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New
York City Baseball,1947-1957
New York City Baseball: 1947-1957 the Golden
Age
By Harvey Frommer
Baseball
in October in New York City seemed like it would never come to an end. That
is why this October of 2013 it seems strange that the New York Yankees and
the New York Mets are finished with baseball, not able to make the play-offs.
And the old cry of the old Brooklyn Dodger fan Wait til next
year seems appropriate.
Also appropriate
for me is the re-issue of my
New
York City Baseball 1947 1957. Published In
1980,my seventh book at the time, remains one of
my favorites.
It was written on a clunky IBM typewriter and the interviews were
conducted with a big box cassette tape recorder. I transcribed the interviews
by hand, slowly, painstakingly, with great respect for the memories and insights
of so many people who were kind enough to pause, to think, to evoke, to bring
back the
time.
It was a
time when there were three teams, the Brooklyn Dodgers, the New York Giants
and the New York Yankees. Each team was distinct. Each team boasted a fabled
history. Each one had loyal and highly knowledgeable fans rooting for them.
Except for 1948, each of
the years from 1947 to 1957, a baseball team, sometimes two, from New York
City was playing in the World
Series.
One of those
I interviewed for the book was owner Walter OMalley in his box at Dodger
Stadium in Los Angeles. He seemed so much less villainous than he had been
painted.
If
they had only given me the downtown Brooklyn location I wanted near the Long
Island Railroad, I would have stayed, he said. If only he could have
known all these years later about the Brooklyn Nets playing in the billion
dollar Barclay Center close by where he would have built a new home for the
Dodgers.
I interviewed
Rachel Robinson, widow of Jackie Robinson. She was gracious, generous in
giving of her time and memories as was personable Monte Irvin who had the
talent to be the first black major leaguer but it was not to
be and he explained why. I would have taken a bat and probably killed
somebody. I could have not held back from that abuse.
One of the
great voices in this book (who later appeared in several other books I wrote)
is that of the irrepressible Irving Rudd, a real New York City character
who for a time was the public relations chief of the Dodgers. He told the
tale of famed General Douglas MacArthur coming to Ebbets Field, of Branch
Rickey planning the breaking of the color line no matter the personal cost,
of talented players and fanatical fans, of special promo events, providing
an over-the top enrichment to this work and incredible historical documentation.
In
New York City Baseball Mel Allen
and Red Barber in their southern voices provide perspective, explaining the
art and craft of baseball.
One more
time we hear Mel Allens home run
call: ""Going. . . Going. . .
Gone!"
One more time we hear
Red Barber sounding off: Oh, Doctor.
One more time we hear about the Subway Series, Wait
til Next Year, Dat Day and the Shot Heard
Round the World.
Phil Rizzuto,
Hank Bauer, Eddie Lopat and Jerry Coleman, who gave me the idea for the book,
and others talk Yankees with pride and detail and even wonder.
I
did not know it then but I was working as the oral historian I would become,
disguised even to myself.
And the
great strength of New York City Baseball and many of the other books I have created
rests on the oral history, the multitude of voices and memories I was able
to reach and record.
The Duke, the Yankee Clipper,
Oisk and Campy, Preacher,
Westy, the Barber and Mandrake the Magician,
Blacky and Whitey,
Skoonj, Pee Wee and Newk,
Yogi, Ellie, Old Reliable, the Peepuls
Cherce, the
Old Redhead and Old Reliable and the Ole
Perfessor,
the Chairman of the Board, Scooter, the Mick, Ellie, Slick and Yogi, the
Rifle, the
Voice of the Yankees, Dem Bums
...
are all in these pages talking and talked
about.
That is why it so rewarding for me that that this book of mine has
another new life. It deals with a special time in the history of New York
City. It was a time when you could walk down the street and the sound of
baseball in spring, summer and fall was always on, always alluring, always
special. It was a time when one
could
go to a butcher shop, a candy store, a laundromat,
moving from one to another virtually without missing a pitch, the sound of
New York City Baseball was always on.
So come
let us re-live one more time the golden age of New York City Baseball,
1947-1957.
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 (original issue)." 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/