Henry Louis Gehrig, born
Heinrich Ludwig Gehrig (June 19, 1903 – June 2, 1941), nicknamed "
the Iron Horse," was an American
baseball first baseman who played his entire professional career (17 seasons) in
Major League Baseball (MLB) for the
New York Yankees,
from 1923 until 1939. Gehrig was renowned for his prowess as a hitter
and for his durability, which earned him his nickname "the Iron Horse."
He was an
All-Star seven consecutive times, a
Triple Crown winner once, an
American League (AL) Most Valuable Player twice, and a member of six
World Series champion teams. He had a career .340
batting average, .632
slugging average, and a .447
on base average. He hit 493
home runs and had 1,995
runs batted in (RBI). In 1939, he was elected to the
Baseball Hall of Fame and was the first
MLB player to have his uniform number retired by a team.
A native of New York City and a student at
Columbia University, Gehrig signed with the Yankees in 1923. He set several major-league records during his career, including the most career
grand slams (23) (since broken by
Alex Rodriguez) and
most consecutive games played (2,130), a record that stood for 56 years and was long
considered unbreakable until surpassed by
Cal Ripken, Jr., in 1995.
Gehrig's consecutive game streak ended on May 2, 1939, when he
voluntarily took himself out of the lineup, stunning both players and
fans, after his performance on the field became hampered by
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, an incurable neuromuscular illness now commonly referred to in North America as "Lou Gehrig's disease."
The disease forced him to retire at age 36, and was the cause of his
death two years later. The pathos of his farewell from baseball was
capped off by his iconic 1939 "Luckiest Man on the Face of the Earth"
speech at
Yankee Stadium.
In 1969, the
Baseball Writers' Association voted Gehrig the greatest first baseman of all time,
] and he was the leading vote-getter on the
Major League Baseball All-Century Team chosen by fans in 1999. A monument in Gehrig's honor, originally dedicated by the Yankees in 1941, currently resides in
Monument Park at
Yankee Stadium. The
Lou Gehrig Memorial Award is given annually to the MLB player who best exhibits Gehrig's integrity and character.
Gehrig joined the New York Yankees midway through the 1923 season and made his major-league debut as a
pinch hitter at age 19 on June 15, 1923. Gehrig wore the number "4" because he hit behind Babe Ruth, who batted third in the lineup.
In his first two seasons, he saw limited playing time, mostly as a
pinch hitter – he played in only 23 games and was not on the Yankees'
1923 World Series roster. In 1925, he batted .295, with 20 home runs and 68
runs batted in (RBIs).
[
The 23-year-old Yankee first baseman's breakout season came in
1926, when he batted .313 with 47 doubles, an American League-leading
20 triples, 16 home runs, and 112 RBIs. In the
1926 World Series against the
St. Louis Cardinals, Gehrig hit .348 with two doubles and four RBIs. The Cardinals won the series four games to three.
On June 1, 1925, Gehrig entered the game as a pinch hitter,
substituting for shortstop Paul "Pee Wee" Wanninger. The next day, June
2, Yankee manager
Miller Huggins started Gehrig in place of regular first baseman
Wally Pipp.
Pipp was in a slump, as was the team, so Huggins made several lineup
changes in an attempt to boost their performance, replacing Pipp,
Aaron Ward, and
Wally Schang.Fourteen years later, Gehrig had played 2,130 consecutive games.
In a few instances, Gehrig managed to keep the streak intact through
pinch-hitting appearances and fortuitous timing; in others, the streak
continued despite injuries. For example:
- On April 23, 1933, a pitch by Washington Senators pitcher Earl Whitehill struck Gehrig in the head. Although almost knocked unconscious, Gehrig remained in the game.
- On June 14, 1933, Gehrig was ejected from a game, along with manager Joe McCarthy, but he had already been at bat.
- In a June 1934 exhibition game, Gehrig was hit by a pitch just above
the right eye and was knocked unconscious. According to news reports,
he was out for five minutes. Batting helmets were not commonly used
until the 1940s. He left the game, but was in the lineup the next day.
- On July 13, 1934, Gehrig suffered a "lumbago
attack" and had to be assisted off the field. In the next day's away
game, he was listed in the lineup as "shortstop", batting lead-off. In
his first and only plate appearance, he singled and was promptly
replaced by a pinch runner to rest his throbbing back, never taking the field. A&E's Biography
speculated that this illness, which he also described as "a cold in his
back", might have been the first symptom of his debilitating disease.
In addition,
X-rays
taken late in his life disclosed that Gehrig had sustained several
fractures during his playing career, although he remained in the lineup
despite those previously undisclosed injuries. However, the streak was helped when Yankees general manager
Ed Barrow postponed a game as a rainout on a day when Gehrig was sick with the flu, though it was not raining.
Gehrig's record of 2,130 consecutive games endured for 56 years until
Baltimore Orioles shortstop Cal Ripken, Jr., surpassed it on September 6, 1995. Ripken finished with 2,632 consecutive games.
Illness
Although his performance in the second half of the
1938 season
was slightly better than in the first half, Gehrig reported physical
changes at the midway point. At the end of that season, he said, "I was
tired mid-season. I don't know why, but I just couldn't get going
again." Although his final 1938 statistics were above average (.295
batting average, 114 RBIs, 170 hits, .523 slugging percentage, 689 plate
appearances with only 75 strikeouts, and 29 home runs), they were
significantly down from his 1937 season, in which he batted .351 and
slugged .643. In the 1938 World Series, he had four hits in 14 at-bats,
all singles.
When the Yankees began their 1939
spring training in
St. Petersburg, Florida,
Gehrig clearly no longer possessed his once-formidable power. Even his
baserunning was affected, and at one point he collapsed at
Al Lang Field, then the Yankees' spring training park.
[53] By the end of spring training, he had not hit a home run.
Throughout his career, Gehrig was considered an excellent base runner,
but as the 1939 season got under way, his coordination and speed had
deteriorated significantly.
[55]
By the end of April, his statistics were the worst of his career,
with one RBI and a .143 batting average. Fans and the press openly
speculated on Gehrig's abrupt decline. James Kahn, a reporter who wrote
often about Gehrig, said in one article:
I think there is something wrong
with him. Physically wrong, I mean. I don't know what it is, but I am
satisfied that it goes far beyond his ball-playing. I have seen
ballplayers 'go' overnight, as Gehrig seems to have done. But they were
simply washed up as ballplayers. It's something deeper than that in this
case, though. I have watched him very closely and this is what I have
seen: I have seen him time a ball perfectly, swing on it as hard as he
can, meet it squarely – and drive a soft, looping fly over the infield.
In other words, for some reason that I do not know, his old power isn't
there... He is meeting the ball, time after time, and it isn't going
anywhere.
He was indeed meeting the ball, with only one strikeout in
28 at-bats; however, Joe McCarthy found himself resisting pressure from
Yankee management to switch Gehrig to a part-time role. Things came to a
head when Gehrig struggled to make a routine put-out at first base. The
pitcher,
Johnny Murphy, had to wait for him to drag himself over to the bag so he could field the throw. Murphy said, "Nice play, Lou."
On April 30, Gehrig went hitless against the
Washington Senators. He had just played his 2,130th consecutive major league game.
On May 2, the next game after a day off, Gehrig approached McCarthy before the game in
Detroit against the
Tigers and said, "I'm benching myself, Joe", telling the Yankees' skipper that he was doing so "for the good of the team."
] McCarthy acquiesced, putting
Ellsworth "Babe" Dahlgren
in at first base, and also said that whenever Gehrig wanted to play
again, the position was his. Gehrig, as Yankee captain, himself took the
lineup card out to the shocked umpires before the game, ending the
14-year streak. Before the game began, the
Briggs Stadium
announcer told the fans, "Ladies and gentlemen, this is the first time
Lou Gehrig's name will not appear on the Yankee lineup in 2,130
consecutive games." The Detroit Tigers' fans gave Gehrig a standing
ovation while he sat on the bench with tears in his eyes. Coincidentally, among those attending the game was
Wally Pipp,
whom Gehrig had replaced at first base 2,130 games previously. A
wire-service photograph of Gehrig reclining against the dugout steps
with a stoic expression appeared the next day in the nation's
newspapers. He stayed with the Yankees as team captain for the rest of
the season, but never played in a major-league game again.
Diagnosis
As Gehrig's debilitation became steadily worse, Eleanor Gehrig called the famed
Mayo Clinic in
Rochester, Minnesota. Her call was transferred to
Charles William Mayo,
who had been following Gehrig's career and his mysterious loss of
strength. Mayo told Eleanor to bring Gehrig as soon as possible.
Gehrig flew alone to Rochester from
Chicago,
where the Yankees were playing at the time, and arrived at the Mayo
Clinic on June 13, 1939. After six days of extensive testing at the
clinic, doctors confirmed the diagnosis of
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) on June 19, 1939, which was Gehrig's 36th birthday. The
prognosis
was grim: rapidly increasing paralysis, difficulty in swallowing and
speaking, and a life expectancy less than three years, although no
impairment of mental functions would occur. Eleanor Gehrig was told that
the cause of ALS was unknown, but it was painless, noncontagious, and
cruel; the motor function of the central nervous system is destroyed,
but the mind remains fully aware to the end.
Gehrig often wrote letters to Eleanor, and in one such note written shortly afterwards, said in part:
The bad news is lateral sclerosis,
in our language chronic infantile paralysis. There isn't any cure...
there are very few of these cases. It is probably caused by some germ...
Never heard of transmitting it to mates... There is a 50–50 chance of
keeping me as I am. I may need a cane in 10 or 15 years. Playing is out
of the question...
Following Gehrig's visit to the Mayo Clinic, he briefly rejoined the
Yankees in Washington, DC. As his train pulled into Union Station, he
was greeted by a group of
Boy Scouts, happily waving and wishing him luck. Gehrig waved back, but he leaned forward to his companion,
Rutherford "Rud" Rennie of the
New York Herald Tribune, and said, "They're wishing me luck – and I'm dying."
An article in the September 2010 issue of the
Journal of Neuropathology & Experimental Neurology
suggested the possibility that some ALS-related illnesses diagnosed in
Gehrig and other athletes may have been catalyzed by repeated
concussions and other brain trauma.
In 2012, Minnesota state legislators sought to unseal Gehrig's medical
records, which are held by the Mayo Clinic, in an effort to determine a
connection, if any, between his illness and the concussion-related
trauma he received during his career, prior to the advent of batting
helmets and other protective equipment. The effort was abandoned after
several leading medical experts explained that a records review would
have no value unless correlated with autopsy data. An autopsy was not
performed on Gehrig's body, and his remains were cremated after his
open-casket wake.
Retirement
The doctors of the Mayo Clinic had released their ALS diagnosis to
the public on June 19, 1939. Two days later, the New York Yankees
announced Gehrig's retirement, with an immediate public push to honor
Gehrig. The idea of an appreciation day reportedly began with Bill
Hirsch, a friend of sports columnist Bill Corum. Corum spoke of the idea
in his column, and other sportswriters picked up on the idea, promoting
it far and wide in their respective periodicals. Someone suggested the
appreciation day be held during the All-Star Game, but when Yankees
president Ed Barrow got ahold of the idea, he quickly shot down the
All-Star Game suggestion. He did not want Gehrig to share the spotlight
with any other all-star. Believing the idea was valid and the best thing
to do, he wanted the appreciation day to be soon, and the Yankees
proclaimed July 4, 1939, "Lou Gehrig Appreciation Day" at Yankee
Stadium. Between games of the
Independence Day
doubleheader against the Washington Senators, the poignant ceremonies
were held on the diamond. In its coverage the following day,
The New York Times
said it was "perhaps as colorful and dramatic a pageant as ever was
enacted on a baseball field [as] 61,808 fans thundered a hail and
farewell." Dignitaries extolled the dying slugger and the members of the
1927 Yankees World Series team, known as "Murderer's Row", attended the ceremonies. New York Mayor
Fiorello La Guardia called Gehrig "the greatest prototype of good sportsmanship and citizenship" and
Postmaster General James Farley concluded his speech by predicting, "For generations to come, boys who play baseball will point with pride to your record."
Yankees Manager Joe McCarthy, struggling to control his emotions,
then spoke of Lou Gehrig, with whom he had a close, almost
father-and-son–like bond. After describing Gehrig as "the finest example
of a ballplayer, sportsman, and citizen that baseball has ever known",
McCarthy could stand it no longer. Turning tearfully to Gehrig, the
manager said, "Lou, what else can I say except that it was a sad day in
the life of everybody who knew you when you came into my hotel room that
day in Detroit and told me you were quitting as a ballplayer because
you felt yourself a hindrance to the team. My God, man, you were never
that."
The Yankees
retired Gehrig's uniform number "4", making him the first player in Major League Baseball history to be accorded that honor.
Gehrig was given many gifts, commemorative plaques, and trophies. Some
came from VIPs; others came from the stadium's groundskeepers and
janitorial staff. Footage of the ceremonies shows Gehrig being handed
various gifts, and immediately setting them down on the ground, because
he no longer had the arm strength to hold them.
The Yankees gave him a silver trophy with all of their signatures
engraved on it. Inscribed on the front was a special poem they asked to
be written by The New York Times writer
John Kieran. The inscription on the trophy presented to Gehrig from his Yankees teammates: