The Last Hero

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by Howard Bryant


  28 He just would not open up to you: Interview with Wes Covington, Eau Claire Leader-Telegram, August 16, 1993.

  29 No one can guess his IQ: Al Stump, “Hank Aaron: Public Image vs. Private Reality,” Sport, August 1964.

  30 One time I got to second base: Poling, A Summer Up North, p. 40.

  31 It was never a romance: ibid, p. 52.

  32 When you think about who Henry Aaron is: interview with Jerry Poling.

  33 Jacksonville and Savannah: The Sporting News, April 15, 1953.

  34 It was toward the country: interview with Jim Frey.

  35 When you’re seventeen or eighteen years old: interview with Felix Mantilla.

  36 I remember one day I asked Henry: interview with Bill Slack.

  37 I’ll never forget that day at the depot: interview with Ed Scott.

  CHAPTER THREE: STEPIN FETCHIT

  38 Any amount you ask for that kid Henry Aaron: Milwaukee Journal, March 3, 1954.

  39 Aaron Given Divided Vote By Prophets: Milwaukee Sentinel, March 14, 1954.

  40 Aaron laid claim to a permanent roster: Mark Stewart and Mike Kennedy, Hammering Hank: How the Media Made Henry Aaron (Guilford, Connecticut: Lyons Press, 2006), p. 49.

  41 I was playing in Sarasota: Hank Aaron, with Dick Schaap: Home Run: My Life in Pictures (New York: Total Sports, 1999), p. 47.

  42 Red Sox Shade Braves, 3–2: Milwaukee Journal, March 11, 1954.

  43 a little house on stilts: interview with Henry Aaron.

  44 I remembered thinking: interview with Bill White.

  45 Mother Gibson Serves Very Tasty Table: Milwaukee Journal, March 2, 1954.

  46 Mrs. Gibson’s was the best choice at that time: interview with Henry Aaron.

  47 Behind the scenes, we made things happen: interview with Bill White.

  48 “Slow Motion” Aaron Becomes: Milwaukee Journal, March 21, 1954.

  49 He was talking about something: interview with Henry Aaron.

  50 We had so many different people: interview with Chuck Tanner.

  CHAPTER FOUR: MILWAUKEE

  51 The whole thing is utterly fantastic: The Sporting News, July 18, 1951.

  52 With the team we had: interview with Johnny Logan.

  53 We got automobiles to drive: interview with Frank Torre.

  54 The free choice of residence: Milwaukee Commission on Human Rights, The Housing of Negroes in Milwaukee, 1955, pamphlet 57-2402 (Milwaukee, 1955); available online at www.wisconsinhistory.org.

  55 The first thing I noticed about Milwaukee: interview with Henry Aaron.

  56 If it weren’t for Bill Bruton: ibid.

  57 There were beaches everywhere in Florida: Larry Moffi and Jonathan Kronstadt, Crossing the Line: Black Major Leaguers, 1947–1959 (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 1994), p. 89.

  58 My grandfather was a shortstop: interview with Greg Spahn.

  59 Spahn and I: interview with Henry Aaron.

  60 No way: Milwaukee Sentinel, March 11, 1954.

  61 He knew Henry was going to have it rough: interview with Chuck Tanner.

  62 Aaron Good Now: Milwaukee Journal, June 25, 1954.

  CHAPTER FIVE: WEHMEIER

  63 Aaron, who rarely shows emotion: This and subsequent quotes regarding the banquet are from The Sporting News, February 1, 1956.

  64 I shouldn’t dignify either question: The Sporting News, September 28, 1955.

  65 Kick his ass, Joe: interview with Johnny Logan.

  66 Baseball is a lot like church: interview with Roger Kahn.

  67 He was more than just a manager to me: Chicago Defender, May 26, 1956.

  68 I don’t care if the guy is yellow: interview with Roger Kahn.

  69 Willie’s Wallop Wins Windup: The Sporting News, November 16, 1955.

  70 It was okay to be black in the South: interview with Henry Aaron.

  71 All Mays had over Henry: interview with Johnny Logan.

  72 Robby Has Reds Buzzing: Chicago Defender, March 21, 1956.

  73 Jackie, what are you doing?: interview with Roger Kahn.

  74 Aaron Picked To Win: Chicago Defender, April 21, 1956.

  75 Dodgers, Yanks Picked To Win: ibid.

  76 You didn’t even worry about Spahn: interview with Gene Conley.

  77 Are you prepared to say that Grimm: The Sporting News, June 27, 1956.

  78 We would have been the powerhouse: interview with Johnny Logan.

  79 Burdette told me that there is no place: New York Times, September 12, 1956.

  80 Braves Open With Cardinals: Milwaukee Journal, September 28, 1956.

  81 What Happened To Braves?: Milwaukee Journal, October 1, 1956.

  82 In 1956: interview with Henry Aaron.

  CHAPTER SIX: JACKIE

  83 An outburst by Jackie Robinson: New York Times, November 2, 1956.

  84 Dear Jackie and Rachel: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress.

  85 Dear Jackie: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress.

  86 And when Jackie wants to try extra hard: New York Times, December 17, 1956.

  87 Thank you for your letter: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, Jackie Robinson Collection.

  88 Campy is quoted as saying: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress.

  89 Had something in mind: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress.

  90 Some pacifist black freak: interview with Roger Kahn.

  91 Southern Scribe Blames Jackie: Los Angeles Times, August 3, 1956.

  92 If you’ll forgive a personal experience: New York Times, December 17, 1956.

  CHAPTER SEVEN: SCRIPTURE

  93 Braves’ Aaron Asks Pay Boost: Chicago Tribune, January 27, 1957.

  94 I was making ten grand one year: interview with Gene Conley.

  95 I think back then we all realized: interview with Henry Aaron.

  96 The National League pennant has been a mirage: Chicago Tribune, January 19, 1957.

  97 Bob Wolf always kept it to the game: interview with Chuck Tanner.

  98 Jolly Cholly: interview with Gene Conley.

  99 Whether I’m hitting good or not: The Sporting News, May 1, 1957.

  100 I remember it probably better than anybody: interview with Frank Torre.

  101 You have to remember: interview with Johnny Logan.

  102 Ah, that was complete bullshit: ibid.

  103 You had to drink to hang out: ibid.

  104 I kept to myself: interview with Henry Aaron.

  105 He went through terrible times: interview with Frank Torre.

  106 He really was all business: interview with Gene Conley.

  107 You had to remember that integration: interview with Henry Aaron.

  108 Hank Aaron Ties Ruth Homer Mark: Washington Post, July 11, 1957.

  109 The Wrist Hitter: Time, July 29, 1957.

  110 I wouldn’t have taken that shit: interview with Bill White.

  111 We got along quite well: interview with Furman Bisher.

  112 Born To Play Ball: The Saturday Evening Post, August 25, 1956.

  113 Braves’ Blazing Aaron Bids For Batting Title: The Sporting News, August 8, 1956.

  114 I don’t know if there was a way to figure it: interview with Chuck Tanner.

  115 For Aaron stretched out his hand: Time, October 7, 1957.

  CHAPTER EIGHT: BUSHVILLE

  116 Fred, do you think your team will choke up: Los Angeles Times, October 1, 1957.

  117 Before the thing even began: interview with Johnny Logan.

  118 They had to beat the White Sox: interview with Greg Spahn.

  119 Before the start of the 1957 World Series: ibid.

  120 We weren’t scared of the Yankees: interview with Gene Conley.

  121 When we went in 1957: interview with Johnny Logan.

  122 The Pennant Victory Ball: Milwaukee Journal, September 30, 1957.

  123 You can’t help your club from the tub: interview with Ralph Garr.

  124 Aaron’s Swap: Crown For Pennant: Milwaukee Journal, September 29, 19
57.

  125 Henry didn’t volunteer what he thought about you: interview with Felix Mantilla.

  126 Braves Welcomed At Airport: Milwaukee Journal, October 4, 1957.

  127 “Well,” the Perfesser told his pitcher: Hank Aaron: Chasing the Dream. Directed by Mike Tollin; produced by Mike Tollin and and Brian Robbins. Copyright 1995 TBS Productions, Inc.

  128 Lary would spend three weeks: Los Angeles Times, December 16, 1957.

  CHAPTER NINE: ALMOST

  129 When you come close to winning: Eddie Mathews, Eddie Mathews and the National Pastime (Milwaukee: Douglas American Sports Publications, 1994), p. 150.

  130 The other ballplayers were completely stunned: Mathews, Eddie Mathews and the National Pastime, p. 166.

  131 Those guys, all they did was carry the balls to BP: interview with Gene Conley.

  132 looked his friend in the eye: Henry Aaron, with Stan Baldwin and Jerry Jenkins, Bad Henry (Radnor, Pennsylvania: Chilton, 1974).

  133 If he ever had one beer: interview with Gregory Spahn.

  134 That position in center: New York Times, March 12, 1958.

  135 Braves Frolic In Clubhouse: New York Times, October 7, 1958.

  136 Going into the eighth: Washington Post, October 10, 1958.

  137 You didn’t want to swing it last October: Washington Post, March 10, 1959.

  138 Braves Shade Dodgers: Los Angeles Times, May 6, 1959.

  139 Sam Jones Guns For Hank Aaron: Los Angeles Times, May 21, 1959.

  140 A disgracefully small crowd: New York Times, September 29, 1959.

  141 The Coliseum was a football field: interview with Frank Torre.

  142 Every team has its “ifs” and “buts”: Hank Aaron, with Lonnie Wheeler, I Had a Hammer: The Hank Aaron Story (New York: HarperCollins, 1992), p. 143.

  CHAPTER TEN: RESPECT

  143 You ache with the need: Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man (New York: Random House, 1952), p. 4.

  144 There was a reason: Frank A. Aukofer, City with a Chance: A Case History of Civil Rights Revolution (Milwaukee: Marquette University Press, 2007), p. 219.

  145 It’s nice to get attention and favors: Roger Angell, Once More Around the Park: A Baseball Reader (New York: Ballantine Books, 1991), p. 150.

  146 You always knew he was a serious man: interview with Joe Torre.

  147 Soon, a routine formed: interview with Henry Aaron.

  148 My mother was so mad: interview with Ted Williams.

  149 I remember it well: interview with Henry Aaron.

  150 a lone black fellow who played baseball: interview with Howard Chinn.

  151 Stump came away with a story: Al Stump, “Hank Aaron: Public Image vs. Private Reality,” Sport, August 1964.

  152 I know I did not make it easy: interview with Henry Aaron.

  153 Things are as bad: James Baldwin, The Fire Next Time (New York: Dial, 1963), p. 59.

  154 We’ve been waiting all this time: Jackie Robinson, Baseball Has Done It. (1964; reprint, Brooklyn, New York: IG Publishing, 2005), p. 139.

  155 I was sensitive to what they would face: interview with Henry Aaron.

  156 I’ve read some newspapermen saying: Robinson, Baseball Has Done It, p. 134.

  I never knew Jackie said that: interview with Henry Aaron.

  157 It never did any good: interview with Henry Aaron.

  158 People have been treating this man: interview with Allan Tanenbaum.

  159 It always bothered me: interview with Bill White.

  160 Henry Aaron is a nice man: interview with Furman Bisher.

  161 Pursuant to general agreement: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress.

  162 Fred Lowey called: ibid.

  163 I think Fred Lowey: ibid.

  164 That was when the old man: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress.

  165 My Dear Larry: ibid.

  166 Dear Dick: ibid.

  167 Dear Mr. O’Malley: ibid.

  168 “Nobody,” Selig would say, hit more home runs: interview with Bud Selig.

  169 The Camel Mildness Test: Milwaukee Journal, April 16, 1951.

  170 He was such a good, open man: interview with Joe Torre.

  171 It was almost from the time we met: interview with Carolyn Aaron.

  172 Dressen never blended with this club: interview with Joe Torre.

  173 The two things I remember most: interview with Tim McCarver.

  174 I don’t think I’ve earned my due: Robinson, Baseball Has Done It, p. 140.

  CHAPTER ELEVEN: ATLANTA

  175 This is a moral issue: The Sporting News, January 16, 1965.

  176 I thought about history: interview with Bill Bartholomay.

  177 Mr. Perini is planning to move the Braves: The Sporting News, November, 7, 1962.

  178 Milwaukee Syndicate Offer: The Sporting News, December 1, 1962.

  179 The cow had been milked: The Sporting News, November, 7, 1962.

  180 Move To Georgia Peachy? Not To Aaron: Chicago Defender, April 17, 1965.

  181 Aaron and Maye Disturbed: Associated Press, January 16, 1965.

  182 I have lived in the South: Chicago Defender, April 17, 1965.

  183 Not only were blacks forbidden to sit: Gary Pomerantz, Where Peachtree Meets Sweet Autumn: A Saga of Race and Family (New York: Penguin, 1996), p. 257.

  184 When I was in high school: interview with Bob Hope.

  185 There was a real hostile feel: interview with Bill Bartholomay.

  186 The leaders of the city didn’t want: interview with Andrew Young.

  187 Aaron Says He Could Have Won: Chicago Defender, March 2, 1964.

  188 I had read so much about Musial: Associated Press, May 14, 1970.

  189 Martin was a big baseball fan: interview with Andrew Young.

  CHAPTER TWELVE: WILLIE

  190 Eisenberg was a Braves batboy: interview with Buz Eisenberg.

  191 What got you here is what’s going to keep you here: interview with Ralph Garr.

  192 Francona had been a big leaguer: interview with Tito Francona.

  193 When his son, Terry: interview with Terry Francona.

  194 In New York, Tito and Henry: interview with Tito Francona.

  195 Yet Ralph and Dusty saw Henry: interview with Dusty Baker.

  196 There were times I got called in: ibid.

  197 And then there was the infamous evening: New York Times, August 9, 1966.

  198 You could never tell at the plate: interview with Ralph Garr.

  199 I had the fortune to room with a guy: interview with Cito Gaston.

  200 He used to tell me all the time: interview with Ralph Garr.

  201 Already he ees showing me: Al Stump, “Hank Aaron: Public Image vs. Private Reality,” Sport, August 1964.

  202 I don’t know if I’m talking out of school: interview with Tito Francona.

  203 Somewhere during the exchange: interview with Joe Torre.

  204 No way was Willie a better hitter than me: interview with Henry Aaron.

  205 I consider us the best of friends: Wall Street Journal, April 17, 1970.

  206 Hank Becomes A Hit: Sports Illustrated, August 18, 1969.

  207 Move Over, Babe: Los Angeles Times, October 5, 1969.

  208 We were off that night: interview with Ralph Garr.

  209 Aaron—600G For 3 Years: Chicago Tribune, March 1, 1972.

  210 It was Milo Hamilton, the broadcaster: interview with Wayne Minshew.

  211 I’ll see how it goes: Washington Post, January 30, 1972.

  212 It’s July 1957: interview with Reese Schonfeld.

  213 I was just a kid, and it was exciting to me: ibid.

  214 Wednesday Night: New York Times, June 1, 1972.

  215 It’s kind of fun now and then: Charles Einstein, Willie’s Time: A Memoir (New York: Penguin, 1989), p. 34.

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN: RUTH

  216 He had leukemia: interview with Bob Hope.

  217 Just give us the chance: interview with Buck O’Neil.

  218 Fo
r our community: Jimmy Carter, An Hour Before Daylight (New York: Simon and Schuster), 2001, p. 32.

  219 Like Jimmy Carter, Bob Hope also felt a certain swell: interview with Jimmy Carter.

  220 He refused to defile his body: The Long Winter of Henry Aaron, originally broadcast by NBC, 1973; rebroadcast by ESPN, 2006.

  221 I would like to read to you: ibid.

  222 It’s the only place: “Hank Aaron: Going for the Record,” Ebony, September 1973.

  223 Henry would sit in the boat: “Chasing the Babe,” Newsweek, August 13, 1973.

  224 Aaron Sued For Tenfold Alimony: Associated Press, June 3, 1974.

  225 I’ve always read Mickey Mantle: “Henry Aaron’s Golden Autumn,” Time, September 24, 1973.

  226 The game was being televised on Channel 17: Atlanta Journal-Constitution, April 5, 1974.

  227 It should not even have been necessary: interview with Billye Aaron.

  228 “Ralph,” Henry said at his locker: interview with Ralph Garr.

  229 I just feel good and happy: Atlanta Journal-Constitution, April 9, 1974.

  230 To Downing, the words were another: interview with Al Downing.

  231 If there’s anything I can ever do for you: ibid.

  232 One night, someone brought up the idea: Jim “Mudcat” Grant, Tom Sabellico, and Pat O’Brien, The Black Aces: Baseball’s Only African-American Twenty-Game Winners (Farmingdale, New York: Black Aces, 2006), p. 319.

  233 Henry Aaron. What else did you need to say?: interview with Steve Yeager.

  234 I had no idea who they were: interview with Mike Marshall.

  235 Everybody expects him to do it every time now: Atlanta Journal-Constitution, April 8, 1984.

  236 Henry begins to walk up to home plate: Hank Aaron: Chasing the Dream. Directed by Mike Tollin; produced by Mike Tollin and Brian Robbins. Copyright 1955 TBS Productions, Inc.

  237 No, you have your own footsteps: interview with Jimmy Wynn.

  238 There’s Al Downing: interview with Al Downing.

  239 And swinging two bats is Henry Aaron: Hank Aaron: Chasing the Dream.

  240 It was a long time ago: interview with Steve Yeager.

  241 If you told someone you were Cape Verdean: interview with Davey Lopes.

  242 Well, I wasn’t really sure what I was going to do: interview with Ron Cey.

 

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