The Last Hero: A Life of Henry Aaron (79 page)

BOOK: The Last Hero: A Life of Henry Aaron
6.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

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, 1957.

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.

Other books

A River Town by Thomas Keneally
Tyrant: Storm of Arrows by Christian Cameron
The Linguist and the Emperor by Daniel Meyerson
Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie
The Ascension by Kailin Gow
If We Lived Here by Lindsey Palmer
The Silver Spoon by Kansuke Naka
Instinct by Ike Hamill
hislewdkobo by Adriana Rossi
Borrowed Bride by Patricia Coughlin