Read The Last Hero: A Life of Henry Aaron Online
Authors: Howard Bryant
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.