harridge, and congressman
"Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald, former mayor of Boston.
After the ceremony a fifty car cortege headed to
Kensico Cemetery in Westchester County where Colonel
Jacob Rupperts burial was in the family
mausoleum.
A
vast fortune was basically left to three women.
Twenty million dollars
was for two nieces.
And one third of the estate was left
to a former chorus girl Helen Winthrop Weyant,
37. Her name had never appeared
in the press before. She lived on 55th Street in Manhattan with her mother.
She was described in newspapers as a ward, as formerly
a chorus girl, and by The Sporting
News as "a former showgirl friend."
Claiming
she had met the Colonel about 14 years before his death,
Weyant told reporters that that she had no
idea why he left her so much money."
The
New York Yankees would play on through the decades under new ownerships.
And it would not be until 2013 that Colonel Jacob
Ruppert, the man who created the Yankee Empire,
would finally and deservedly be admitted to the National Baseball Hall of
Fame in Cooperstown, New York.
About the Author
Dr. Harvey Frommer received his Ph.D. from New York University. Professor Emeritus, Distinguished Professor nominee, Recipient of the "Salute to Scholars Award" at CUNY where he taught writing for many years, the prolific author was cited by the Congressional Record and the New York State Legislature as a sports historian and journalist.
His sports books include autobiographies of sports legends Nolan Ryan, Red
Holzman and Tony Dorsett, the classics
"Shoeless
Joe and Ragtime Baseball,"
"New
York City Baseball: 1947-1957." The 1927 Yankees." His
"Remembering
Yankee Stadium" was published to acclaim in 2008. His latest book, a
Boston Globe Best Seller, is
"Remembering
Fenway Park." Autographed and discounted copies of all Harvey Frommer
books are available direct from the author. Please consult his home page:
http://harveyfrommersports.com/remembering_fenway/