REMEMBERING
ELSTON HOWARD
By Harvey Frommer
“A
man of great
gentleness and dignity”
–on his Plaque in Monument Park
“He deserves credit and where would I be
without
him? Phew! He can give me a job in the outfield and he can catch,
too. Good kid, too. He's good.”—Casey Stengel
With
all the newspaper headlines today
documenting angst and anger and antagonisms in the sporting scene and
elsewhere
about race relations and unity, a flashback to a different time and a
remembering of another Yankee great is welcome respite.
The
Yankees scouted Elston Howard playing in the Negro Leagues for the
Kansas City
Monarchs. He was signed to a minor league contract and broke in with in
with
Muskegon, Michigan in 1950 in the Class-A Central League. His playing
there was
interrupted by two years Army service.
In 1953, Howard played for Kansas City of the American
Association, the
Yankees' top farm team. He did well, hitting .286, collecting 10 home
runs,
driving in 70 runs.
There
was much clamoring for the Yankees to promote Howard to the major
league roster
and finally have their first African-American player. No dice. In 1954, the Yankees assigned him to Toronto
in the International League, outside their organization. More
controversy.
Charges of Yankee prejudice and discrimination were in the news.
Frustrated but
determined, Howard batted a robust .330, hit 22 home runs, drove in 109
runs,
led the league with 16 triples and was named the International League's
Most
Valuable Player.
MONTE IRVIN: Howard like me
bided his time.
By the time he made the Yankees, he was 26.
He also had to suffer through the indignity in that first spring
training of not being able to stay with the rest of the team at their
hotel in
segregated St. Petersburg; he had to be put up by a family in the black
section
of town. He bore up under this, too.
On
April 14, 1955—almost eight years to the day that Jackie Robinson broke
the
color barrier—the Yankees called up catcher Elston Howard. He had been
in the
team's farm system since 1950 and won the International League's Most
Valuable
Player in 1954 and could have been the regular catcher for most major
league
teams.
Manager
Casey Stengel appreciated Howard’s versatility and that rookie season,
one in
which he earned $10,000, with Yogi Berra
still quite “the man,” Howard caught nine games played and played 75
games in
the outfield.
Pressure
for years had been put on the Yankees to break
their own baseball color line and Elston Howard, affectionately known
as
“Ellie,” was a wise choice. He had the goods.
Much has been made of the fact that Casey Stengel said: “When I
finally
got me a nigger, I got one who could not run.”
Those
who knew Casey knew the comment was another example of his running his
mouth,
an old habit that was hard to break. The “Ol’ Perfessor” was also very
much
aware that although the first black Yankee was not swift afoot, he was
a
tremendous athlete, dangerous as a hitter, a very capable handler of
pitchers,
a class act all the way around.
And
it was the St. Louis born Howard who made the point: "No one in the
Yankee
organization made me conscious of my color." And he fit in and
flourished
in the winning culture of the New York Yankees.
Clear
evidence of his acceptance was visible a month after
his major league debut on May 14th. Howard slashed a triple in the
bottom of
the ninth inning with two outs, two runners on and the Yankees trailing
the
Tigers 6-5. The three bagger vaulted the Yankees to a 7-6 victory.
Entering the
clubhouse, Howard was touched by the carpet of white towels Collins and
Mantle
had laid out from his locker to the shower.
Casey Stengel utilized Howard from
1955-1957 in the outfield and as catcher.
An American League All-Star nine straight seasons (1957-1965),a
two time
Gold Glove catcher, Howard batted over .300 three times. Number 32 had
a heck
of a career not the least of which included being a major part of ten
pennant
winners and four World Series champion teams and winning the MVP award
in 1963,
the first black player to be so honored in the American League. A jubilant Howard said: “I’ve just won the
Nobel Prize of baseball.”
When
Ralph Houk became manager in 1961, Howard finally became the regular
catcher.
The 36-year-old Yogi Berra went to left field. “Ellie” had the season
of his
life -- hitting .348. He also rapped 21 homers, drove in 77 runs. In
1964, he
won his second Gold Glove, and led American League catchers with a .998
fielding mark, as the Yankees won their fifth straight pennant.
Inventive,
interested in all things baseball, Howard pioneered the hinged glove.
That made
possible one-handed catching and a catcher being able to place his
exposed hand
behind his back protecting his “meat” hand. The weighted donut swung by
some
batters in the on-deck circle was also invented by Howard.
In
1967, Howard was traded to Boston. A
few years later he came back to the Yanks as the first black coach in
the
American League. He was a vital and respected member of the coaching
staff for
eleven years. A solid catcher who
played 13 years for the Yanks, “Ellie” was in nine World Series. He was
strong
and solid in the clubhouse, a guy who everyone could count on.
Tragically, man they called “Ellie” passed
away from a heart attack on December 14, 1980. He was only 51 years
old.
Red
Barber said: "The Yankees lost more class than George Steinbrenner
could
buy in ten years."
About
Harvey Frommer: One of the most prolific and
respected sports journalists and oral historians in the United States,
author
of the autobiographies of legends Nolan Ryan, Tony Dorsett, and Red
Holzman,
Dr. Harvey Frommer is an expert on the New York Yankees and has
arguably
written more books, articles and reviews on the New York Yankees than
anyone. In 2010, he was selected by the City of New York as
an
historical consultant for the re-imagined old Yankee Stadium site,
Heritage
Field. A professor for more than two decades in the MALS program at
Dartmouth
College, Frommer was dubbed “Dartmouth’s Mr. Baseball” by their alumni
magazine.
His ULTIMATE
YANKEE BOOK debuts this fall. PRE ORDER from
AMAZON: http://www.frommerbooks.com/ultimate-yankees.html.
“As a
lifelong Yankees fan, I was devouring every last
delicious new detail about my beloved Bronx Bombers in this fabulous
new book.”
—Ed Henry, author of 42 Faith: The Rest of the Jackie Robinson
Story
Article
is Copyright © 2017 by Harvey Frommer. All
rights reserved worldwide