HANK
BAUER
By Harvey Frommer
He was born in East St.
Louis, Illinois on
July 31, 1922. Like Yogi Berra, his education only lasted through the
eighth
grade. The tough and gritty Bauer was a Marine in the Second World War
and saw
action in the battle of Okinawa.
"We
went in with 64," he recalled, "and six of us came out." He won
quite a few battle stars for his combat in the Pacific.
Signing
with the Yankees after the
war, the rugged Bauer climbed up the minor league rungs. In late 1948,
he was
promoted from Kansas City. He was 26, old for a rookie.
Busting it in one game in the
outfield which was his way, he took notice of centerfielder Joe
DiMaggio
glaring at him in a not too friendly manner.
"Did
I do something wrong?"
a puzzled Bauer asked.
"No, you didn't do anything
wrong," DiMaggio responded. "But you're the first son of a bitch who
ever invaded my territory."
Bauer never invaded the Yankee
Clipper’s territory again.
Casey Stengel often platooned him
in the outfield. "I didn't like it," Bauer said. "But there
wasn't much I could do about it. He was the boss. Later on in my career
I
finally realized he probably prolonged my career a couple of years."
“He had that rough, grumbled
talk, but was a real nice guy,” Bauer’s old teammate Irv Noren
recalled. “He
was a tough guy who got a lot of respect – no one wanted to fight him
not even
Billy Martin.”
A
solid hitter with the power, Bauer collected 8 first-inning leadoff
career home
runs. Playing on nine pennant winners for the Yankees from 1949 thru
1959, his
favorite expression was: "Don't mess with money!" When he saw a
teammate he though was not putting out as much effort as though was
required,
Bauer used that phrase as a wakeup call.
A Yankee for 1,406 games spread
over a dozen seasons, a three-time All-Star, and one of Casey Stengel's
favorites, Bauer didn't make mental mistakes and became testy when his
teammates did.
The
Yankee time for Hank Bauer ended in 1960 when he was shipped off to
Kansas City
in a big trade that brought Roger Maris to the Yankees. It ended a
Yankee
career that spanned the the end of the DiMaggio era through the rise of
Mickey
Mantle.
Dependable,
selfless, honed in, were just a few of the ways he was described. Famed
cartoonist Willard Mullin chose Henry Albert Bauer, who had a rugged
handsomeness, as the model for the prototypical Yankee.
Oddly
enough, Hank Bauer does not have a plaque in Monument Park.
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 can be
ordered from AMAZON: http://www.frommerbooks.com/ultimate-yankees.html.