Lou Gehrig(1903-1941)
- Actor
Lou Gehrig is remembered as baseball's "Iron Horse" and used to own the
major league record for the 2,130 consecutive games that he played for
the New York Yankees between 1925 and 1939, where he had a .340 career
batting average, making him one of the greatest hitters of all time.
Henry Louis Gehrig was born in the Yorkville section of Manhattan, New
York City on June 19, 1903. His parents, Heinrich and Christina Gehrig,
were German immigrants. Of their four children, Lou was the only one
who survived to adulthood. Growing up as a mama's boy, Lou lived with
his parents until he married at the age of 30. Lou attended New York
public schools, including the High School of Commerce, where he
excelled in baseball, football and swimming. In his senior year, Lou's
school won New York's public school baseball championship. They played
Chicago's best high school team at Wrigley Field in 1920. The game was
a portrait of what was to come: with the bases loaded and two outs in
the 9th inning, Lou crushed a 3-2 pitch over the right field to win the
game. To fulfill his parents' dream, Lou enrolled at New York's
Columbia University in 1922. Because he had briefly played for a
professional baseball club the preceding summer, Lou was barred from
athletic competitions at Columbia for a year. After sitting out the
year, Lou started on the college's baseball and football squads,
earning him the nickname "Columbia Lou." When his father lost his job
and his mother fell ill, Lou decided to leave college for a
professional baseball career. In June 1923, the New York Yankees signed
him to a minor league contract. He was assigned to the team's Hartford,
Connecticut, farm club where he played for two seasons. Lou was then
inserted into the Yankee lineup on June 1, 1925 substituting for their
regular first baseman, Wally Pipp. For the next 14 years, Lou did not
miss a single game. Even though Lou made an immediate impression in the
majors, leading the American League with 20 triples in his second
season, it was in 1927 that this six-foot, 210-pound left-hander
blossomed as a slugger. He challenged teammate Babe Ruth for the
league's home run title. By the end of the season, Lou had hit 47 home
runs to Babe Ruth's 60, earning second place. That year, Lou hit .373
and set a major league record by racking up 175 RBIs. Not surprisingly,
Lou was voted the league's Most Valuable Player. He also helped the
Yankees to win the 1927 World Series against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
True to his form, Lou had almost decided to sit out the entire series
to stay by his ill mother's side. For the next 13 consecutive seasons,
Lou knocked more than 100 home runs, and slugged 46 home runs with 184
RBIs in 1931. On June 3, 1932, Lou hit four home runs in one game
against the Philadelphia Athletics, setting another major league
record. In 1933, Lou married Eleanor Twitchell, who helped him
withstand the rigors of professional baseball. On the eve of his
2,000th consecutive game in 1938, Eleanor suggested that Lou was
getting compulsive about the streak and advised him to end his career
at 1,999 games. Despite his wife's good intentions, Lou would not be
deterred and appeared there and at 130 more games. During 1939 spring
training Lou began to experience weakness and problems with
coordination. On May 2, 1939, Lou's consecutive game streak finally
ended when he removed himself from the team. Suspecting something more
than his training was making him feel worn out, Lou entered the Mayo
Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota for health tests and on June 19, 1939,
his 36th birthday, Lou was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis, a rare incurable muscular disorder which causes the muscular
motor functions to degenerate, resulting in atrophying muscles, which
in turn can lead to paralysis and ultimately death. New York mayor
Fiorello LaGuardia named Lou the
city's parole commissioner upon his retirement from baseball in 1939, a
job he held until his declining health confided him to his bed in early
1941. Lou Gehrig finally passed away from ALS on June 2, 1941 at the
age of 37. His universal renown was so great that amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis later became known as Lou Gehrig's Disease.