Letter to the Editor 9-24-06

Letter to the Editor:

 

September 24, 2006

 

On today’s front page there is a story about another needless teenage death on the roads of Westchester. Over the past number of weeks and months, there have been many similar stories. Obviously, it is not easy to prevent young people from going out late at night, though this accident was at 11 AM. It is patently obvious that it is almost impossible to prevent many young people from engaging in risky behavior and mixing substance abuse with high speed. One suggestion I have is to place a “governor” on all vehicles owned and driven by individuals under the age of 21. Since most authorities believe “speed kills,” if young driver’s speed were limited to a maximum of 55 mph, many a life could be saved. If society cannot change our mindless social habits regarding the mixing of driving, poor judgment, and intoxication, than we should mechanically slow cars down. This is something that can be done, let us petition our state legislature and stop the carnage.

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

Take Me Out to the Ballgame-My Eary Memories of Baseball September 21, 2006

Take Me Out to the Ball Game, My early Memories of Baseball

By

Richard J. Garfunkel

September 21, 2006

 

Baseball is a remarkable game. It’s a wonderful activity that comes up from one’s youth. Not only do most fathers dream that their sons (daughters, also) will become a centerfielder for the Yanks (those from out –of-town, please substitute their team!), but they make sure that as soon as that youngster can sit up straight a baseball shirt, ball, and glove are placed in his hands. There is uniqueness to baseball that separates it from almost all games. First of all there is no clock. Therefore no team can sit on a lead. Baseball is not a scrimmage game like football, basketball, hockey, soccer or rugby. It is the only game where the most important player, the pitcher cannot score, and where the defense puts the ball in play. Unlike any other sport, every position on defense has it own characteristics. Each individual must bat and every at bat is different. One could analyze every one of Henry Aaron’s 12,364 at bats, the Major League record, and not one of them is the same. Aaron obviously has batted multiple times against individual pitchers, but probably no one situation was exactly the same. There are so many variables that include the weather conditions, the score of the game, the inning, the location of the game, the men on bases and how the pitcher feels. Baseball is a game that combines leisure, patience, tension, excitement and beauty. It is a game of inches and a game of perfection. It is a player’s game, and no one is so much alone as the batter, when he faces a tough pitcher in an important and desperate situation.

 

It was 55 years since I made my inaugural visit to the old Yankee Stadium, whose rebuilt version is obviously still located off the Grand Concourse at 161st Street and River Avenue. I certainly don’t remember much about that game with the Red Sox, but I do remember being very impressed with Johnny “Big Jawn” Mize, the Hall of Famer, who loomed bigger than life at first base. Mize originally made his name, in the late 1930’s, with the latter edition of the Gas House Gang, Cardinals from Saint Louis. Mize eventually wound up with the Giants whose home, the Polo Grounds, was located across the Harlem River in Manhattan. My father who liked the Giants took me a few times to the Polo Grounds, an antiquated and rusting hulk of a stadium, which originally was built in Coogan’s Hollow, the last vestige of a farm granted by the King of England, in the 17th Century, to John Lion Gardiner. The property became the Coogan estate when a Gardiner descendent married James J. Coogan, who was elected the first Borough President of Manhattan in 1890. Twenty years after the original stadium was built in 1911 a fire swept through the 16,000-seat stadium and destroyed it. Eventually a concrete oval stadium was built and by the time it was enclosed in 1923, it held 55,000 fans.

 

Mize was a pull hitter, and was built for the Polo Grounds, and its strange horseshoe shape that had very short foul lines, which were only 279 feet in left and 257 feet in right. Mel Ott, the one-time home run king of the National League, was also a left-handed dead pull hitter and when he retired in 1947, after 22 seasons, he owned National Leaguer record with 511. Mize, whose salad years seemed behind him when he was traded to the Giants in 1942, wound up in the service for three years and when he came back to the Giants in 1946 his bat seemed to like that “short porch” in right field. By the next year, he hit 51 homeruns. This remained the National League record for left handed hitters for many, many years. Of course, times were a changing, and Leo “The Lip” Durocher, the new Giant manager, switched boroughs and teams, and wound up in the Polo Grounds after a decade in Brooklyn. Leo wanted to make his mark on the lumbering Giants and one of his earliest moves was to bench big John Mize. Mize was not to happy riding the bench, and gathering splinters, so as to shut him up; Durocher shipped him over to the Bronx.

 

In the hallowed grounds of the “House that Ruth Built,” Mize blossomed as one of the premier pinch-hitters of all-time. In reality he hit only .284 as a pinch-hitter in those five years, but his 53 hits and numerous homeruns were usually in the clutch. He wound up with 25 home runs in 1950, an amazing pace of one home run per every eleven at bats. Mize was one of the few Yankees to play on their five straight World Series championships teams from 1949 through 1953. No wonder I liked him from my earliest days as a fan!

 

The Yankees were originally known as the Highlanders, who owed their name to the location of their ballpark and the fact that their owner Joseph W. Gordon’s name reminded some folks of the famed British Army unit (Gordon’s Highlanders.) In 1913 the current owners (Farrell and Devery) of the Highlanders, who were quite often were referred to in the press as the Yankees, were unhappy with their antiquated park, and therefore accepted an invitation to play in the Polo Grounds. But moving to the Polo grounds did not bring the Yankees or their owners financial or artistic success

 

Therefore, the modern Yankees are really traced to the partnership of (NY National Guard honorary) Colonel Jacob Ruppert, (aka The Prince of Beer) who owned the Ruppert Breweries. He was a former four-term Congressman (1899-1906 from NY’s Silk Stocking District!) and reputedly worth between $50 and $75 million, who teamed up with one (retired Army Corp of Engineers) Colonel Tillinghast l’Hommedieu “Til” Huston, to buy the team. Huston, a construction millionaire and Ruppert bought the Yankees in 1915 for the astronomical sum of $460,000 from Big Bill Devery and Frank Farrell, who had paid just $18,000 for the Baltimore franchise in 1903 before moving it to New York, (The Yankees had a previous 12 year losing record of 861-937, and an average attendance of 345,000 fans per season.) Of course, it was the innovative Ruppert, who supposedly designed the team’s brand new pinstriped uniform in the 1920’s. He thought pinstripes would make the Babe, who had a tendency to expand his belt-size, look slimmer. Ruppert liked to win and told his new business manager “I want to win.” He also said, “Every day I want to win ten to nothing. Close games make me nervous.” I always heard that Ruppert, the proto-typical Yankee fan also said, “I like to see the Yanks score nine runs in the first inning and pull away gently!”

 

The Yankees stayed there as tenants of the Giants until 1922, when John McGraw asked the Colonels Jacob Ruppert and Til Huston to take their team and leave. It is a mystery why he did that. The Yankees were big draws and outdrew the Giants in 1920 (in this year the Yankees set a major league record, drawing 1,289,422 into the Polo Grounds, 350,000 more than the Giants), 1921, and 1922 and most would have thought that the added revenue would have been hard to resist. Maybe the Giants felt that they were being overshadowed by the presence of the Yankees new star Babe Ruth. John McGraw, an exponent of “inside” baseball or “little ball” as they term it today, hated Babe Ruth and his home runs. He said in 1921, “The Yankees will have to build a park in Queens or some other out-of-the-way place. Let them go away, and wither on the vine.”

 

They moved directly across the Harlem River and built “The House that Ruth Built.” The 58,000-seat concrete and steel edifice, opened up on April 18, 1923, at the cost of $2.5 million. It was built in 258 working days and featured the first triple-deck grandstand. The Opening attendance, with Governor Alfred E. Smith throwing out the first ball, was reputed to be over 74,000, but later on it was revised down to about 60,000. John Philip Sousa and the Seventh Regiment Band led the procession of Yankee and Red Sox players to the centerfield flagpole for the raising of the 1922 pennant. There were a few changes since 1923. The right field triple deck grandstands were extended around the foul pole to the bleachers in the late 1930’s, and some of the outfield distances were re-adjusted before the great re-building in 1974-5. Originally center field in the old ballpark was 490 feet. It was later reduced to 461 feet and to its present day 408 feet. Deepest right center was an astronomical 550 feet, but quickly reduced to 457 feet and to its present day 420 feet. The right field foul line remained at 296 feet until the renovation where it was lengthened to 314 feet and the fence was raised from 4 feet to 8 feet. Left field was originally 280.5 feet but was quickly adjusted to 301, and it is presently 318 feet with and 8-foot wall.

 

The Yanks still remain on property purchased from William Waldorf Astor for $600,000 and the Giants, who eventually went broke, left in 1957, and currently play in San Francisco. Many years later, in 1974-5, when Yankee Stadium was being re-constructed, they moved over to Queens and became guests of the City of New York, in Shea Stadium, for two unhappy seasons.

 

But growing up in New York in the late 1940’s and 1950’s was a great era to be a young boy and a Yankee fan. It seemed every year the Yankees were winning the pennant and fighting for the World Championship. The old stadium was quite caverness, and even though it was smaller than in the Babe’s day, center field was still 461 distant feet away. It was so deep that the three massive monuments, erected for Miller Huggins, Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, could sit majestically in center field without anyone ever worrying about them being in play. It did happen, once in a while, and even the flaky Red Sox center fielder, Jimmy Piersal, wound up hiding behind the monuments in the waning innings of a dull Yankee-Red Sox game. It even was said that one or two baseballs were caught behind the monuments.

 

In those early 1950’s seasons my favorite ballplayers were Gene Woodling, Hank Bauer, Irv Noren, Vic Raschi, Allie Reynolds and Yogi Berra. In the days before Mickey Mantle’s ascendancy, the Yankees depended on balance, excellent defense, great pitching and timely hitting. They were not the Bronx Bombers of the 1930’s or the Murderer’s Row of the 1920’s. The days of DiMaggio, Henrich, Keller, Gordon, Dickey, Rolfe and Gomez had passed with the end of the war. These new Yankees were steady, corporate, and clutch.  They did not have much speed, except with their great shortstop Phil Rizzuto, and they didn’t steal many bases. But in those early years from 1951 until 1955 they did hit their share of triples and were always in the top three in the American League. They actually were second in stolen bases both in 1951 (78) and in 1955 (55). But generally speaking the stolen base era would still be a few years away when the Go-Go Chicago White Sox would run their way to a pennant in 1959. They stole 113 bases that year and were led by Luis Aparicio’s 56! His effort would pave the way for a new era in base thievery that would feature running stars like; Maury Wills, Lou Brock, and Bert Campaneris.  

 

Rizzuto and Gerry Coleman, who was a decorated veteran from both World War II and Korea, anchored their defense. Coleman a handsome Californian, like Ted Williams, was a fighter pilot during World War II and like the “splendid Splinter “ from Beantown, was recalled to active duty during the Korean Conflict.  The diminutive Rizutto, known as the “Scooter” was from Brooklyn, and originally tried out for the Dodgers in the late 1930’s. The manager of the “Bums” in those days was the “Old Professor”, Casey Stengel. The Dodgers, who were known variously as the Trolley Dodgers and the Bridegrooms, were once nicknamed the Superbas after a very popular local vaudeville troupe named Hanlon’s Superbas. That name caught on quickly and even in the 1950’s some old-timers still referred to the team as the Superbas. “Little Phil” did not impress Casey, and it was said that he told him “to get lost and pick up your shoe shine box.” More than ten years later, when Rizzuto was an established star, Stengel, who himself played 12 mediocre to average years in the big leagues, and who had managed second division teams in Boston and Brooklyn, became the manager of the Yankees. The Scooter was not one of his greatest fans. When he was unceremoniously dumped in 1956, he was gracious about his sudden departure. Within a short period of time he was invited to join the illustrious broadcasting duo of Mel Allen (nee Israel) and Walter “Red” Barber. He was nurtured along slowly, became a fixture with the Yankee fans, and long after the departure of those two broadcasting legends, in the mid and late 1960’s, he remained a beloved figure.

 

In the 1960’s Phil had a serious lawn mower accident, and had cut up the toes on one of his feet. It was well publicized at the time, and he eventually was able to hobble into the stadium to do his broadcasts. After he returned to the booth that is located on the mezzanine, I left my seat and went up to entrance of the broadcast booth and asked to speak to him. He came out, I wished him well, and welcomed him back to his familiar perch. He responded with graciousness that I have never forgotten. Later on in the late 1990’s Linda saw him walking down Fifth Avenue and said,  “Hello Scooter.” He looked up and with a big smile stopped and responded. As usual he was always the gentleman, and genuinely enjoyed being recognized. His signed autograph is framed along with some old Rizzuto cards from the 1950’s.

 

Always, when he was asked, Rizzuto would invariably make sure to mention that he thought his first manger, Joe “Marse Joe” McCarthy was a much better manager then Old Casey. (Joe McCarthy, was an extremely successful manager, who was born in Philadelphia in 1887 and died in 1978 at the age 91. He managed in the big leagues from 1926 to 1950, except the 1947 season. He started with the Cubs and finished with the Red Sox. But his great success was with the Yankees between 1931 and 1946. He never had a losing season in any of his 24 years as a manager. He won a pennant with the Cubs, and eight with the Yanks. He led the Sox to a first place tie in 1948, but lost a one-game play-off to the Indians.)

 

Joe McCarthy’s Ten Commandments *

For Success in the Major Leagues:

  1. Nobody can become a success walking after a ball
  2. You will never become a .300 hitter unless you take your bat off the shoulder
  3. An outfielder who throws after a runner is locking the barn door after the horse is stolen.
  4. Keep your head up, and you may not have to keep it down.
  5. When you start to slide, slide. He who changes his mind may have to change a good leg for a bad one.
  6. Do not alibi on bad hops. Anybody can field the good ones
  7. Always run them out. You never can tell.
  8. Do not quit.
  9. Do not fight too much with the umpires. You cannot expect them to be as perfect as you.
  10. A pitcher, who hasn’t control, hasn’t anything.

 

* From A Yankee Century by Harvey Frommer, Berkley Books, 2002

 

The Yankees of the 1950’s were incredibly successful, and they had role players like Billy Martin, Harry “Suitcase” Simpson, Enos Slaughter, Hector Lopez, Bob Cerv, Eddie Robinson, Joe Collins, and others, who filled in when needed. People like, Tommy Byrne, Bob Grim, Bob Kusava, Jim Konstanty, Bobby Schantz, Johnny Sain, and Tom Morgan supported their strong starting pitching. The Yankees always had a strong tradition of relief pitching. Before relief pitchers were fashionable, Wilcy Moore won 19 games for the great 1927 Yankees and many of those games were won in relief. Later they developed Johnny “Fireman” Murphy, who was one of the early relief specialists in the mid 1930’s and early 1940’s. He would lead the team in saves in ten of his twelve seasons. Later Murphy would serve as the early general manager of the Mets. He wound up being the architect of their first World Series winner in 1969. Unfortunately, for him and the Mets, he died suddenly of a heart attack in 1970 at age 61! In the late 1940’s and through 1950, Joe Page saved many a game for that generation of Yankees. But as a youngster I first became aware of relief pitchers with Bob Kusava, who was a mainstay in their bullpen until 1954. But the real “intimidator” was one Ryne Duren, who came in from the bullpen for a few seasons in the late 1950’s. Duren wore the “proverbial” “coke-bottle” eye glasses and threw a very hard high fastball. When Duren came into the game, his warm-up habit consisted of squinting at the catcher, usually Yogi Berra, and then throwing the first pitch over everyone’s head. This usually served as a warning to the next batter about “crowding” the plate. Duren burned out quickly and would give way to diminutive Bobby Schantz, who became the star of the bullpen until the Luis “El Senor” Arroyo came through in 1961. Screw-balling Arroyo was sensational, but unfortunately he was quickly burned out and never came close to his 15-5 and 29-save season. The Mantle-Maris homerun race highlighted the 1961 season, but Whitey Ford’s 25-4 pitching, with Arroyo closing almost all of his victories was just as important.

 

My early memories of the stadium in those days were of the hard-throwing, crazy left-hander Tommy Byrne, whose wildness enervated most fans, Enos Slaughter’s combativeness in the field, and Billy Martin’s exciting play. Yogi Berra, a notorious bad ball hitter, would pull home runs to right field off pitches almost in the dirt, Mickey Mantle would bring fans out of their seats with his incredible power on one hand, and his mighty strike outs on the other. Leftfield was a long way from home plate at the old Stadium. The power alleys were well over 400 feet, and few left handed hitters ever were able to reach the bleachers to the right of the visitor’s bullpen. I was always impressed by how strong right handed hitters like Bill “Moose’ Skowron, Bob Cerv and Elston Howard would drive the ball to right field and take advantage of the Yankees shorter right field. Currently, Derek Jeter has become the current master of that art. I was at the stadium in the late 1950’s when Ellie Howard hit two massive blows into “death valley,” as it was called and was caught at the plate twice trying to stretch triples into inside the park homeruns. With that deep outfield, the inside the park homer wasn’t terribly uncommon. In those early days I was impressed with the arm on third baseman Andy Carey, who threw straight overhand to first and Hank Bauer who had a rifle arm in right field. Bauer often led the team in assists, and Carey, who had taken over third from Gil McDougal, when he moved to second base, had some good years but wasn’t as good as Clete Boyer or Greg Nettles. Clete had better statistics and a much better arm than the great Brooks Robinson for a four-year period but was constantly overlooked for the Golden Glove award. Maybe it was Brooks’ bat or the fact that Clete was an abrasive sort, who imbibed too much!

 

Meanwhile I would go to the Polo Grounds on a few occasions. Unlike Yankee Stadium, where one could feel the warm golden rays of the sun almost everywhere during a game, the Polo Grounds was a dark, shadowy, hulking, and rusting edifice whose time had passed. It was a shadow-enveloped ballpark that was known for its poor sight lines and obscured views by its roof support columns. Even though Polo was never played in that massive rectangular yard, it got its name in a logical way.  When the National League franchise that was located in Troy, NY (the home of my grandmother Leah Alexander, who was born in 1888) moved to the city in 1883, the owner John B. Day contracted to play games on the polo field of the owner of the New York Herald, one James Gordon Bennett. His property was located at the corner of 110th Street and 5th Avenue in Manhattan. The team now called the Giants, because the manager once said,  “My big boys, my giants,” had to move to 8th Avenue and 155th Street when their earlier location, just north of Central Park had to be cut through for a new street. Eventually when John T. Brush, who then owned the Giants, moved into the defunct Player’s League stadium, he wanted to call it Brush Stadium. There were many ballparks named after their owners; Shibe Park, Navin Field, Crosley Field, Briggs Stadium, Ebbets Field, Griffith Stadium, Wrigley Field, Comiskey Park among others. But the public insisted it be renamed the Polo Grounds. It was strange elongated horseshoe with a clubhouse in distant center field some 483 feet away from home plate. It was a double-decked park that had a roof that partially covered the second deck all the way around left and right fields. Because the shape was narrow the foul lines were quite short. In left field there was even an overhang from the second deck that came five feet closer to the plate than the cozy 279-foot wall. Many a lazy ball dropped into that overhang before it could be caught by a frustrated leftfielder. It was a strange outfield with a 16 foot 10 inch wall in left field and in the even cozier right field, the wall was 10 feet 8 inches high. In the late 1940’s the Polo Grounds became a homerun hitter’s paradise. In 1947 the team hit homers in 16 straight games, broke the Yankees 1936 major league homerun record of 182 and finished with 221 homers. That total was equaled in 1956 by the Cincinnati Reds and only beaten by the 1961 Yankees, with 240 homers, that featured the Mantle and Maris chase to break Babe Ruth's magic mark of 60.

 

Not only did Mize hit 51, which tied him for the league lead with Ralph Kiner, but also three other Giants finished 3rd, 4th and 5th in the homerun-hitting derby. In the lexicon of that day, someone named those short pop-ups as “Chinese” home runs for some reason. The power alleys did dramatically increase as the horseshoe shape extended to the centerfield bleachers that surrounded the old clubhouse. By far the most famous homerun hit in its history was the one by the Giants’ right fielder Bobby Thomson on October 3rd 1951. Thomson, in front of a mediocre crowd of 34,320 fans, who braved overcast weather, came to bat in the bottom of the 9th inningat 3:57 pm, in the 3rd and last playoff game against the Dodgers, hit the home run called “The Shot Heard Round the World.” He hit it off former Mount Vernon resident Ralph Branca. The unfortunate Branca, who had starred at AB Davis High School in the early 1940’s, had joined the Dodgers at age 18 in 1944. That home run, which won the game in the 9th after the Giants were trailing 4-2, has been called baseball’s most memorable event. The Giants had been trailing the Dodgers by 13.5 games in August and a remarkable run started on August 12th culminating with a finishing record of 37-7, which tied the Dodgers for the league lead. Of course, years later, it was revealed that the Giants were using a “secret” weapon in that stretch.

 

The Giants Clubhouse was in an elevated structure situated between two large sections of bleachers on both sides of the building in deep center field. It was so deep that in its long history only three players hit homeruns there; Lou Brock, Joe Adcock and Henry Aaron. One could reach the clubhouse by two twin 15 step staircases flanking both sides. Joe DiMaggio happened to make the final catch of the 1936 World Series in deep center field and seamlessly glided up the stairs to the clubhouse without breaking stride. In the stretch of the last two months of the 1951 season, the Giants had placed one of their coaches in the window of that faraway clubhouse with a high-powered pair of binoculars, and he would read and steal the signs that the catcher was giving the opposing pitchers. Through a signaling system, the Giant bench and Manager Durocher would be informed, and he would relay what type of pitch was coming to their batter.

 

The other most memorable events in the 1950’s were the homeruns by Dusty Rhodes in the 1954 World Series that helped craft the remarkable 4-0 sweep of the record-winning Cleveland Indians. The heavily favored Tribe had won 111 games in 1954 that broke the 1927 Yankee victory total of 110 and had snapped the Yankees five World Series victories in a row that had started in 1949. They were a team loaded with stars. The had the batting champ playing second, Bobby Avila, the league’s homerun champ in Larry Doby, the MVP on 3rd base with Al Rosen a great defense with George Strickland at short and Jim Hegan behind the plate. Besides all of that talent, which led the league in homeruns, their pitching was legendary. They possessed Hall of Famers, Early Wynn, Bob Lemon, who won 23 games a piece and Bob Feller. Along with that famous trio they had 19 game winner Mike “The Bear” Garcia, Art Houtteman and a remarkable bullpen. But of course, the Giants had the great, unparalleled Willie Mays, at the peak of his game, Don “Mandrake the Magician” Mueller, who had a marvelous season, Monte Irvin, excellent defense with Alvin Dark at shortstop and Wes Westrum behind the plate. Their pitching wasn’t as good as Cleveland, but their trio of Johnny Antonelli, Ruben Gomez and Sal “The Barber’ Maglie had excellent seasons. The legendary knuckle ball artist and future Hall of Famer, Hoyt Wilhelm, anchored their bullpen. That series featured the most famous catch in World Series or even baseball history. In game one, with men on the bases, Willie Mays made his remarkable over the shoulder catch of Vic Wertz’s 460+ foot blast to deep right center. Only Willie could have made that catch and the equally unbelievable throw that followed. This incredible catch and throw so stunned everyone, that it is quite possible that it broke Cleveland’s resolve then and there. By the way Don Mueller, who I would say was my favorite Giant, had two sensational years in 1953 and 1954, hitting .333 and .342. He had very little power in those years but his mastery with the bat in 1954 was a joy to behold. Only years later when Don Mattingly was in his “hay day” did I see an equal to Mueller’s bat control. 

 

Meanwhile, my father was an unreconstructed Giant fan. His early days featured the likes of the great and legendary Christy “Big Six” Mathewson, Iron Man Joe McGinnity, Emil “Irish” Meusel, brother of the Yankee’s strong-armed outfielder Bob Muesel, Frank “The Fordham Flash” Frisch, Mel Ott, Memphis Bill Terry, the last National Leaguer to hit .400 (401 in 1930), and the great “King” Carl Hubbell and his “un-hittable” screwball.

 

By the time I got to the Polo Grounds, the Giants were between pennants (1953) and the old greenish steel and concrete hulk probably was no different than it had been decades before. One of the great ongoing problems was that one had to park usually at Yankee Stadium and than walk over the 155th Viaduct to the Manhattan side. There was practically no parking near the Polo Grounds. Another problem was walking down the huge number of slippery metal steps that led down from the elevated road to ground level. As I recall I didn’t want to go to see the Giants, but the Yanks were out of town and the Phillies were in New York for a double-header on August 15th. The Phillies two pitchers, the ace right-hander Robin Roberts (23-16) and the journeyman right-hander Steve Ridzik (9-6) in 1953, were slated to face Jim Hearn (9-12) and rookie Ruben Gomez (13-1l). The Giants wound up beating them 8-1 and 4-3. Ironically, because of rainouts, the Giants played the Phillies three double-header in a row during the period from August 15th through the 17th.

 

Of course I began to go to Yankee games in that same period, and I was able to go to both the Old – Timer’s games of 1955 and 1956. Again, I cannot remember anything about the games, except that in those days all the former stars of the whole 20th Century of baseball who were still alive usually showed up. First of all both Connie Mack and Denton True “Cy” Young were there. Connie Mack was born in 1862 and would be 144 years old today and Young would be 139. Besides Mack and Young, stars like Hornsby, Speaker, Cobb, and most of the Hall of Famers who could walk, showed up. Of course in those days and for many years later, the Yankees from the 1930’s and 1940’s would show up in uniform and get into a two-inning game. It was only a few years after the great and legendary Joe DiMaggio retired and he still got back into uniform and was in great shape. The sell-out crowd of over 60,000 heartily, and enthusiastically welcomed him as they would for decades after.

 

My next memory was of going to a Ladies Day game in Yankee Stadium on Sunday May 7, 1960, against the Kansas City Athletics. The new look Yankees with their powerful new right fielder Roger Maris beat the hapless A’s 4-1 behind right-hander Ralph Terry, (10-8), who bested Bud Daley, (16-16). Daley, who had a withered arm, was later traded to the Yankees the next year and had an excellent year. Maris became an instantaneous star with his powerful hitting, great base-running, and terrific arm in right field. The fans were not originally happy that their long-time favorite, and the former Marine hero, Hank Bauer was traded away. But the Yanks bounced back to win the pennant again in 1960 after coming in third the previous year, (their worse finish since 1948), and Roger Maris blasted 39 home runs, knocked in 112, batted .283 and won the American League’s MVP award. Hank Bauer, who had been a great war-hero during WWII, had been one of the few Yankees to play on all of the World Series Championship teams between 1949 and 1953. He was the hero of the 1958 World Series win over the Braves. But after being traded, he hit only .275 with only 3 homers and 31 runs batted in. After the 1961 season he was out of baseball. By the way the box seats cost $3.50, reserved went for $2.50, the grandstand $1.50 and the bleachers were 75 cents! Parking cost $1.00 and their program went for 15 cents. They served Ballantine beer and the hot dogs went for 25 cents. I was always incredibly impressed with Maris as a total ballplayer. He could run the bases, had a sensational arm and could play the outfield. I remember when he made a great catch in right and fell into the lower stands backwards, but held on to the ball. He was a pro’s pro, but unfortunately he was not used to the New York press corps. He was really mishandled by the Yankee public relations department which could have made life much more simple for him.

 

That summer of 1960 my maternal grandfather John Kivo decided to take me on a trip up to Boston, Cape Cod and then Montreal. My grandfather was 76 and I was all of 15. We rented a car and he drove all the way to Boston, where we saw the Red Sox play the Detroit Tigers on June 30th. My grandfather was an intrepid soul, who as a businessman had been traveling all over the world for decades. Even at age 76, a driving trip to Boston and the Cape, was not a challenge to him. He also wanted to visit the “Hub” and to see some of his old business associates for probably the last time. When we walked into Fenway Park, we were astounded on how different it looked from Yankee Stadium. It was really a remarkable place, and the famous “Green Monster,” in left field, loomed larger than life. It looked as if any batter could tattoo that wall with impunity. In 1960 the Red Sox, denizens of that famous baseball town, were in a slump. They had been in decline for years and had not won a pennant since 1946, though they had tied Cleveland for first place in 1948, they subsequently lost a one game playoff.  The Sox were slow to sign black ballplayers and were old and slow. (Their first was one Pumpsie Green who came on board in 1959 and was on the bench that June day.) Their line-up was always stacked with powerful right-handed hitters, so they rarely faced lefthanders in Fenway with that short 309 foot 37 foot high wall. This reality was a benefit for their aging star Ted Williams, who was in his last year. The powerful Williams, a left-handed hitter, had to face few lefties and therefore mostly righties his long career in Fenway Park. Supporting Williams that day were Pete Runnels, Vic Wertz, Frank Malzone, a great 3rd baseman and a number of journeymen. The Red Sox were already 20 games under .500 at 43 and 63 and they were facing the emerging Detroit Tigers who were 32-34. The Tigers, with Charlie Maxwell, who killed the Yankees on Sundays, future Hall of Famer Al Kaline, and Norm Cash were a year away from challenging that emerging great Yankee team of 1961. Meanwhile the boxes seats at $2.50 were cheaper at Fenway than in the Bronx!

 

That day was terribly hot, and we sat in box seats in a special seating area with metal folding chairs and canvass covers to keep the seats from becoming unbearable because of the heat. We had gotten there quite early, and we were able to see batting practice and the infield work. Since our seats were right next to the field, every time a throw came into the coach who was hitting fungo (practice) balls to the outfielders, and got past the cutoff man, some of the balls rolled back to where I was sitting. By the time I had picked up 4 or 5 balls, the coach got wise. He was not happy, but no one came over and demanded them back. Boston, and Tom Brewer (10-15) won the game in a slugfest 11-7 over Detroit’s star Jim Bunning who was knocked out early. The game featured two home runs, I believe the 509th and 510th by the legendary Ted Williams. This would be his last season, and he would finish with a .316 batting average, and 29 home runs. His career total of 521 home runs placed him, at that time, number three on the all-time list behind the great Babe Ruth’s 714 and Jimmy Foxx’s total of 534. His career batting average of .344 placed him 6th on the all-time list.

 

Of course it is incredibly hard to believe that1960 was to be Charles Dillon “Casey” Stengel’s last season as the Yankee manager. (By the way he was born in Kansas City in 1890!) As a fifteen year old, I remembered no other Yankee manager. In New York, in those days, there was an unusual degree managerial stability. Leo Durucher had been the Giants manager from 1948 through 1955, and in Brooklyn Charlie Dressen had been manager from 1951 until 1953. He had been offered only a one-year contract after winning back-to-back pennants in 1952-3.He wasn’t happy and was fired. Walter “Smokey” Alston replaced him, was satisfied with one year contracts and remained for 23 straight seasons from Brooklyn to Los Angeles and until 1976. So Yankee fans were used to Casey, who was known as the “old Professor.” (The newspapers referred to him as “Perfessor.”) Now, it’s even harder to believe that Casey left the Yanks 47 years ago. Casey had been known as a ”clown” for decades. He had broken in with the Dodgers in 1912 and hung in the major leagues as a part-time player for 14 years. He was a hero in a couple of World Series with the New York Giants in the early 1920’s. Stengel managed the old Brooklyn Dodgers and the old Boston Braves (or Bees) from 1934-1943. His teams did not do well, and they perennially finished in the second division. In early April of 1943, just before the last season he would manage the Braves, he was crossing Kenmore Square in Boston, (where I lived for two years from September 1963 until June 1965) through the rain and fog and was hit by a car and sent to the hospital. His leg was broken badly. But some in the rough Boston press corps were not too kind to Stengel. One writer, named Dave Egan, who hated Ted Williams so much, that in 1941, when “The Kid” hit .406, refused to list him on his Most Valuable Player ballot, causing him to lose the award to Joe DiMaggio by a few votes, also disliked Stengel. He wrote about the driver, who ran Stengel down, “No one did more for Boston baseball in 1943 than the motorist who ran down Stengel two days before the opening game and kept him away from the Braves for two months.” By a quirk of fate he wound up in the maternity ward which caused many a droll remark from the press. Many of their letters to him were addressed to the psychopathic ward. Old Frankie Frisch, (The Fordham Flash) who was managing the Pittsburgh Pirates, often mocked Casey about the poor quality of his clubs, sent a wire to Stengel addressed in care of the psychiatric ward. He said, “Your attempt at suicide fully understood. Deepest sympathy you didn’t succeed.”

 

At the end of 1960 when the Yanks lost the incredible World Series to the upstart, over-powered Pirates, the Yankee management was anxious to dump Stengel. After he was dismissed, Stengel was quietly bitter. He said “I commenced winning pennants when I got here, but I didn’t commence getting any younger.” The Yanks had told him that they wanted a “youth” movement and Stengel countered with the remark that “Most guys are dead at my age anyway. You could look it up. I’ll never make the mistake of being seventy years old again.” Casey, with all his warts, was one of the greatest personalities in the history of baseball. Most of the younger players on the Yankees loved him. The veterans gave him mixed reviews. Casey was a platoon player in his final days with the Giants in the early 1920’s He had learned that style from the late great John McGraw. By 1949 there were not many players around who remembered “Old Mugsy” or “Little Napoleon,” who retired in the beginning of the 1932 season. McGraw had managed for 33 years and had been at the helm of 2,840 victories out of the 4,879 games he had managed. He had managed more games when he had retired than any other manager, and was dead two years later. Only old Connie Mack, who would manage for 53 years when he retired in 1950, would manage more. Stengel was always great theater in New York. He didn’t have to wait long to be called to baseball. When the New York Mets came into existence in 1962, he was selected as their field manager. He joined his old boss George Weiss, who had also been dismissed as the General Manager of the Yankees, and was hired as president of the Mets. The great Hall of Fame pitcher, Warren Spahn, who had started with Stengel and the Braves in 1942, finished up with the Casey and the Mets in 1965. After serving in the Army in World War II, he won his first game in 1946 at age 25. When Spahn, who had a great career and won more games than any other left-hander in history (363), joined the Mets, he was asked what he thought of Casey, He stated, “I knew Casey before and after he was a genius.” I love that line!

 

My next great memory was a special night in the Bronx. My grandfather was a member of the American Millinery Men’s Association, and their trade group bought a whole block of tickets for a game on Friday night, September 1, 1961. One of the highlights of the early part of the evening was the entrance of the then welterweight champion of the world Emile Griffith, who strode into our section of the mezzanine. Griffith worked in that industry. (One may recall the famous Griffith-Benny “the Kid” Paret fight of early April, 1962, where during the weigh-in, Paret impugned Griffith’s masculinity by calling him a “maricon.” Some say, as a result of that remark, Griffith gave an extra beating to Paret who was trapped on the ropes as referee Ruby Goldstein watched and watched. Paret suffered massive head injuries resulting in his death on April 3rd). But aside from that future situation, this was the year of the home run. Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris were making their famous two-player assault on one of the most sacred of the Bambino’s records, his 60 home runs in the legendary baseball year of 1927. By the time September 1st came along, the Detroit Tigers had turned into a powerful hitting machine with Norm Cash, Rocky Colavito, Al Kaline, Billy Bruton and their ace pitcher Frank Lary (23-7) who beat the Yankees almost every time they faced him. On that night they had the old veteran Don Mossi (15-7) facing the Yankee ace Whitey Ford (25-4). It was a warm night, the Yanks and Tigers were tied for first, and there was a sell-out crowd of 65,566. Whitey Ford hurt himself and Bud Daley relieved in the 5th inning. Late in the game, Yogi Berra, who was playing left field, because Elston Howard had become the regular catcher, made a remarkable play in left field and threw out Al Kaline, who was attempting to stretch a single into a double. Luis Arroyo relieved late in the game as the contest remained scoreless, until the bottom of the ninth when Bill ”Moose” Skowron hit a single through the left side that scored Elston Howard with the winning run in the 1-0 victory. It was the turning point of the season for the Yanks. The ballpark, which had been hushed into silence through most of the game exploded. Later the “Moose” credited 3rd base coach Frank Crosetti for tipping him off on Don Mossi’s pitches. The Yanks next swept the Senators four straight and the Indians five straight. They beat the White Sox and then finally lost a double-header to the Pale Hose after reeling off 13 straight victories. By the time they met the Tigers again, their lead had been expanded to 10 games, and they never looked back. By the end of the season Maris had hit 61 home runs, Mantle was in the hospital with an abscess on his hip and had finished with 54 round-trippers. The Yanks had won the pennant with 109 victories to the Tigers 101 and went on to crush the Reds in the World Series 4 game to 1.

 

I even wound up back at the old Polo Grounds in 1962. On June 1st of that first year of the reincarnation of National League ball in New York, the Giants were coming to town, and someone asked me to go to see the return of Willie Mays to his old ballpark. The Mets were horrible, but there was close to a sellout crowd at the old ballpark to see their old tenants.. The Giants were in first place with a record of 36-15, and the Mets were in last with a record of 12 and 31. They would eventually finish with the worst record in baseball history (120 losses) and the Giants would go on to win the pennant and lose a heart-breaking 7th game in the World Series to the Yanks, when Bobby Richardson caught big Willie “Stretch” McCovey’s savage line drive in the 9th inning. Roger Craig, who would lose 24 games that season, faced their fast-balling ace Billy Pierce (16-6), who had come over from the White Sox. The Giants won the game, 9-6 and Willie went hitless. The only excitement with Willie was when, in his bid for an infield hit, he barreled down the first base line and tripped over the bag, and somersaulted into right field.

 

There were many more memorable games in the next few years, but I do recall being at the Stadium in August of 1963 when Whitey Ford (24-7) lost to the Indians and Dick Donovan (11-13) by the close score of 2-1. The Yankees had little worries and at that time of the season they were 79 and 44 and were 8 games ahead of the 2nd place White Sox, who were 70-55. In the next series with the Yanks, these same Sox would lose 3 out of 4 games and slip 12 games off the pace.

 

By the fall of 1963, I was off to Boston University, and my dorm Myles Standish Hall was right off Kenmore Square in Back Bay. One could see the lights from Fenway Park, which was only a stone’s throw away.  The Yankees had already been to Boston and had come and gone earlier in the season. Because the Red Sox were a 2nd division team, and Ted Williams was long gone, they were not drawing very well. Carl Yastrzemski had not reached star status as of yet, and their miracle season of 1967 was still a few years away. Therefore the doors of Fenway were opened to all who wished to walk in after the 7th inning. Fenway was an old ballpark in 1963, but in that era most of the ballparks in the Major Leagues were old and had been built before the Crash of 1929. Only the expansion franchises, or the teams that changed cities had newer venues.

 

Comiskey Park Chicago-1910

Wrigley Field, Chicago- 1916

Crosley Field, Cincinatti-1912

Briggs Stadium, Detroit- 1913

The Polo Grounds, NY- 1911

Yankee Stadium, NY –1923

Shibe Park, Philadelphia-1909

Forbes Field, Pittsburgh- 1909

Sportsman Park, Saint Louis-1902

Griffith Stadium, Washington 1901

 

Fenway, built in 1912, was old back in 1960 and even when we returned a number of times in the late 1990’s and after the turn of the recent century, it was still pretty antiquated. I still can vividly remember walking from the MTA stop at Kenmore Square, across the bridge over the Thruway, and up to Landsdown Street where we would turn left and walk to the bleacher entrances right along and past the back of the Green Monster.

 

Downstairs from the bleachers,  where we always sat (we couldn’t get tickets anywhere else), there was a large partly underground room where the concessions stands and bathrooms were located. I can always remember the smoking, open charcoal grills where the hot dogs and sausages were being cooked, the French fries boiling in oil, and the beer and soda stands. Late in the games the concrete floors were coated with a thin film of beer slime that had sloshed from the thousands of cups of the bubbly carried up into the stands. It was a real American smell, stale beer, hot dogs, fried onions, boiling cooking oil and perspiration. The only change from the 60’s to today was the lack of cigarette and cigar smoke. Thankfully, in recent days, even the open-air ballparks became smoke free.

 

But baseball was still big in Boston and when the Yankees met the Dodgers in the 1963 World Series, the television room in the Myles Standish Hall dormitory basement was jammed for each game. The Yankee fans were really outnumbered there. Between the New Englanders that loved the Bosox and the New Yorkers, who were Giant, Dodger and even Met fans, the climate was downright hostile. The venal crowd was fully satiated as the pitching rich Dodgers with Drysdale, Koufax (25-5), Podres, Perranoski, and Sherry totally shut down the Yanks (104-57) as they swept them 4 straight. The Yanks who had won the World Series that past October in San Francisco, and would win another pennant in 1964 would go into their swan song in the 1965 season. It was the end of an era and it would be 15 long years before the Yanks won another World Series in 1977.

 

The next spring, my first in Boston, my Boston University buddy, Andy Mandell and I went to Opening Day. It was a gray cold day that went extra innings. We were not dressed for the weather, and the Sox eventually won 4-1, in I believe, the 15th inning.

 

Even though the Red Sox had still not recovered from the loss of Ted Williams in the mid 1960’s, when the Yankees came to Fenway the town was electric. Everyone from the cab drivers to the doormen to the newspaper hawkers and even the college professors were excited. In May of 1965 the Yanks came into town. They were certainly not the Yankees of old. Kubek, Richardson, Tresh, Mantle, and Boyer were still, there but their numbers were way down. Joe Pepitone had joined the club along with Ray Barker and Doc Edwards. On Wednesday night the 12th, Jim “Bulldog” Bouton (4-15) faced Big Bill Monbouquette, and the Sox walked away with a 2-0 victory.  Mantle had a single as the Yanks went quietly with 6 hits. They were 10-14 when they came to Boston, and when they returned in early July they were 37-39. Another month and a half later in mid-August they were 60-60 and they stayed around .500 level baseball into mid September when they slipped to 5-6 games under and finished a mediocre 77-85. This was the first time they were under .500 in decades. The Red Sox were really horrible that year, finishing last and losing 100 games. But they did have some attractive ballplayers. Tony Conigliaro was an emerging star leading the league in homeruns. Later on, he was hit in the eye by a pitch, and his career was never the same. Frank Malzone had a great glove on 3rd, but he was gone by 1967. Rico Petrocelli had power at short and new acquisitions in George and Reggie Smith helped the Red Sox move up to first in 1967.

 

In 1966 the Yankees made their inaugural return to Fenway for a weekend series. On Friday night, the Yanks, behind Al Downing (10-11), erupted for a 15-5 walkover. Mantle went 0 for 5, but Maris, Tresh and Hector Lopez hit homeruns. The bottom four men, including pitcher Downing, accounted for 10 hits and 11 runs as Boston pitcher Earle Wilson (5-5 before he was traded to Detroit) and three others were rocked.

 

The Red Sox won the next game on Saturday 6-3, as Jose Santiago out-dueled Mel Stottlemyre. The rubber game was played on Sunday with the Yankees bouncing back with the fading Jim Bouton (3-8) again on the mound against Jim Lonberg (10-10). Roger Maris hit a homerun, and both Mantle and Jake Gibbs contributed two hits each. George Smith of the Bosox had three hits including a homer, and Yaz a double, but it wasn’t enough. The Yanks wound up 70-89 (three games were not made up,) and the Bosox were not much different at 72-90.

 

In 1967, my last year in Boston, the Yankees were still declining (72-90 and 9th place) as the Boston Red Sox reversed their last years record to 92-70 and won the pennant. On Sunday April 23rd, afterlosing the first two games of the series, Jim Bouton started but was rocked early and out of the game in the 2nd inning. The Yanks had a big inning in the 5th by scoring 5 runs off Jose Santiago and went on to win 7-5. The only players left from 1963 were Mantle and Tresh. Newcomers Howser, Whittaaker, Gibbs, Kennedy, Amario and Horace Clarke would not help this team. It was still exciting to be in a sold-out Fenway and see the Yanks win, no matter how bad they were.

 

The great Mickey Mantle! Every time I went to the stadium in the Mantle Era I expected lightning to strike. Mickey, who was originally called the “Commerce Comet” came to the Yankees just about when I was able to understand baseball. In the 1951 season, Mantle’s rookie year, every one expected him to be an instant success, or as the poet said, “A no can miss!”  Unfortunately he didn’t exactly start that way. The Yankee fans were used to the “Great DiMag,” and any heir to his exalted throne would be scrutinized with a very harsh focused light. Also remember “Joltin’ Joe” had succeeded another great Yankee centerfielder, the Hall of Famer and Kentucky Colonel, Earle Combs. Combs hit .356 in 1927, and finished his great career with a .325 lifetime batting average, which was the exact average that DiMaggio finished up with in 1951! Therefore the “Mick” had big shoes to fill. Of course after he hit his famous homerun out of Griffith Stadium on April 17, 1953, much was expected. This massive drive that cleared 32 rows of bleachers off Washington pitcher Chuck Stobbs, left the ballpark sailing over the 391-foot sign, caromed off a 60-foot high beer sign on the last row of the bleachers, and finally came to rest in the backyard of 434 Oakdale Street. As Clark Griffith, the 83-year old owner of the Senators told the Washington Star, “Wind or no wind, nobody ever hit a ball that hard here before.”  Maybe the wind helped a bit, but hitting the top of the beer sign didn’t help either.

 

Therefore, with all that in mind, and the stories of his epic homeruns in spring training, especially his huge blast at Bovard Field, Los Angeles, much was expected. The famous USC Coach Rod Dedeaux, who witnessed that monster shot, said, “it was like a golf ball going into orbit, it was hit so far it was like it was not real.” His pre-season blast, at Ebbets Field, in an exhibition on April 15th that cleared the 38-foot high scoreboard, caused great expectation and anticipation. Also finishing spring training with a .402 batting average did not dampen the average fans’ dreams of the second coming of Babe Ruth!

 

But life doesn’t proceed in a straight line, and a slow start by the young rookie tended to dampen some of the enthusiasm. Mantle also suffered from the “boo birds” syndrome regarding his draft status. Mantle suffered from a bone condition called osteomyelitis and was ruled 4F by his draft board. With his 4F draft status, his tendency to strike out, and with the memories of the graceful DiMaggio on their minds, the fans were pretty unmerciful towards the young centerfielder. This proclivity continued until his great Triple Crown season in 1956.

 

Meanwhile the younger fans, like myself, loved the “Mick” and flocked to the Stadium to witness another chapter in his explosive career. Whether Mantle hit a homerun or struck out, there was a palpable sense of excitement and electricity. As time moved on, and Mantle became a great star, he was never really loved by the average fan until Roger Maris came upon the scene. Maris was well liked right from the start. His first season, 1960, was sensational, and only an injury he incurred while trying to steal second, tempered his statistics. He wound up losing the home run crown to Mantle 39 to 40 but missed 13 games because of the injury, while Mantle missed only one. The next year, 1961, the M and M boys started to seriously challenge the hallowed Ruthian record of 60 homeruns. It was during this famous summer that fan appreciation started to shift away from the moody Maris, who was feeling the pressure from the whole baseball community. It seemed that no one wanted Maris to break the record, including the Commissioner of Baseball Ford C. Frick. Frick declared that if the record was not broken in the 154 game parameter, (which the Babe had played in 1927), but did it within the new 162 game schedule, an asterisk would be placed in the record book next to the number! Frick was a bit prejudiced, since he knew the Babe, and even had ghost written columns for him in the newspaper. Therefore, almost according to all, if it were to be broken, everyone wanted Mantle to do it! When Mantle had to drop out of the home run race because of an abscess on his hip, Roger Maris was doomed. Within a season, Mantle ascended to an exalted level, which he would retain for the rest of his days. For Roger Maris, the home run record was almost a curse! From 1961, it was downhill for the Rajah! My friend, Alan Rosenberg and I, met the surly Maris in the bar at the Stadium Motel, just north of the stadium off the Major Deagan Highway in 1962 or 1963. He was not a pleasant or friendly sort, plain and simple.

 

With the scene set, almost every Mantle at bat, the crowd would be hushed with anticipation. Of course Mantle usually came through. He hit mighty homeruns and many were in the clutch, when they were needed, and especially in the late innings. Of his 535 homeruns, 177 were hit from the 7th inning on! Mantle hit 298 homeruns with no one on base, and 238 with men on bases.

 

Of his seven pinch-hit homeruns, three were hit in Yankee Stadium, and I was there for two of them. One he hit on August 3, 1963 and the other he hit on September 2, 1967. The first one was hit in the 7th inning off George Brunet in the 2nd game of a double-header against Baltimore. Mantle had broken his foot on June 5th and had not obviously played since that accident. In the newspapers it was reported that he would most probably be in the lineup that day. The Orioles had won the first game 7-2, with Steve Barber besting Ralph Terry and were leading 10-9 in the second, with the starters Jim Bouton and Dave McNally, two pretty good pitchers, long gone. Mantle entered the game to pinch-hit for relief pitcher Steve Hamilton. The crowd of 38,555, which had been attracted by the thought that they would see the Mick’s return, went crazy when Mantle stepped out of the dugout. They had been waiting for him to make an appearance all day, no less two months. He hit the ball on a line into the left field stands and the Yanks went on to win the game 11-10.

 

The next game that I remember attending was played on September 2, 1967, when the Yankees were in the midst of their long decline. The Yankees beat the new Washington Senators 2-1 in a short one hour and 51 minutes. Mel Stotttlemyre (15-15) had only given up 6 hits and was on the losing end of a 1-0 score in the 8th inning. Washington’s Bob Priddy was pitching a 2-hitter when Bill Robinson reached first on a single, and the Mick was called upon to pinch hit for the weak hitting infielder, Ruben Amaro. With a full count, Priddy threw a fastball that Mantle deposited in the lower right field stands. Even though there were only 8,645 people there, the noise was remarkable. He had 14 game winning hits including 8 game winning homeruns. The Yanks only batted .225 for the season and the entire American League hit only .236! So Mantle’s .245 on gimpy legs could be almost understood. By the way, this was the season that hitting in baseball hit rock bottom and Carl Yastrzemski won the batting title hitting only .301!

 

In the long history of the Yankees, not many of their ball players have hit three homeruns in one game. Babe Ruth did it once, but twice in the World Series, Joltin’ Joe DiMaggio did it three times and Lou “The Iron Horse” Gehrig also did it three times. In the more modern era I had the pleasure of witnessing both Tommy Tresh accomplish the feat in 1965 and Bobby Murcer doing it in 1970. On June 6th 1965, the 21st anniversary of the D-Day landings, Tom Tresh, who never lived up to his rookie year success in 1962, hit three home runs in a 12-0 walkover. Al Downing, easily bested Juan Pizarro of the White Sox. In the earlier game the aging veteran White Ford (16-13), in his last decent season, bested the young Tommy John (14-7) 6-1. Ford would win only 4 more games over the next two seasons and finish with 236 victories. Tommy John, who had a very long career, had his first winning season and eventually would pitch a total of 26 seasons, have a surgery named after him, win 288 games, and 91 of those were for the Yanks. 

 

Bobby Murcer, who has broadcasted baseball for many years in New York, actually hit three homeruns twice in his career with the Yankees. He accomplished it in 1970 and 1973. I happened to be at the Stadium on June 24, 1970, when the Yankees split a double-header with the Cleveland Indians. In the opener Sudden Sam McDowell (20-12) shut down the Yanks, 7-2, and Mel Stottlemyre, (15-13) with his sizzling fastball. In the 2nd game, Bobby Murcer, who had hit a homerun in his last at bat in game one, hit three homeruns in a row to help the Yanks win 5-4. Murcer was one of the rare ballplayers to hit four straight homeruns as the Yanks beat Fred Lasher in the 9th. Both starters Stan Bahnsen (14-11) and Mike Paul were not around at the end. Murcer, who was not very big, had a swing built for Yankee Stadium. When the Yanks moved over to Shea Stadium when the Stadium was being refurbished, Murcer’s numbers declined markedly and he was eventually traded into the National League, where ironically his home run numbers bounced back up. He later came back to the Yankees for five final seasons, but the magic was gone. It wound up being a great move for Murcer, because he was still one of the most popular players from one of the worst Yankee periods. He wound up having a long career in the broadcast booth.

 

On October 18, 1977, I had the distinct and rare pleasure of attending a World Series game. As it turned out, it wound up being the last game of the 1977 Series and I was a guest of Linda’s cousin Mark Adler. It was a cool fall evening, and the stadium was jammed with 56,400 insane fans. There was electricity in the air. The Yankees had just come home from Los Angeles. They had a chance to win the Series in game five but were beaten by Don Sutton who breezed to a 10-4 victory. Our seats were two-thirds up into the third deck at Yankee Stadium, exactly behind home plate. It was the 6th game and the Yankees were leading the Dodgers, their former cross borough rivals, almost 30 seasons after they moved to Los Angeles, three games to two. Starting for the Yankees was Mike Torrez  (14-12) against Burt Hooton (12-7). In the second inning Reggie Jackson walked and scored on a homerun off the bat of Chris Chambliss, who after he was acquired from the Indians, wound up being a terrific first baseman for the Yankees. In the fourth inning Reggie came to bat with Thurmon Munson on base, and the Dodgers up 3-2. Reggie lined the first pitch like a “frozen rope” into the lower right field seats. The blow sent Hooton to the showers down 4-3. In the next inning, the fifth, Reggie came up with one man on and hit Elias Sosa’s first pitch deep into the right field stands. The two homeruns came so fast that one could have missed his at bats if one turned one’s head. By the bottom of the eight, with the Yanks in front 7-3 and Torrez rolling along, I must have been one of the few fans to start working my way to an exit. I walked down to the front of the third deck and started to proceed to the far left field exit and the foul pole. I knew that Reggie was going to be first up in the bottom of the 8th and I wanted to make sure that I did not miss his potential shot for immortality. I can recall clearly all the hundreds of people crammed into the entranceway who, were either standing and watching or making their way back into the stadium. I was standing almost next to the foul pole as Reggie came up to bat. Again, before anyone could focus on the start of the inning, Charlie Hough, the next and third Dodger pitcher, threw his knuckleball right down the middle to the leadoff batter, one Reginald Martinez Jackson. Again, Reggie swung viciously and this time the ball went straight over everyone’s head deep into the black area of deepest centerfield, some 450+ feet away. Reggie had hit three straight homeruns, off three different pitchers and each on the first pitch. The stadium erupted en masse and went collectively insane. Up to this game, Babe Ruth had been the only player to hit three homeruns in a Series game. He did it both against the Cardinals in the 1926 and 1928 World Series. By this year, in the 100+-year history of the Series it has only been done thrice.

 

I started to make my exit from the Stadium. I had parked at a garage three subways stops north of the Stadium right off the Grand Concourse. As I made my way down the ramps to the street level, the Yankees went quietly down in the rest of the eighth inning, and I climbed up the stairs to the subway station and sat down in a waiting car. I was anxiously waiting for the train to leave. I didn’t want to be caught with a huge crowd. After another few minutes, a roar went up, and then another, and then a final roar, and I knew the game was over. Thankfully, not long after the last cheers, the subway pulled out, and before long I was at my stop, and headed down the stairs to the street level. It wasn’t long before I was alone in the garage, got to my car, started it, turned on the radio, and pulled out into the street. Mel Allen was doing the post-game show from the locker-room and it was so interesting that I was totally engrossed in his interviews. As I pulled out into the Concourse I started driving along on the almost eerily empty streets, happy as a lark that I was heading home before anyone else. In a minute or so, after making every light, I noticed cars coming towards me, honking and waving pennants from their windows. I said to myself, “Where are these guys coming from?” Unfortunately, with all my exquisite planning, I wound up going the wrong way on the Concourse, and I was almost back at the Stadium. The mistake cost me dearly. By the time I turned around, I was in the midst of incredibly heavy traffic, and it took me an extra hour to get home.

 

Interestingly enough in the opening game of the 1978 season, thousands of “Reggie” candy bars were given out to the fans. When Reggie came to bat in his inaugural appearance of the season, on the first pitch, he again hit a long three-run homer! The delirious fans threw their “Reggie” bars on to the field in a sugary salute and it took five minutes to clean them all up. Reggie had hit four straight homers, each on the first pitch!

 

Of course the question always is posed to a “baseball fan,” who are your favorites, all-time teams, and whom did you like on the opposing teams? First of all my favorite manager was Casey Stengel and then, of course Joe Torre. Ralph Houk was a disappointment, but the front office let him down. Billy Martin was good theater, but he was too much of a hot-head! Personally I thought Dick Howser, Lou Piniella and Bill Virden should have been given more of a chance. The biggest managerial failures were Dallas Green, and Stump Merrill.

 

My favorites were the following:                                       All-Time Yankee Team 1903-2005

 

1B- Don Mattingly, Bill Skowron                                                Lou Gehrig, Don Mattingly

2B- Bobby Richardson, Willie Randolph                   Tony Lazzeri, Joe Gordon

SS –Derek Jeter, Phil Rizzuto                                           Derek Jeter, Phil Rizzuto

3B- Greg Netttles, Clete Boyer                                           Red Rolfe, Greg Nettles

C- Yogi Berra, Elston Howard                                      Bill Dickey, Yogi Berra

LF- Gene Woodling, Roy White                                     Charlie Keller, Dave Winfield

CF- Mickey Mantle, Mickey Rivers                                     Joe DiMaggio, Mickey Mantle

RF- Hank Bauer, Roger Maris                                          Babe Ruth, Roger Maris

 

RP- Allie Reynolds, Catfish Hunter                                    Red Ruffing, Allie Reynolds

LP- Whitey Ford, Eddie Lopat                                           Whitey Ford, Lefty Gomez

Relief- Mariano Rivera, Sparky Lyle                        Mariano Rivera, Joe Page

 

Opposing Ballplayers: Defense (1951-2005)                Opposing Players: Offense (1951-2005)

 

1B- Vic Power, Keith Hernandez                                  Willie McCovey, Mark McGwire

2d- Nellie Fox, Joe Morgan                                  Joe Morgan, Rod Carew                                    

SS- Luis Aparicio, Ozzie Smith                                            Alex Rodgriquez, Ernie Banks

3B- Brook Robinson, Mike Schmidt                  Mike Schmidt, Eddie Mathews

C-   Roy Campanella, Johnny Bench                      Johnny Bench, Roy Campanella

LF- Carl Yastzemski, Dave Winfield                Frank Robinson, Ted Williams

CF- Willie Mays, Bill Virdon                                             Willie Mays,  Ken Griffey Jr.

RF- Al Kaline, Roberto Clemente                                                Bobby Bonds.  Hank Aaron

 

RP- Bob Gibson, Juan Marichal

LP-Sandy Koufax, Warren Spahn

Relief- Hoyt Wilhelm, Dick Radatz

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

All-Time Team 1951- 2005                                           All-Time Team 1900-2005

              

1B- Willie McCovey, Don Mattingly                              Lou Gehrig, George Sisler

2B- Joe Morgan, Rod Carew                                             Rogers Hornsby, Eddie Collins

SS- Ernie Banks, Cal Ripkin                                              Honus Wagner, Cal Ripkin                                    

3B- Mike Schmidt, Eddie Mathews                                               Mike Schmidt, Pie Traynor

C-   Johnny Bench, Yogi Berra                                                Johnny Bench, Bill Dickey

LF- Ted Williams, Stan Musial                                           Ty Cobb, Ted Williams

CF- Willie Mays, Mickey Mantle                                     Willie Mays, Joe DiMaggio

RF- Hank Aaron, Roberto Clemente                                Babe Ruth, Hank Aaron

 

RP- Bob Gibson, Nolan Ryan                                           Walter Johnson, Christy Mathewson

LP- Sandy Koufax, Warren Spahn                                     Lefty Grove, Sandy Koufax

RP- Mariano Rviera, Hoyt Wilhelm                                 Mariano Rivera, Hoyt Wilhelm

 

All-Time Announcers 1951-2003

 

Mel Allen, Red Barber, Bill White and Phil Rizzuto

 

 

There, of course, is an unlimited amount to say about baseball. Unlike other sports it is written about almost daily throughout the year. Every day during the season, which lasts now 7-months, something new happens. It is said that in every game one can see something new. Unlike other sports, hitting .300 for a career, or getting a hit only 30% of the time gets one in the Hall of Fame. Great, great teams lose 33% of their games. Therefore the baseball season is always an unfolding saga, with new heroes and “goats” every day. With rookies emerging and aging grizzled veterans coming through with unexpected heroics, baseball is very much like life. It unfolds methodically, and it moves along with measured care. But opportunity in baseball only knocks sporadically, and that opportunity must be taken advantage of immediately, or it can be lost forever. There are many other stories to tell, like meeting old friend and fellow Mount Vernonite, Ken Singleton, while he was broadcasting a Dodger-Expo game at the cavern-like Olympic Stadium in 1994, or seeing the Yankees blast Cleveland 21-1 in late August of 1999. That was a real Jake Ruppert-like game. There have been about 9,000 Yankee games since 1951, and I can say that I have had the pleasure of listening and seeing a great many of them via the radio and the television. On the other hand, I have probably been to a few hundred over the years, and I am always thrilled with the prospect of “Take Me out to the Ballgame.”  Today with crowds of 52,000+, at each and every game, the Yankees and baseball, in general, are enjoying a golden age of interest. The excitement that is generated is marvelous. But with all that wonderment in mind, I wanted to add an essay I wrote about a game I did not attend, but I sure will remember forever.

 

“The Yankees Win! The Yankees Win!’

                     John Sterling, Yankee announcer at 11:30 pm – July 1, 2004

 

Last Thursday night, July 1st, was quite memorable for Yankee fans of all ages. Not only did the Bombers dispose of their century old archrivals from New England, the Boston Red Sox, but also they swept the series. The Red Sox, once known as the Beaneaters, had been drifting further and further back in the Eastern Division race, making this series critical to their pennant hopes. Of course the Red Sox started fast, and earlier in the season they had taken six out of seven from the slow starting powerless Bronx Bombers while establishing a 4½ game lead. But as this month ended, the Red Sox found themselves suffering from a “June Swoon” malaise. But in baseball, like life, hope springs eternal, and after losing the first two games in the Bronx, they trotted out their flaky, but fearsome, ace Pedro Martinez to the mound. With the quixotic Martinez facing the Yankee rookie Brad (Admiral) Halsey, who was making his 3rd start of his nascent career, things looked good for the Bosox.

 

Of course baseball doesn’t follow a predetermined script, and the Yanks opened up a 3-0 lead on the back of two massive homeruns by fill-in first baseman Tony Clarke and all-star catcher Jorge Posada. They were cruising along with the “Admiral” into the fifth inning, when like life itself, things started to change. Eventually with a hit here and a large homerun by former Manhattan resident Many Ramirez, the score was tied at.3-3. The game went into extra innings, with both sides sparring back and forth with any success. They both experienced the frustration of loading the bases only to be thwarted by great defense. Finally with two on and two out in the top of twelfth and the runners on the move, the great Derek Jeter ran for a slicing hump back floating liner that was heading for the 3rd base foul line. Jeter, who has made a career of tracking down these tricky and dangerous floaters, ran at full steam, caught the ball, and headed right for the stands. Facing the consequence of running into the concrete wall or flying over it, Jeter chose the latter. It seemed like something out of Superman with the “Captain” taking off with the momentum of a runaway locomotive and landing on top of a flock of people, their food and souvenirs, and the unforgiving metal seats. Of course even though two runs were saved, the hushed standing room crowd of 55,000 plus held its collective breath as we all waited for Jeter to be lifted back into sight. When, after what it seemed like an eternity, the wounded Jeter emerged bloodied but unbowed, the crowd roared its love and approval that the “Captain” had survived his short flight into immortality. He walked off the field under his own steam but with some assistance, obviously bruised but not broken.

 

After a few moments, the game resumed with the Yanks again loading the bases in the bottom of the twelfth. But to no avail, they could not score. When they took the field in the 13th inning they had a makeshift lineup in the field. With Jeter gone, and different pinch-hitters used, the Yanks had to improvise at a few positions in the field. Down to two pitchers, the Yanks were forced to use journeyman Tanyon Sturtze on the mound to open the inning. Facing Yankee nemesis Manny Ramirez, the fearsome slugger late of George Washington High School, (where my mother graduated in 1925), Sturtze served up a “gopher ball” that flew over the center field wall.  Suddenly it was 4-3 and the Red Sox had hope once again. It seemed like Jeter’s catch and resulting injury would be all for naught. The rest of the inning went quietly, and the Yanks, with their backs against the wall, faced the bottom of the inning and their last “licks.”

 

The bottom of the 13th did not start well for the shaken Yanks. The first two batters went up and down with nary a whisper. But, as it often happens in baseball, lightning struck in the late evening hours in Bronx County. Ruben Sierra singled, and then the platooned second sacker Miguel Cairo, who killed the Yanks in the last World. Series, strode to the plate. After fouling off pitch after pitch, Cairo went with the pitch and drilled a line drive to right center that scored Sierra with tying run. With the huge crowd rocking and the game 4 hours and 19 minutes old, pinch hitter John Flaherty, the seldom-used back up catcher hit a ball over the shallow fielding Manny Ramirez’s head. The fans went crazy, the run came in, the Yanks won again, and the bench ran to the mound with an eruption of uncontrolled joy! Wow, what it means to be young, rich and a Yankee!

 

Of course there have many great and memorable games in the long and illustrious history of the Yankees. From the early days of Ruthian greatness in the 1920’s through the Bronx Bombers days of Gehrig and DiMaggio of the 1930s and 40s, to the Stengel-Houk eras of the 1950s and 60s, to the tempestuous days of Billy Martin and the Bronx Zoo, and to the current Torre Dynasty, the Yanks have always delivered excitement and success. I myself have seen thousands of Yankee games from the early 1950’s to today. Back in 1961 I had the pleasure of being at the Stadium, with 67,000 others on September 1st, a Friday night, when the Yanks and Tigers came into the Bronx tied for first. The game was scoreless until Moose Skowron singled in the winning run in the bottom of the ninth giving the Yanks and Whitey Ford the victory. The Yanks went on to win 109 games, Maris hit number 61 and the Yanks won the Series over the Reds. Maybe game seven of the 1960 World Series with its ups and downs, and its final score of 10-9, resulting in the improbable Pirate victory, could be seen as one of baseball’s most exciting games. Of course great performances like Don Larsen’s Perfect pitching in the 5th game of the 1956 World Series, or Reggie’s 3 homeruns do not make all-time great games. I was lucky to be at the stadium for Reggie’s home runs, and also for Bobby Murcer’s and Tom Tresh’s three homeruns performances. I watched on television the great pitching performances of Dave Righetti, Jim Abbott, David Welles and David Cone. Of course, talking about excitement in my time, Mickey Mantle hit 177 homeruns from the 7th to the 11th inning.  Great performances are the exclamation points that make baseball the marvelous game that it is and will always be.

 

Again the setting was great. Each Yankee-Red Sox contest is another contribution to one of sport’s great rivalries, and again there was another sell-out in the Bronx. So the scene was set, the players came out for this latest chapter in this century-old saga, and the fans were enraptured by the ebb and flow of a great game. Hurrah for baseball! 

 

On the day after the Yankees clinched their 45th Pennant or Division championship, I must close this piece with a quote from the great Branch Rickey, who wrote in 1965, “The unique strength in the game of baseball as a team sport lies in the ingenious geometry of the diamond. It is really a game of individuals: nine men and a batsman play out of drama on separate stages as the action unfolds. The greatest single individual contest, both in action and the suspense immediately preceding the action that ever confronts any player in any sport comes when the batsman faces the pitcher.”

 

A Day at the Races, Hand Melons and a Night in Ottaw 9-9-06

A Day at the Races, Hand Melons, and a Night in Ottawa

By

Richard J. Garfunkel

September 9, 2006

 

Saratoga Springs is a beautiful little city not far up the line from Albany, Schenectady and Troy. One could easily find a lot to do there as long as the weather is mild. Besides its famous track that has been in business for over 140 years there are some interesting museums, the Lincoln Baths, beautiful Congress Park and the old gambling Casino, the Gideon Putnam Hotel, the old and new campuses of Skidmore College and a great downtown. Saratoga, now a city of more than 27,000 souls was first settled around 1776, was established as a geographical entity in 1819, a village in 1826 and finally a city in 1916.

 

By the way, the pivotal Battle of Saratoga, which proved to be a critical, if not the most critical turning point of the American Revolution, was fought fifteen miles to the Southeast from September 19 to October 7, 1777. It was at this pivotal engagement that British forces, supported by Tories, Canadians, German Brunswickers (also called Hessians) and Indians were defeated in a series of local battles, Oriskany, Bennington, Freeman’s Farm and Bemis Heights. Historically the British plan of having the forces of Colonel Barry St. Leger, General John Burgoyne, and General William Howe meet up in central New York and divide the Colonies failed. Howe went south to Philadelphia, St. Leger and his Indian allies were beaten at Oriskany and forced to retreat by General Nicholas Herkimer, who gave his life, and General “Gentleman Johnny” Burgoyne was beaten by a combination of forces at Bemis Heights led by General Horatio Gates, and assisted heroically by Generals Benjamin Lincoln, Benedict Arnold, Enoch Poor, Ebenezer Learned, and the heroic Virginian Colonel Dan Morgan. Out of the original British combined forces of 7800, over 1600 were killed or wounded and 6000 were captured. The American colonial forces that numbered over 15,000 were made up of regulars and volunteers from all over the region, including four or five states, and even some Oneida Indians suffered 800 casualties. So one could spend a great deal of time in and around Saratoga studying its military history. 

 

But, all in all, it’s the nation’s longest continuously operating racetrack. It has been located on Union Avenue since 1863 and has attracted millions over the years to its August meet. As the late great writer Walter “Red” Smith wrote in one of his columns on racing in 1957, Godly Gambling Hell,  “I heard it said,” the priest said, “that Saratoga and the racetrack especially have been enjoying their best season in history. More people have been attending race and more money has been going through the mutuel machines than ever before. I understand that yesterday the daily double windows were kept open longer than usual and when they closed there were still lines waiting and 150 people were turned away. If any of those people are here this morning, we will cheerfully accept those bets, in the collection basket.” Smith went on to say that “…in Saratoga, where racing remains a recreation first and a business enterprise last, it has often seemed here that there is a happy affinity between horse playing and piety.”

 

With all that in mind, I had a number of experiences up in old Saratoga, what was familiarly called “The Graveyard of Favorites.” My mother’s mother, Leah Alexander, who died in 1946, when I was still a toddler, was born in Troy, NY, which is somewhat equidistant from Albany to Saratoga and is also the home of Russell Sage College, where Linda began college and we visited in the early part of this present century. I had been up in the capital region a number of times when I was a young boy because my grand aunt Rose (my grandmother’s younger sister) and my uncle Carl Myers, who owned a few department stores, lived on fashionable Marion Avenue. Marion Avenue was ritzy then with its Federal-style brick houses, and today it looks even better. My grandfather, John Kivo happened to like the track, and he combined familial obligations with his sporting interests. Over the years he spent most of his time up there at the luxurious old Gideon Putnam Hotel that sits in the middle of Saratoga Spa State Park. This Georgian structure, built in 1935 by Marcus Reynolds has 120 rooms and sits in the middle of 2300 acres that also contains the Hall of Springs, the Roosevelt and Lincoln Baths and a golf course.

 

When I was first there over 50 years ago, I remember going into the bar with my father and having him point out the famous people. One person I clearly remember was Monty Wolley, who was sitting in his accustomed place at the bar. For all who have forgotten, Wolley (1888-1963), who was known also as the “Beard,” was a friend of Cole Porter (1891-1964) at Yale, taught English for a time at Old Eli and had a later career as an actor. Wolley played himself in the fictitious Hollywood Cole Porter “bio-pic,” Night and Day, with Cary Grant as Porter, and Alexis Smith as his beautiful wife Linda. Though the music was great, when the legendary Porter saw the film, his comments were, “Great film, not my life.” Wolley really became famous, when he starred in both the Broadway (1939) and the Hollywood (1942) Kaufman-Hart productions of The Man Who Came To Dinner, as the eccentric Sheridan Whiteside. George S. Kaufman (1889-1961) and Moss Hart, (1904-1961), the husband of the actress Kitty Carlisle (nee. Conn, pronounced Cohen) based this comedy classic on the career of their friend and Algonquin Round Table luminary Alexander Woolcott (1887-1943). Unfortunately, for the great rotund wit he originally turned down the part, because he was too busy with his other pursuit, died soon after, and was eventually forgotten. Therefore, Wolley always remained “The Man Who Came To Dinner!”

 

Ironically, my mother always talked of her chance meeting with the myopic, tall and gangly wit, writer, director and critic George S. Kaufman. She was standing outside the Yiddish Theater, on 2nd Avenue and 2nd Street in New York City, right across from the old, now long gone, Romanian restaurant, Moskowitz and Lupowitz, in 1926 at the age of eighteen. Kaufman, aged 37, at the time, approached her and said, “hello.” He told her that he had an extra ticket to the show and asked her if she would accompany him to see it. According to my mother’s account, she agreed, they saw the show and parted. Years later in 1968, I was enjoying a trip to Florida with my life-long friend Larry Reich, who was enrolled in an externship in a hospital in North Miami Beach, Florida, on his way to a long medical career. As I absorbed the summer sun on Hibiscus Island, situated in Biscayne Bay, off the MacArthur Causeway, I happened to read a great biography of Kaufman by Howard Teichman. (1916-1987, who also wrote a biography of Alexander Woolcott and co-wrote The Solid Gold Cadillac with GS Kaufman.) In the biography Teichman tells of Mary Astor, (1906-1987), the Hollywood beauty, who was sued for divorce by her then husband Dr. Franklin Thorpe in 1936, when details of her juicy diary were revealed. The judge ruled the diary as being too sexually explicit and had it confiscated. It was rumored that Ms. Astor rated all her lovers with an accompanying chart. It was also said that the myopic and stooping Kaufman was rated number one, with a 5-Star billing. When I returned home I asked my mother about this story and jokingly asked her whether she had had any other contact with Kaufman. She didn’t “take the bait” and brushed off my silliness. I did say to her that after reading about Kaufman, I had “new respect for her!”

 

On our way up to Canada, during the recent Labor Day long weekend holiday, we stopped once again in Albany, toured the New York State Museum in the Empire Plaza, and went to lunch with my distant cousin Carl, whose parents, Rose (my mother’s young aunt) and Carl Myers, had passed away many years ago. We went to eat in the Bagel-Bite on Delaware Avenue, drove through his elegant old neighborhood on Marion Avenue and eventually said our farewells, and moved on to Saratoga Springs. When we arrived into the City of Saratoga we quickly drove over to the venerable old track on Union Avenue, saw that parking was $10 and then drove across the street to the National Racing Hall of Fame. We wound up parking in someone’s backyard. There was a sign that said “Donation $5, put the money in the window of the white Valiant, thanks.” We looked around, and found the old rusting “junker” parked next to the curb cut with its front window cracked open about 2 inches. On the seat were crumpled dollar bills and, and I assumed that this was the “cash register” as I slipped mine in also. We walked right across to the Racing Hall of Fame. Little did we know that we could have parked there for free! I had learned earlier in the week that my stockbroker Art Pasternak, and his wife and his young son Rick, were to be at the track on that very Saturday. I called him on my cell phone, found out where his box seats were, and made my way across Union Avenue to the track while Linda stayed at the museum. I paid my two beans at the window and found Art at the end of the sixth race. We talked a bit, and realizing that I had promised to be back at the Hall of Fame by five PM, I had only time for one bet. I asked for the racing program, looked at the chart of the seventh race and determined that this field was horrible! Not one horse had ever won a race. Classically one could have termed this race a “maiden” race, but in fact some of these nags had been around so long that the race could have been better termed an “old maid’s race.” The field was so bad that even Art was sitting this one out. So I decided to take the four most extreme long shots and “box” them in an exacta. In the parlance of the track, any “boxed” combinations of the 1, 4, 7, and 8 horses that came in first and second or second and first would constitute a winning exacta. The odds ranged from 99 to1, which means that the odds are usually over 100-1, but the mutual board only shows two digits, and 55 to 1. Therefore, if by chance the lowest combination had come in, the pay-off could have been in the range of $3,000! But the gods of the track are notoriously fickle and at the top of the stretch, when it seem like my vacation would be paid in triplicate, the number 9 horse slipped into the lead and the finishing results wound up being 9-1-4-8. Too bad, but that’s what’s the track is about, momentary elation and long-term reality.

 

In my younger days I had been to the track more often than most. Every once in a while I had wound up at Yonkers Raceway, where in the backstretch, the lowlifes of the world congregated, and during my college years I spent many days and nights “improving the breed” as the poet said, at Suffolk Downs in Boston and Rockingham Park in New Hampshire. Truthfully, if one really pays attention, a more worthwhile education about the vagaries of life can often be found at the track. Certainly those frequent costly lessons are not for the faint at heart. Amazingly the last time I had placed a bet at Saratoga was almost 40 years earlier to the day. My grandfather, John Kivo wanted to take a trip up to Saratoga and see old friends and relatives. He was then 80 and probably thought that this might be his last chance to visit the track. (Luckily that wasn’t so. My grandfather lived to the ripe old age of 87, and Linda, her father Morris Rosen, who loved the track, my grandfather and I, went to see the 101st racing of the Belmont Stakes in 1969!) So in the middle of August of 1966, I drove first up to Albany to visit the Myers in their wonderful house on Marion Avenue. Forty years later I would be taking their son out to lunch at the Bagel-Bite. The Myers were lovely people and always incredibly gracious, so our visit was quite pleasant. After saying our goodbyes, we were back on the road to Saratoga and the Gideon Putnam Hotel.

 

In 30 minutes or so my grandfather, and I arrived, checked in, unpacked and once we were comfortably billeted in the venerable edifice, we planned our strategy for the coming few weeks. I had brought a little money with me and each day we would drive to the track, park, walk to the gate, grab lunch, look over the Racing Form and the Daily Program, make our first bets, and wait for each race to begin. Eventually, as it happens with most bettors, time and the odds are not on one’s side. If one bets long enough, the chances of winning decline markedly. So after four days or so, I was “tapped” out! Therefore I decided to improve my mind and body and not go into further debt with my grandfather. I parked myself by their terrific pool, spent time with my weights, that I had left in the trunk of my 1963 Chevrolet Super Sports convertible, and settled in to a pattern of exercise, sunning, and reading the short stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald. (I still have the book, it was a gift of my sister and inscribed …Christmas 1959!)) Two of those tales always stuck in my mind, The Diamond as Big as the Ritz and Bernice Bobs her Hair. Each morning I would shuttle my grandfather back and forth from the big oval on Union Avenue and go back to the hotel to my established routine. My grandfather had made friends with a couple named Liguori from his early days in Saratoga. He made plans to meet them and of course without my fore knowledge they appeared. It seems that Rose Ligouri had worked as a hostess in one of the Lake Shore Hotels where gambling operated outside the purview of the law as the local officials looked askance. Gambling had legally existed in the “Casino,” which was, and is still located, in the center of Congress Park. In 1911 it was closed down and the owner was paid $150,000 for his inconvenience. When the new “law and order”, boy governor, Thomas E. Dewey was elected in 1942, the Lake Shore Hotels were forced to shut down their back rooms. With regards to my grandfather’s friend, it seems Mr. Ligouri was said to be in the “dry cleaning” business in New Jersey, and who was I to question that fact? One thing I learned quickly, Mr. Liguori never went to the track but used to make a bet somehow each day. Unfortunately he was not doing well, and by the end of the week he was quite unhappy.

 

Eventually as the meet was coming to an end, Mr. Liguori came to me at the pool where I was reading and relaxing. He asked me if I could find my grandfather at the track and if I would place a bet for him. I said that I would be pleased to do it and he instructed me to bet on “a horse that I have since forgotten” in the feature race. He also told me to tell my grandfather what his intentions were. I was happy to comply, and was astounded when he gave me $1000 in crisp fifty dollar bills. He also gave me a fifty for myself and said that I could bet on the horse if I wished, and he had highly recommended that I do it. I did not need to be asked twice. I had some “mad” money left in my wallet, and I considered this occasion an unusually “mad” situation and therefore I knew all of it would be bet on this nag. I hustled into shorts and a shirt, ran to my car, and drove directly to the track. There was no real traffic; every one was at the track. I pulled through the open, and unattended gates, parked on the lawn next to the gate and walked right in. In a minute or so I found my grandfather, told him the news and went to work “spreading” the money around. I had been instructed to bet half of the money to win and the other half to place. I certainly did not want to go to one window and bet it all at once. I was afraid that so large a bet, seen coming from the hands of a 21 year old, would cause “tongues to wag” amongst the betting tellers. In those pre-computer days, the track offered separate $2, $5,  $10, and $50 betting windows for wagering. Today one would be able to bet any combination, at any window at the track, as long as that betting combination was authorized for that race. At the track every one is always looking for an “edge” and information is “king”. In fact, “touting” is a legendary activity at all tracks. So I was well aware that it would be wiser to “spread” my money around.

 

I was finally finished right before the horses reached the gate. When the bell rings, the gate opens, the horses break and the betting windows close. I was in no hurray to rush back to view the race. In those days there were not a lot of televisions spread around the grandstand. Eventually I was able to wedge into the crowd look up to the left and see the top of the stretch where the field starts to wheel into the final furlongs (A furlong is strictly a thoroughbred racing term, and it is equivalent to an 1/8 of a mile.) This now “forgotten horse”, with Helidoro “Gus” Gustines whipping and high up into the stirrups, swung five wide on the field and charged to the front. As I ran to the finish line and tried looking over the twenty-deep person crowd, I realized that our horse had won and had paid a hefty price!

 

I immediately ran to the windows to collect with all my various win and place tickets, I received all sorts of monies, and I almost needed a bag to hold all the cash.

Meanwhile I was a little concerned about walking alone towards where my grandfather was stationed. For one reason my pockets were bulging. My grandfather was also quite happy with the results of the race, but I was concerned about holding all of Mr. Liguori’s winnings. Therefore, I would drive back to the Gideon Putnam and return later to get him. Mr. Liguori already had heard the good news, and as I recall these forty years later, he had a large toothy grin spread across his broad face. There was more good news. Mr. Liguori gave me a very, very large tip that paid a lot of bill far into my senior year at Boston University. So along with my own “meager” bet that returned around $500, I was now “in the chips” for the fall of 1966. Later on at Boston University I met my old school buddy Gil Wang, from Yonkers and Roosevelt High School. He and I had spent many nights together at various sporting (hockey) and racing venues. I told him the story of the bet, and he told me that he had also been at Saratoga that past summer day. Gil had been a camp counselor for many years, and the camp was near Saratoga and he often went to the track. Talk about a “small” world.

 

Meanwhile Linda and I had other adventures in lovely Saratoga Springs over the years. Our daughter applied to Skidmore and was on the waiting list when she accepted Rutgers in 1989. When I was a young boy my grandfather and parents raved about a local Saticoy or melon familiarly known as the “Hand” melon. This melon was reputed to be the finest melon known to fruit connoisseurs around the planet. A man named “Hand” had produced it, and a small hand shaped design, which was inbred into the skin of the melon, could identify it. When I was first married in 1969, I had told this story to my father-in-law Morris Rosen, who loved fruit, and was quite incredulous about the existence of this mysterious melon. No matter how much I insisted, I got nowhere. A few years later when Linda and I happened to be driving through Saratoga, I again brought up the subject of the “Hand” melons. Amazingly as we were driving along one of the local roads I stopped at the sight of an old hand-made wooden sign with the words HAND MELONS SOLD HERE! Immediately I slammed on the brakes, skidded to a halt and u-turned back to a small fruit and vegetable stand. Boy did I feel vindicated. Now it was the trick to buy this mysterious melon and see how it tasted. Unfortunately the vindication was short-lived. I learned to my abject disappointment that the weather-beaten sign was indeed not only old, but antiquated and inaccurate. The young proprietress had heard of the melons, but had not seen one in years.

 

Back to the present, my “one bet” adventure at the Saratoga Racetrack was now history, I walked back over to the Racing Hall of Fame, met Linda and we got back into our car and headed off to Plattsburgh, where we would stay the night before our sprint to the border the next morning. I sort of missed “hanging around” Saratoga for another day or so, but we had a date in Montreal for lunch, and Plattsburgh was where we were headed for dinner and the evening.

 

If you didn’t know, Plattsburgh is only forty miles from Canada and many of the signs around that town are bi-lingual. Plattsburgh doesn’t have much to offer, but it is the home of the local state university. It wasn’t hard to find, and we did an obligatory drive around the campus so as to say we saw it. So, after our short tour, it was back on Route 87 and northward to the border and Canadian customs. After a 15-minute wait at the border, we were asked by the Canadian customs official what our intentions were. We told him that we were visiting for pleasure and had only one bottle of white wine to declare. He didn’t seem too concerned and we were on our way in Montreal to meet Linda’s distant, distant cousin at The Black Tulip, which was located conveniently right off Route 15 in Montreal and at the Ruby Foo’s Hotel. We had never met Carol and Howard Blank before, but Linda had been communicating with Carol by email for years. Betty Levitan, Carol’s mother was a cousin of Linda’s father, and we saw her often over the years. She was always a lot of fun and had a great sense of humor. Unfortunately she died of pancreatic cancer, the disease that killed my father. The Blank’s generously treated us to lunch, the conversation was animated, and fun was had by all. We parted as new friends and headed right back on the road for our 94-mile trip to Route 117 and into the Laurentian’s and the town of Mont Tremblant.

 

The time-sharing property, owned by Club Intrawest, is exquisite and the surrounding hills and lake are as picturesque as one could imagine. Tremblant Village, which is an $850 million creation built into the mountains and one, can ride the sky lift right from the center of town to the top of the mountain sky trails. Frankly it’s pretty breathtaking. After frolicking around the Village for a few days, we headed southwest for a two-day trip to the Canadian capital of Ottawa. The 100-mile drive to Ottawa is through sparsely populated Quebecois countryside. With the empty countryside, there is not a lot of going on, and therefore the narrow roads were quite empty and we could easily average 110 kilometers per hours (65 mph). (All distances of the roads in Canada are based on the metric system.) We made one stop in Montebello, which features the massive Fairmont Hotel, the largest log-built structure in the world and the home of a wonderful golf course. We had a picnic lunch and continued onwards toward Ottawa.

 

Ottawa is by far one of the most beautiful cities in the world. The governmental buildings, which surround and include Parliament, are remarkable. We walked all around, took a tour of the interior of Parliament, which included the Senate, the Commons and the Library and were generally quite impressed. The city is very clean and very bi-lingual, because Ottawa, though located in the Province of Ontario, sits across the Ontario River from the Province of Quebec. Its open-air market and culinary center, Byward, is pretty remarkable. We spent a lot of time walking around and shopping. I found a terrific toy soldier store, located at 8 Byward Market Square and acquired two Mounties and a great Iroquois warrior. There are great museums in Ottawa, which we unfortunately had to pass up, but it will encourage us to return. Ottawa has a shopping mall located on Sparks Street that runs through the center of town and one can find all sorts of sweaters and collectibles, along with unlimited Indian art. We stayed in the fabulous Westin Hotel that overlooks the center of the city and Parliament Hill. From our 18th floor room, with its floor to ceiling windows, we were able to have a bird’s-eye view of a nighttime light show from the Hill that painted the Parliament’s nine story Peace Tower with a myriad of colors. So Ottawa is fabulous, a worthwhile visit for anyone, and not insanely far away!

 

Eventually it was back on the road to Mont Tremblant, where we played tennis, watched the US Open in French, read our books and traipsed all over the Village and its shops. We planned to leave a day early and stop in Montreal, walk around a bit, and go to dinner with some old business friends the Bordoffs. We had a wonderful room on the 34th floor, at the Sheraton, located on the Rue Rene Levesque. It seems that since Montreal really embraced the Quebecois separatist mind-set, and many of the English and non-French left for Toronto, things have changed in that old and beautiful town. One thing they did was to rename many of the old streets after party hacks like Rene Levesque. I had wondered where Dorchester Street had gone? I thought that type of activity only happened in Russia with towns like Volgagrad and St.Petersburg. But, be that as it may, the city is still a real delight and the “old” city area is a joy to walk about. Along the Rue Notre Dame and south towards the St. Lawrence River and the grounds of the Expo, the cobble stone streets near St. Denis and Saint Antoine bustle with activity. The outdoor cafes, the street hustlers, the young and old lovers, the galleries, and tourist shops explode with life. After walking around and dropping into as many stores as possible, we headed back to our hotel, rested a bit, and awaited the Bordoffs. Lawrence and Claire picked us up, and took us to a great fish restaurant called Le Nantua on Rue Notre-Dame Ouest. After our meal we drove up to Mount Royal and had a great late night view of the city. Every time, since I was first in Montreal in the 1950’s, I have looked down on the city from Mount Royal. It is a kind of a ritual. We even were taken to a bagel-making factory where we watched the bagels being twisted and baked late into the night while Lawrence picked up two-dozen of his favorites. So it was finally back to the Sheraton and bed. The next morning we had breakfast on the 37th floor over-looking the city and the St. Lawrence Rive and the states to the south.

 

It’s a 350-mile trip to Tarrytown, and we planned to get halfway and stop once again in Saratoga. We thought the town would be empty in the wake of the end of the August racing meet, but it seemed that Skidmore College was welcoming their new students for the upcoming semester, and the Main Street was jammed. We had lunch, drove around a bit and headed south on Route 50 to find the Thruway. But as fates would have it, Linda spied a fruit and vegetable stand and we pulled off the side of the road. Of course, as a matter of course I asked about the availability of a “Hand” Melon. Lo and behold the owner said he had some extra ripe ones that usually sold for $2 per pound! He would sell us one for half price because the top had been cut off. We found out that the “Hand” melon was created and licensed by one John Hand in 1934, and is grown today by a third generation of the Hand family and they that have a farm in nearby Greenwich, NY. Even though they have over 400 acres, very few are devoted to this special cousin of the cantaloupe. In fact, it is said, that at some of the more trendy restaurants at the Saratoga Race Track, “Hand” melons go for $8 per slice. He offered us a bite of the melon, and we were not surprised, the taste was fabulous. We bought, for half-price the six-pound melon and placed it in our cooler and got back on the road. I had finally found the mysterious melon, because of our serendipitous stop in Saratoga. We were back home in Tarrytown in a few more hours, watched Ms. Sharapova beat Ms. Henin-Hardin 6-4, 6-4 in the women’s tennis final of the US Open and finished half of the melon. The next day we watched the men’s finals with Roger Federer handily beating Andy Roddick and finished the remains of that same melon. My fifty-year quest for the “Hand” melon was over, and we were both convinced that the “Hand” melon is unsurpassed in taste.

 

 

 

Mount Vernon, Henry Littlefield and Myself -August 25, 2006

 

Mount Vernon, Henry Littlefield and Myself

2006

Letter to Mal Gissen

By

Richard J. Garfunkel

August 25, 2006

 

 

Thanks, and great to hear from you after all these years. Remember Henry was only 9 years older than you were and he was really from a different world. I think that it took him a few more years to really adjust to MV. He had gone to Trinity Prep, knew and taught Jimmy Brown how to wrestle in the Manhasset, LI YMCA, got his BA and MA at Columbia and became a ROTC officer in the Marine Corps. Mrs. L. went to Wheaton and was from Smithtown. I believe that when the Littlefield's came to MV they were in culture shock with the Jews, Italians and Blacks. For sure it was the Jews that shocked them the most. Henry was used to the city Jew and not a confident suburban somewhat smart ass Jew. As open-minded and progressive as they eventually became, they were not ready for MV. I got to know them quite well and though they knew Jews were smart, they never realized how able they were to conduct their affairs in an assimilated world, of which MV was. All in all, in the years after you left he came into his own as giant among men.

 

Regarding my relationship with Henry, I was much more of a roughhouse type and after a rough year at Horace Mann I was a bit more dysfunctional. I related to Henry quite quickly as a friend and outsider. To a degree I was always an “outsider.” In the fall of 1961, after Vinnie Olson cut me from the BB team. (He regretted it later and told me, and Gene Ridenour the new coach the next year, in 1962-3, was my gym teacher and saw me play each day in phys-ed. He asked me to play on the varsity. I told him that I didn't want to sit as a senior, and I had tossed in my hat with HML and totally committed to what he wanted. Gene and I remained friends for many, many years after that!)

 

Meanwhile the year before, and right after being cut, I wandered around a bit and even though I had never met HML I decided it was time. Tony Taddey, who was a neighbor and a year younger, had joined the football team and raved about Henry. So I went up to him, told I knew Gus Petersen, the famous trainer, former star wrestler from the turn of the century and long-time coach at Columbia U, at Horace Mann and we clicked. On a long 3-hour bus ride to Cheshire Academy, in the fall of 1961, we talked about history (WWII), a common interest for both of us and we became quite close. Over the years I always worked for him and had the pleasure of running the NY State Section I Wrestling Tournament held in MV for three years in a row 1964-5-6. I came in from college for the event and did all of the coordinating. I wound up being his closest friend and acquaintance from MV. We exchanged 5000 letter, post cards, and e-mails from 1963 until his death in 2000. Randy Forrest and I went to his funeral in Monterrey, which was attended by over 1000 people! 

 

Aside from all of that, one late afternoon Bobby Danetz, who was my neighbor, and I were walking home after a wrestling meet. Bobby had been pinned by some opponent. Bobby was quite strong, but he did not have a real killer instinct. He was too nice a guy and there were some real studs out there in the light heavyweight and heavy weight divisions (175 and Hvy). He just couldn't cut it with finesse. As we walking up Prospect he slipped on the ice and fell right on his back with all his books and gear. I jumped right on top of him and said now you've been pinned twice. I did not see Bobby for many years after that until I attended a funeral for one of Jimmy Cotton's parents. My parents were quite friendly with the Cottons and were in Florida I suppose. So I went as an obligation. Bobby was there, and he had not changed an iota. Still soft spoken, still nice, and still very decent! Later on he showed up at our 40th reunion and we shared a few laughs and memories.

 

 

Jon Breen – His Life and the Fund -August 25, 2006

  

Jon Breen – his Life and the Fund

By

Richard J. Garfunkel

August 25, 2006

 

I've spent a lot of time in Mount Vernon over the past number of years. In 1993 at the time of our 30th HS reunion, of which I was the chairperson, an old friend named Jon Breen showed up. Jon Breen and his young brother Scotty were the sons of a well-known physician, Steven Breen who had his practice and home on Sidney, between Columbus and Darling. His mother died of a stroke at age 42 I believe. She was a strange gal of sorts who had a huge head of platinum blond hair. Dr. Breen later died at the age of 59 or so. Jon and I had met in the 4th grade in the new Holmes School. He was friendly with three others, Bob Liscio, who eventually went to Fordham Prep and disappeared from view, Bill Bendlin, who went to Concordia Prep, and Charles Columbus, whose older brothers Jay and Richie grew up in MV, went to school there and graduated college from Michigan State and Ohio State respectively. I became friendly with Charles and a fellow named Warren Adis. My parents got to know the Columbuses and Richie, of the Class of 1955, had more then a passing interest in my sister Kaaren, the Class of 1959. Eventually the Breens moved across town and Jon went to Nichols, but we stayed connected through the “Y” and other social avenues. My parents went to Europe for 18 weeks in 1957-8 and I stayed with the Columbus family for that period of time. Richie Columbus, who had a Casanova type reputation, to say the least, was engaged to a go-getter gal at OSU. But he invited my sister out to Columbus, Ohio when she was about 16 to see the school. Of course he had other things on his mind, but that is another story. My sister, who was and is very sophisticated told me all about him in later years. After that incident he and I never really got along. But all that is water way over the dam.

 

In the interim Jon Breen and I re-kindled our friendship in high school and stayed friendly during his years at Dartmouth. He was a volatile sort and I wasn't a particular wilting wall flower. He was easy to rile up and I had a great time teasing him over the conservative reputation of Dartmouth College. When I got married in 1969 and traveled to Boston on a short trip back to BU's homecoming, we met up with Jon and his girlfriend who became his future wife Ronne. After that evening I never saw Jon Breen again until the evening of our 30th reunion in 1993. We had a great time, but to make a long story short, he was dead of a massive heart attack within 5-6 months. As the reunion head, I donated the money to MVHS in his name and started the Jon Breen Fund (see latter below).

 

Therefore over the years I re-familiarized myself with Mount Vernon and all the dynamics that made it tick. I eventually wrote a lecture, that I gave at the high school, about the affect of the Brown v. the Topeka Board of Ed. decision on my life growing up in MV. I posted it on the Class of 1956 website. Unlike the other medium-sized cities in Westchester; White Plains and New Rochelle, the City of Mount Vernon made colossal errors regarding commerce, education and race. Ironically Mount Vernon, which had the image of toleration and theoretical assimilation wound up being a victim of its own hubris. The world we grew up in was quite unique, especially for Jews and Italians who were the last European immigrant groups that sought acceptance in Anglo-Saxon Protestant dominated America. Both groups brought a great deal of “baggage” with them to America. The Italians suffered from an inferiority complex of not knowing the language, being an artisan group that did not value education or professionalism and were our enemies during WWII. The image of Mussolini, who most Italians adored in the 1930's, became that of the strutting, pompous clown, portrayed and parodied by Jack Oakie in Chaplin's masterpiece, the Great Dictator, and in all too real life, the junior Fascist partner of the Axis.

 

The Jews who immigrated to Mount Vernon from NYC, the Bronx and Germany in late 1930's suffered from the age old ravages of anti-Semitism. Most groups and other ethnic minorities lived in self-contained ghettoes in the cities, and the youngsters from those groups congregated in their own hangouts and even their own sections of both the ocean beaches and the mountain bungalow colonies. Only in Mount Vernon, where Jews could buy property, and were not bound by restricted covenants in property deeds, could they really breathe the free open air of the suburbs and live in integrated neighborhoods determined by a meritocracy and not a red line. I believe that this existence was quite unique to Mount Vernon.

 

As turbulent social dynamic demands came in the late 1960's that unique world started to change and change quickly. In a short period of time, the lines of opposition which had been drawn over the effort to build a new unified high school, fractured the alliances amongst the races and the religious groups. The Liberal Jews sided with the blacks against the Italians and the conservative Jews. When times got tough the Jews who had supported integration and busing saw the Blacks turn on them. The Jews, as in many periods of their history, voted with their feet, and the white flight began with the momentum of an avalanche. The Italians never forgave the Jews for first fighting for the new high school, then supporting busing and then abandoning the city. The rest is history. In a short period of time the city changed forever with no hope of a revival to its glorious past. There is a sense of great nostalgia for Mount Vernon amongst almost all of the citizens that lived there from the 1930's through the middle 1960's. It is a longing for the unique and open life of neighborhood and community that existed almost nowhere else. It has now disappeared and has been re-born in the new world of suburban divisions between upper middle class and lower middle class.

 

 

March 31, 2001

 

The Honorable Ernest Davis

Mayor of Mount Vernon,

City Hall

Mount Vernon, N.Y.

10552

 

Dear Mayor Davis,

 

I hope that this letter finds you and yours quite well. I wanted to thank you for taking the time to speak to me this morning at the Memorial Field Tennis Facility. Knowing the dynamics and pressures of public life, I appreciate your thoughtfulness regarding my subject matter.

 

We had originally met through the good offices of my long time friend Randy Forrest, whom I have known for 40 years. I have worked with Randy on many projects starting with scholastic wrestling in the early 1960’s, up to his work with the Frederick Douglass Institute in New Rochelle. In fact, Randy and I flew to San Francisco together, just a year ago this week, for the memorial service of the former great Mount Vernon High School coach Henry M. Littlefield.

 

Over the last eight years, I have directed the effort to raise funds for the Jon Breen Memorial Fund, which uses these funds to sponsor a public policy essay contest every year. The late Jon Breen, a 1963 Mount Vernon High School graduate (president of his class), a Dartmouth College alum, a Harvard Law School graduate and a Fulbright Scholar, had a great fondness for Mount Vernon, was an award-winning essayist, and was a public-policy thinker. Through these eight years I have raised over $20,000, have read and judged over 200 essays yearly, and have awarded thousands of dollars to the winners. With the help of the last three Social Studies coordinators at Mount Vernon High School, L.E. Smith, John Alberga and Paul Court, I have been able to accomplish this important effort.

   

Last year, with the untimely death of Henry Littlefield, I was able to start an annual history award to be given in his name. With Mr. Court’s able assistance, I was able to select Robert McNair (Cornell, ’04) as the year 2000’s honoree. This year, as in the past, we have chosen a subject that has recent historical and political relevance, the Electoral College. Please find, along with this letter, copies of last year’s Jon Breen Fund letters, and one of the contest flyers from 1999.

 

Over this period of time, I have had the pleasure of being invited to speak in Advanced Placement and Honors classes on 20th Century historical topics. One of these topics has been the life and times of Franklin D. Roosevelt. As part of my lecture, I bring along artifacts and collectibles reflective of his life, public career and the events that made him famous.

 

Your idea of convening a panel discussion, in front of an assembly, on this very important topic and having this event and the awardees also honored on local cable television is greatly appreciated. I believe it will bring added recognition and needed exposure to the project. I look forward to helping you accomplish this goal with any and all efforts I can contribute.

 

Regards,

 

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

 

 

 

The AB Davis Flying Fortress – August 25, 2006

The AB Davis Flying Fortress

August 25, 2006

By

Richard J. Garfunkel

 

 

The letter below is from my friend, Paul Court, a Mount Vernon alum, who is currently the Social Studies/History Lead Teacher at Mount Vernon H.S. He is the advisor to the Jon Breen Fund and for a number of years now he and I have worked closely on the Jon Breen Essay Contest and the Henry M. Littlefield Memorial History Award. I had sent him the piece below from the AB Davis Class of 1956 website, which was written by Linda (Young) Shapiro. I had inadvertently identified the AB Davis as a B-24 (known also as the Flying Box Car and the Flying Coffin). He supplied the pertinent remarks regarding the name AB Davis and our warplanes in the letter directly below my piece on the B-17 and Robert Rosenthal.

 

The Flying Fortress AB Davis was a B-17E. There were 12,731 Flying Fortress manufactured between 1935-45. Boeing built 6981, Douglas built 3000 and Vega (Lockheed) built 2700. 4750 were lost in combat. The Fortress carried a crew of 10 and had 8 .50 caliber machine guns along with one .30 machinegun. The B-17E had a wingspan of 103' 9.4” and its length was 73' 9.73″.  The earlier models were approximately 67 feet long and the later models E, F, G; H had a rear gun turret. The B-17E had 4 Wright Engines, and a gross weight of 40,260 lbs. Its top speed was 318 MPH and it usually cruised at 226 MPH. It had a range of 3300 miles and a service altitude of 35,000 ft. There were 512 B-17E's built.

 

I had the distinct pleasure of interviewing Major Robert Rosenthal, of Harrison, NY, one of the heroes featured in Edward Jablonski's (1923-2004) seminal history of the B-17,  “Flying Fortress”, published in 1965 by Doubleday. Major Rosenthal, the winner of the DSC (extraordinary heroism), the Silver Star (with cluster for gallantry in action), the Purple Heart (with cluster), the Air Medal (with seven clusters) and the DFC (with cluster for extra ordinary achievement in flight) amongst his 16 other decorations, along with a Presidential Unit Citation for his Squadron, The Bloody 100th,” is today 89 years old. He graduated from Brooklyn Law School, entered into the US Army Air Force in 1941and rose to fame as the pilot of Rosie's Riveters and the Royal Flush. His bomber group carried the first American airmen to bomb Berlin.

 

“Thirteen planes from the 100th Group took off for Munster (Germany); only one, Rosie Riveters, returned.” and “except for Rosie's Riveters, not one of the 100th planes had succeeded in reaching the target. They were attacked just as the formations were approaching the IP, just when the P-47s (fighter escort) had to turn around (lack of adequate range). Without fighter escort the Fortresses were now open to attack.” As they proceeded into Germany, “Over Munster Rosenthal completed his bomb run; his two engines (out of four) were already out, both waist gunners were wounded, one seriously. The interphones were out and the oxygen system was shot up; a rocket had gone through the right wing, ripping a large ragged hole in the skin. The flak was heavy as the plane dropped its bombs.”

 

“In his diary, tail gunner William J. DeBlasio summarized the depleted emotions of his crew; by the grace of G-d we were the only ship to come back, our pilot brought us home safely.” (From the “Flying Fortress” by Edward Jablonski)

 

He along with Paul Tibbits, the legendary commander of the 509th Air Squadron and pilot of the Enola Gay were considered amongst the greatest pilots produced by our Air Force during the Second World War. 

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

 

 

—–Original Message—–
From: QuartzPc@aol.com [mailto:QuartzPc@aol.com]
Sent: Monday, March 13, 2006 7:24 PM
To: rjg727@optonline.net
Subject: Re: The Mount Vernon Library and the B-24 Bomber The AB Davis

There were several warplanes purchased by the students and citizens of Mt. Vernon. I have seen a photo of a Boeing B-17E Flying Fortress with the name “Purchased by students of A.B.Davis” painted on the rear fuselage. The date would have to be 1943 or early 1944. I also received a copy of the Boeing B-29 Super Fortress and her crew also dedicated to A.B.Davis High School (in recognition to the outstanding success of their war bond sales drive). The photo was from the late war effort…. perhaps even Korea! US Air Force markings changed in 1947 and a black night bombing scheme was used in Korea on the undersides of these bombers. My guess is 1950-1952. I heard about a Grumman Hellcat fighter, which was delivered to the school and parked near the flagpole parking area as a token of the school's war bond sales success. It was reputedly stripped for souvenirs and was eventually taken away sometime later. Interesting tale but I haven't got too much information on this tale. I never heard of a Consolidated B-24 Bomber being named after AB Davis…that's a new one on me. Did you know that an AB Davis graduate was an original member of the Eagle Squadron (Yanks flying for Britain BEFORE pearl Harbor), he was later shot down and listed as KIA while flying with the USAAF in 1943 or 1944. He's on the roll of honor.

Cheers,

Paul Court

QuartzPc@aol.com
[Richard J. Garfunkel] 

 

 

The Death of Joe Rosenthal and the Flag Raising on Mount Suribachi 8-21-06

The Death of Joe Rosenthal and the Flag Raising on Mount Suribachi

by

Richard J. Garfunkel

August 21, 2006

 

 

Joe Rosenthal, a wartime photographer for the Associated Press, who was one of the last survivors of the Battle of Iwo Jima, died yesterday on August 20th, 2006. He was 94 years old. Rosenthal, who at age 33, had been rejected by the Armed Forces because of his poor eyesight, volunteered to be a combat photographer. He had covered many of the ferocious battles of the War in the Pacific, and took many memorable combat photos in the campaigns from Guadalcanal to New Guinean and through Iwo Jima. The following is the story of his most memorable one, and the one that inspired the Marine Corps Monument in Washington.

 

On February 23, 1945, the adjutant of the Second Battalion, 28th Regiment, Fifth Marine Division, Lt. G. Greeley Wells, carried the first flag, which was relatively small, only measuring 54” by 28” that was raised on Mount Suribachi, the 545-foot high extinct volcano that dominated the skyline of Iwo Jima. When his unit was activated at Camp Pendleton, California, the commanding officer had his staff explain their jobs to the officers of the battalion. Lt. Wells’ duty was to “Carry the flag.”  When his battalion hit the beaches of Iwo Jima, he procured a flag from their transport USS Missoula and put it in his map case. (Iwo Jima, one of the last major battles fought in World War II, was fought between February 16th and March 26th of 1945.)

 

When the marine assault reached the top of Suribachi, he gave the flag to Lt. Harold G. Schrier. When the marines secured the top of that ghastly mountain, Louis Lowery, the Marine Corps photographer took a number of pictures of all the men on the crest with the newly hoisted flag. Hundreds of ships in the fleet that observed the flag saluted it with salvoes, as did excited marines all over the island. Of course this was the first foreign flag in four thousand years to ever fly over Japanese territorial soil.

 

Secretary of Navy, James V Forrestal, (1882-1949, Secretary of the Navy 1944-7) who was with the fleet, was at that time, landing with the Marine Commander, General Howland “Howlin’ Mad” Smith (1882-1967, called the father of the modern amphibious warfare). As they were landing, the flag went up, was spotted immediately from the beach and the mood amongst the high command turned to unmitigated excitement and joy. Not long after the flag-raising Forrestal sent word to division headquarters to relay to the flag-raisers that he wanted the flag. Forrestal remarked also to General Smith: “Holland, the raising of that flag on Suribachi means a Marine Corps for the next five hundred years.” 

 

The 2nd Battalion commander, Colonel Chandler W. Johnson, whose temperament was as fiery as the legendary Smith’s, said that the original flag was for the men of our battalion and ordered Lt. Wells to get another flag to replace the first flag. Wells said he sent his company runner, Rene Gagnon, (later to be a flag raiser) to the beach to get a flag from one of the many crafts that were wrecked and littered along the beach. Interestingly, Col. Johnson later recalled that he had sent Lt. Ted Tuttle to the same beach to get the replacement flag. Johnson called after Tuttle and said, “And make it a bigger one.” While Lt. Tuttle was looking for a replacement flag, Gagnon, who had also been sent to the beach, reached Colonel Johnson’s command position. Tuttle took a large 96” by 56” American flag to the Colonel that he had obtained from LST-779. This flag had been found in a salvage yard at Pearl Harbor and had been rescued from a sinking ship on December 7th. He handed it to the Colonel, who in turn gave it to Gagnon. He told Gagnon, and others with him “You tell (Lt.) Schrier to put this flag up, and I want him to save the small flag for me.”

 

By the time Gagnon got back to the top, Joe Rosenthal, the Associated Press photographer, had arrived. A long pole was found, and because it was long and heavy it took quite a few men to hoist it to the site of where the first flag was planted.

 

Ironically, when Rosenthal had disembarked from the command ship, he had slipped on a wet ladder and had landed in the ocean between that ship and a landing craft. He had to be fished from the water. He was lucky his bulky, but durable 35mm Speed Graphic was in a waterproof bag. After he landed he was able to get a few shots of Smith and Forrestal disembarking from their landing craft. He and another reporter had heard that the Marines were approaching the top of Suribachi. Along with Rosenthal, was Bill Hipper, a magazine correspondent, and combat photographers Private Bob Campbell, who worked with a still camera and Sergeant Bill Genaust, who had a movie camera loaded with color film.

 

As their party started to work their way up to the mountain, Gagnon had reached the summit and had given the larger flag to Lt. Schrier. The accompanying sergeant told the Lieutenant “Colonel Johnson wants this flag run up high so every son of a bitch on this whole cruddy island can see it.” Rosenthal, at about the same time, met Sgt. Lou Lowery who was descending from the crater at the top of the extinct volcano that was Suribachi.  Lowery said that he had already taken pictures of the flag raising, but that they should continue to go up because there were great views of the harbor.

 

As Rosenthal approached the top shortly after noon, he noticed a couple of marines hauling a long heavy iron pole.  The pole the marines were dragging was a length of drainage pipe and weighed more than a hundred pounds. As the three photographers milled around, the first flag was lowered, some photos and movies were taken, and the marines got set for the almost simultaneous raising of the second and larger flag. The Marines wanted the replacement of the smaller flag with the larger one to be seamless. Rosenthal set his camera down and piled up some stones and a sand bag to stand his short five foot five inch frame upon. His camera was set a 1/400th of a second with an f-stop between 8 and 16.

 

The second flag raising happened within seconds as the men, Ira Hays, Frank Sousley, John Bradley, Harlon Block, Mike Strank and Rene Gagnon carried the flag and started to plant it into the ground. As they approached Rosenthal spotted their movement, grabbed his camera, and got set. Genaust who was about three feet away asked Rosenthal if he was in his way. Rosenthal said. “Oh no,” and later said “Hey Bill, there it goes.” Everyone got what they wanted, the first flag going down and the second larger flag going up. Rosenthal wasn’t even sure that the shot would come out. After a few moments Rosenthal did what Lowery had done, he called several marines to cluster around the pole for a standard shot. Eventually 18 marines would be in this casual shot. They were laughing, waving their arms and helmets. The replacement flag raising was so casual that it was never even reported in the 2nd Battalion’s “Action Report.”

 

Of course the events of this day were big news back in the states. Joe Rosenthal’s film was sent back to the fleet where it was put on a mail plane headed for Guam, a thousand miles south across the Pacific. The film would eventually be sent to technicians who would develop the pictures and discard the ones that would be deemed rejects or mistakes. Eventually, the prints that they decided were worthwhile would be sent by radiophoto to the United States. By February 25th the photo was published in the States and the affect was electric. It hit newspapers all over the States. Because Rosenthal worked for the Associated Press his photo reached the States sooner than the military pictures. Because the first flag raising had been reported, and there were few pictures or any real identification of the flag raisers, there was a natural confusion over the events that surrounded both flags. In fact, the second flag raising was never really mentioned because it involved a replacement flag. Again to the marines on Iwo this event was meaningless. The original flag raising had lifted the Corps’ and the fleet’s morale, and all deemed the second event as anti-climactic.

 

This confusion regarding the first and second raisings of the flag would inadvertently cause a future controversy. Part of the problem was that most people thought that 4574 casualties and the raising of the flag signaled the end of the battle for Iwo Jima. In fact, it only marked really the beginning. The bloodletting and slaughter would continue for four and one half weeks more and would not end until March 26th.

 

When Joe Rosenthal left Iwo Jima and landed on Guam, he had, by accident, created the myth that the flag raising was “staged.” As he walked into the press headquarters he was congratulated for the flag raising shot.  He was asked whether the shot was posed? Rosenthal, thinking that they were talking about the other shots involving the group of 18 marines, said, “Sure.” At that moment Rosenthal had no idea what they were talking about. He was totally unaware of the excitement generated by his picture, and he even was unaware that any of his later photos had survived.

 

Of course when he saw the “shot” they were all talking about, he said that that shot was not staged, and “if he had tried to arrange that shot I would have ruined it.” He was still unaware of the importance of the “shot” and was for sure did not conceive that his idle remark would cause such future controversy. Unfortunately, many of the correspondents who had overheard Rosenthal’s remarks, claimed that he had said that the picture was staged. This would haunt Rosenthal for the rest of his life. The first flag raising photos taken by Lou Lowery, and delayed in transmission were basically ignored. The other photos by Rosenthal’s colleagues, who stood on the crest of Suribachi, were also ignored.

 

Also, this slur about the “reality” of the photo was repeated and embellished by some of the rival photographers, who felt their work had been eclipsed by this photo. So it was a mixed blessing for Rosenthal, who was eventually honored with the Pulitzer Prize for his effort. On one hand he became famous for being in the right place at the right time, but on the other hand, he became the focus of this ongoing 60-year myth regarding the photos spontaneity. Ironically Bill Genaust, who took the color movies of the flag raising, was killed three days after the event. When his camera discovered and eventually the film was processed, the true visual evidence re-affirmed Rosenthal’s version of the story.

 

There was much more to this battle of course. According to James Bradley, in his great book, Flag of Our Fathers, Iwo Jima took a great and savage toll on the American marines who fought there. “Of the original eighteen men photographed around the second flag raising fourteen were casualties. Of Colonel Johnson’s 2nd Battalion: 1400 boys landed on D-Day; 288 replacements were provided as the battle went on, a total of 1688. Of these, 1511 had been killed or wounded. Only 177 walked off the island. And of the 177, 91 had been wounded at least once and returned to battle.” One of the stark facts is that it took 22 crowded transports to bring the 5th Division to Iwo and the survivors fit easily into 8 as they left. The Battle of Iwo Jima incurred, for the first time in the Pacific War, more casualties on the attacking American force than on the defending Japanese. The Americans lost approximately 6800 men along with over 20,000 wounded. The Japanese lost over 20,000 men with only a few hundred captured.

 

Rosenthal, who left the AP in 1945, and worked for the San Francisco Chronicle for 35 years, battled the so-called controversy through out his long life. His greatest antagonist, the famous Time-Life correspondent Robert Sherrod, claimed that Marine Corps photographer Lou Lowery had told him that it was staged. Also Jack Anderson had repeated that same story. Both men eventually apologized for their mischaracterization of both Rosenthal and the event. There was also bitterness from a number of marines who were pictured in the first flag raising. They objected to the photo being called the “flag raising at Iwo Jima.” Charles Lindberg, not the flier, who was a retired electrician, and the last survivor of all the men photographed at either flag raising, always felt bitter that the first group of 18 were mostly forgotten.

 

On a personal note, I had the pleasure of meeting Joe Rosenthal in 1989 and getting his autograph on the accompanying picture of the “Flag Raising on Mount Suribachi.” In the best tradition of our country’s sense of volunteerism, this man, though rejected by our armed forces, still sought to contribute to our great effort, and went to the heart of the action. His contribution was not demanded but was freely offered. We are better for his and the sacrifice of uncounted others.

 

Letters to the Editor 8-18-06

August 18, 2006

The Journal News

Letter to the Editor:

letters@lohud.com

 

 

Here we are less than three months from our next Congressional elections and we are experiencing an interesting phenomenon. On one hand, we have the Money Pit President who has spent this country into unprecedented deficits without doing anything to improve the deteriorating rolling stock of the country. With schools, bridges, roads, sewage systems, watersheds, and the power grids of the country suffering from a case of fiscal starvation, the President, like Tom Hanks continues to ask for billions for his Money Pit in Iraq. Most people are disillusioned with our effort there, not only because the justification was fabricated, but because the effort was mismanaged and fought on the “cheap.” On the other hand, we have our new version of the “Do-Nothing Congress.” This term was first used by President Truman to characterize the Republican led Senate and House during the 1948 campaign. We have a Congress that has passed tax relief for multi millionaires, while ignoring health coverage for millions, open borders, the drainage of American jobs overseas, unprecedented trade deficits, increased crime, the dissolution of the middle class, as wages decrease, scandals on Wall Street, the profligacy of corporate brigands, global warming, energy dependency on foreign suppliers, the disgrace and inadequacy of Homeland Security, the colossal failure of FEMA, and an endless and growing list of other inadequacies. When President Bush came into the White House, on his full first day in officer, he reflected on a prayer inscribed on a mantelpiece from John Adams, “… that only the wise and honest may rule under this roof.” Can we really believe that that prayer has been fulfilled?

 

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

Potsdam, The A-Bomb, and the Emergence of State Sponsored Suicide 8-9-06

Potsdam, The A-Bomb, and the Emergence of State Sponsored Suicide

By

Richard J. Garfunkel

August 9, 2006

 

Always throughout history individual soldiers and even units were willing to sacrifice their lives to hold a position. Certainly the effort of the 600 Spartans at the Battle of Thermopylae, in 480 BCE was a prime example of a heroic and suicidal stand against overwhelming odds. But most of these suicidal efforts were of a defensive nature. Still most soldiers fight to be able to survive, not to die. When one is faced with a foe, that is not only willing to give up his/her own life, the battle reaches a more serious level. The phrase “kill or be killed” rings very true in these types of circumstances. In fact, in combat, this mantra becomes almost universal. In a conventionally based conflict, pitting one state against another, the desire to survive the action is still paramount with most combatants and most responsible governments. In July of 1945, the Potsdam Conference attempted to answer the problem of state sponsored suicide with an explicit threat. History tells us that this threat was ignored and a more drastic and escalated response followed with swift brutal finality. 

 

According to the agreement at the Potsdam Conference, which was held in Cecilienhof in Potsdam, Germany from July 17th to August 2, 1945, a Declaration and warning was given to Japan, the remaining combatant from the former Axis Alliance. Of course this last great meeting of the 2nd World War brought together the leaders of the three great Allied Powers, the United States, the United Kingdom and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Unlike the previous summits, unforeseen events intervened and dramatically affected the makeup of the participants. Unlike the Yalta Conference and the Teheran Conferences, two of the major personalities who dominated the prosecution of the war were gone. Franklin D. Roosevelt * (1882-1945), who served as the nominal chairman of both the meeting in Yalta, a Russian Black Sea resort city and at Teheran, the capital of Iran, had died suddenly in Warm Springs, Georgia of a cerebral hemorrhage on April 12, 1945. Winston Churchill was defeated in a massive repudiation of the Conservative Party on July 5, 1945, though the vote was not decided until the 26th of that month, when all the overseas ballots had arrived and had been finally counted.

 

Franklin D. Roosevelt, who had won an unprecedented 4th term as President, was quite run-down and worn out after he had made his extensive 12,000 mile round trip to the Yalta / Crimea Conference in the former USSR and now located in the Ukraine Republic. He was suffering from advanced arteriosclerosis, an enlarged heart and various other ailments. Though he was still sharp and lucid through most of the meeting, the difficult trip had exhausted him and sapped his strength. Joseph Stalin * (1878-1953) did not wish to be out of the Soviet Union while his country’s big push into Germany was on, and therefore demanded that both FDR and Churchill travel to meet him on Soviet territory. The meeting lasted from February 2, until February 11, 1945. It was held in the Livadia Palace, and it was said that all the rooms were “bugged” by the Soviet KGB.

 

* Joseph Stalin- General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Soviet Union, 1922-1953, Wartime leader of the Soviet Union. Pravda Editor in 1917, Elected to the central Committee and the Politburo in 1917. After Lenin’s death in 1924 worked to consolidate power. Dictator of the Soviet Union, 1929-1953.

 

* Franklin D. Roosevelt- President of the United States, 1933-1945, Governor of NY, 1928-1932, nominee for the Vice-Presidency, 1920. Soldier of Freedom, author of the Four Freedoms, created of Lend-Lease, co-author of the Atlantic Charter, developer of the Arsenal of Democracy, Architect of Victory, and founder of the United Nations.

 

 

Unlike other meetings, where lesser lights like China’s Generalisimo Chiang Kai-Shek (1887-1975) and either French or Canadian representatives attended, the “Big Three” and their chosen political and military aides and staff were the only ones represented at Yalta. It was at Yalta where critical decisions were made regarding the borders of postwar Europe:

 

·        The priority of Germany’s defeat and the four occupation zones.

·        German demilitarization and denazification.

·        The status of Poland was discussed but not resolved.

·        The establishment of the Curzon line was demarked, which called for substantial surrender of western German land to Poland

·        Citizens of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia were to be repatriated to their respective countries, regardless of their consent.

·        FDR received Stalin’s commitment to participate in the United Nations, and the five permanent member arrangements with veto power was set.

·        Stalin agreed to join the fight against Japan 90 days after the defeat of Germany with concessions to the USSR over the Kuriles and Sakhalin Islands.

·        A committee on the dismemberment of Germany was to be set up.

 

Winston S. Churchill*, (1874-1965), who was an appointed, not elected Prime Minister and was wildly popular, was forced to face a general election in Great Britain in July of 1945. King George VI* basically called it because Britain felt it needed the two party system again. The Conservatives were supremely over-confident and based their whole election on the reputation of Churchill. Labour offered a new all-inclusive welfare system, reflecting the general feeling that improvements were needed. The Conservatives wanted no part of the Labour program. Churchill made a strategic error of miss-characterizing his opponent Clement Atlee’s wartime contributions, even though Atlee was an active and useful member of the War Cabinet. The Conservatives were also blamed for the policy of “Appeasement” which was associated strongly with Churchill’s predecessors Neville Chamberlain and Stanley Baldwin. But is seemed that the largest issue with the voters, in one opinion poll, was that of social reform. This reform would later involve the following: housing, national health, insurance and educational standards.As a result of this unexpected landslide Labour received almost 50% of the vote and picked up 239 seats while the Conservatives with just over 36% of the vote lost 190 seats. There were also some minor shifts with the Liberals and the National Liberals losing 9 and 22 seats respectively. Therefore the stage was set for change. When the votes were finally counted from the overseas ballots, the Conservatives were out and Churchill was forced to resign as Prime Minister and Clement Attlee* (1883-1967) replaced him at the Potsdam Conference.

 

* Clement Attlee- Labour Prime Minister 1945-1951, led nationalization of industry in Britain, and established socialist reforms, Deputy Prime Minister 1942-5, Made First Earl Attlee, replaced as PM by Churchill in 1951, even though Labour won more votes than the Conservatives and more seats in Parliament.

 

* Winston S. Churchill – British Prime Minister 1940-1945, 1951-1955, Nobel Prize winner 1953, Chancellor of the Exchequer 1924-1929, Home Secretary, First Lord of the Admiralty WWI and WWII.

                       

                        *British monarch who reigned from 1937 to 1952, after the abdication of his brother Edward VIII.

 

Of course, besides the final results of the Potsdam Conference, which was chaired by the newly sworn in President Harry S Truman (1884-1972), a declaration was made to the Japanese. The resulting Potsdam Declaration stated, Japan must surrender immediately and abide by the following:

 

·        The end of Japanese militarism

·        Japan would be occupied until objectives were met

·        The declarations of the Cairo Conference would be carried out

·        The Japanese Army would be disarmed and returned to the home islands

·        War criminals would be prosecuted

·        Freedoms of religion, speech and of thought along with fundamental human rights would be established.

·        Unconditional Surrender

 

If not, Japan “would face prompt and dire consequences.”  Of course, this meant in no uncertain terms that the full force of the United States, the British Empire and the Republic of China would strike unprecedented blows that would lead to “the inevitable and complete destruction of the Japanese armed forces and just as inevitably the utter destruction of the Japanese homeland.” When Truman * authored this statement, he was aware of the fact that the atomic bomb worked. The “Trinity Test” at Los Alamos, New Mexico, had worked spectacularly on July 16, 1945 and the witnesses were able to feel the heat of the blast on their skin 32 kilometers or 20 miles away. After the successful testing of this first atomic device, Truman, who was staying at the Little White House, in Babelsburg, just outside of Potsdam, received the following encoded message from Henry L. Stimson through his aide in Washington. This was the first official report to the President regarding the “bomb.”

 

“Doctor has just returned most enthusiastic and confident that little boy is as husky as his big brother, the light in his eyes discernable from here to   Highhold and I could here his scream from here to my barn.”

 

Highhold, 250 miles from Washington, DC, was the summer place on Long Island of Secretary of War, Henry L. Stimson* (1867-1950), a conservative Republican appointed by FDR in 1940 to head the War Department.

 

* Harry S Truman – President of the United States, 1945-1953. United State Senator, 1934-1945. Truman created the Truman Doctrine that confronted Soviet expansionism in Turkey and Greece, and supported the Marshall Plan that helped put Europe back on its feet.

 

* Stimson had previously been a young lawyer in the law firm of Root and Clark where he became a protégé of Elihu Root, who later became a secretary of war and then state. Stimson later was appointed the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York He was a candidate for governor of New York, a Secretary of War under President William Howard Taft, 1911-3, and a secretary of state under President Hoover, 1929-1933. In this message, his aide Harrison is referring to “Little Boy” the black and orange shaped bomb weighing nearly five tons. 

 

There are a number of different versions regarding Truman’s remarks to Stalin about the power of this new weapon. Truman said in his book Year of Decisions (1955) that “On July 24th, I casually mentioned to Stalin that we had a new weapon of unusual destructive force. The Russian Premier showed no special interest. All he said was he was glad to hear it and hoped we would make good use of it against the Japanese.” Maybe his quote is better remembered as, “A rain of ruin from the air, the like of which has never been seen on this earth.”

 

Churchill seemed to remember the event differently in his book, Triumph and Tragedy (1953) and seemed to believe that Stalin was “…delighted. A new bomb! Of extraordinary power! Probably decisive on the whole Japanese war! What a bit of luck!”  Churchill had the impression that Stalin was glad to hear about it but totally unknowledgeable about how it came about. But of course, in retrospect, we know now that Stalin was quite aware of the development of the bomb through his master spy Klaus Fuchs, (1911-1988) * who was a son of German Lutherans, and was a physicist assigned to the Manhattan Project in Los Alamos. James Byrnes* (1879-1972), who was then secretary of state, writes in Speaking Frankly (1947) “that Truman told Stalin that after long experimentation, we had developed a new bomb, far more destructive than any other known bomb, and we intended to use it very soon unless Japan surrendered.” Byrnes also seemed to note Stalin’s lack of interest in the details of the weapon. Charles Bohlen, (1904-1974), Truman’s translator, in his book Witness to History (1973) wrote that “…years later Marshal Zhukov, in his memoirs, disclosed that that night Stalin ordered a telegram sent to those working on the atomic bomb in Russia to hurry with the job.” Soviet Marshall Georgii Zhukov’s (1896-1974) * version, in his book The Memoirs of Marshal Zhukov (1971) was that “Stalin in my presence told Molotov about his conversation with Truman. The latter reacted almost immediately. ‘Let them. We’ll have to talk it over with Kurchatov and get him to speed things up’. I realized that they were talking about research on the atomic bomb.” Later Zhukov added, “It was clear already then that the US Government intended to use atomic weapons for the purpose of achieving its imperialist goals from a position of strength in the cold war. Without any military need what so ever, the Americans dropped two atomic bombs on the peaceful and densely populated cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.”

 

*James F. Byrnes – was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1911 and served until 1925. He was a US Senator from 1931-41, a Supreme Court Justice from 1941-2, Head of the Economic Office of Stabilization and War Mobilization Board, “Assistant President” 1942-5, Secretary of State 1945-7, and Governor of South Carolina from 1951-5.

* Georgii Zhukov – Marshall of the Soviet Union’s red Army, defeated the Germans at Stalingrad 1942, led the final Soviet offensive into Berlin- April 1945, Soviet Defense Minister –1955.

* Klaus Fuchs – German born theoretical physicist, and British citizen, who worked at Los Alamos and leaked atomic bomb secrets to the Soviets. Arrested and convicted in Great Britain and sentenced to 14 years in prison, he served nine years and was released in 1959. He was stripped of his citizenship and emigrated to Dresden, DDR.

 

Of course this sounds like Cold War propaganda of its most basic type. The United States was facing a most difficult task ahead regarding the invasion of Japan. We had just experienced two brutal campaigns in Iwo Jima and Okinawa, and we were facing the human terror of the kamikaze in the surrounding waters of those islands. So we see a few different perspectives of this event. On one hand, we see Truman’s simple view of it all, with Byrnes in basic agreement. Byrnes, of course, was quoted in his book in 1947 and Truman, with the advantage of writing years later, concurred in 1955. Later in 1960, Byrnes would reiterate the same feeling that Stalin had no real appreciation of what was said to him by Truman. Marshall Zhukov, years later stated, that Stalin really knew and was acting the part of being uninterested. Of course this whole account by Zhukov served a dual purpose. One aspect was that the Soviets had successfully penetrated Los Alamos and were able to be informed by their spies. The other aspect was that this episode also seemed to feed fuel to the Soviet argument that the western Allies were not really upfront or sincere with them about sharing information. Besides those two points, Zhukov reflects on the brutality of the United States policy and its infliction of unnecessary casualties on the Japanese people.

 

Of course Japan would never surrender and if any one individual attempted to follow this course of national action, he would be removed violently by the fanatics within the military. This of course set the stage for the ultimate delivery of the atomic bomb on Japan. There is general historical disagreement regarding not only how the Japanese reacted to the Potsdam Declaration, but which people really represented the government or had access to the Emperor. There is evidence that the Japanese had made overtures to the Soviets regarding a possible avenue regarding a “negotiated” peace. But of course the Soviets had different designs on Japan, and they were looking to get a large piece of a future “occupation” prize.

 

The Japanese home islands had been bombed for many months, but without much success. Originally the new Superforts, as the silver skinned B-29’s were known, were being flown out of India and China. Unfortunately, they had problems with their electrical systems, and their superchargers had a tendency to fail at high altitudes. The flights out of China wound up being ineffective, but the sight of those great sleek birds heading off to Japan emotionally buoyed the Chinese. Eventually these air-pressured sealed behemoths were able to move into the Marianas (15 islands with Saipan, Tinian and Rota the best known) and begin their Pacific mission. The B-29’s were the direct heir to the fabled B-17 Fortresses, that, with the able assistance of B-24 Liberators, carried the strategic bombing load of the 8th and 15th Air Forces in Europe. Strategic daylight bombing helped win the war in Europe, but American airman paid a heavy price in casualties. Aside from the infantry, the Army Air Corps took the next greatest losses during the war. The Army Air Corps suffered 24,288 men killed in action along with 18,699 who were missing and mostly presumed dead, 18,804 wounded and 31,436 men shot down and captured.

 

The B-29 Superfort was 99’ long, stood 27’ 9” high and had a wingspan of 141 feet. It was heavily armed with 12 electronically guided 50-caliber machine guns and one 20 mm tail gun. It was an air-pressured sealed 4-engine bomber that could operate at 38,000 feet which was above any Japanese fighter’s maximum ceiling. It could cruise at 350 mph and had a range of over 3500 miles with a bomb load of 4 tons. When the B-29’s moved into the Mariana Island group in June of 1944 everyone expected them to have greater success. The round trip from the Marianas to Japan was 3000 miles and the Forts could easily handle that distance. In their first strike on November 24, 1944, a force of 111 Forts was led by Brigadier General Emmet O’Donnell in the Dauntless Dotty piloted by Robert K. Morgan (1918-2004). Morgan had commanded the famous Memphis Belle, the first B-17 to complete 25 missions over Nazi controlled Europe. The Memphis Belle and its crew became a national heroes and celebrities by being featured in the 1944 William Wyler* (1902-1981) documentary, Memphis Belle, the Story of a Flying Fortress.

           

Of the 111 Superforts that took off that day, only 24 made it to their target. Because of high winds at the altitude the B-29’s flew, their bombing was not very affective. Along with many operational failures, the top military planners were concerned with the B-29’s future effectiveness. There were too many aborted flights, too many glitches in equipment, especially at high altitude and, of course, too few planes reaching their destinations. With this great concern the Army Air Force, under the command of General Henry Arnold* (1886-1950) looked to young Major-General Curtis Lemay for help. Lemay was the no-nonsense 38-year old commander of the 3rd Air Force Division in Europe. He had been serving in India and was transferred to the Pacific to command the 21st Bomber Command on January 20, 1945. Lemay, (1906-1990), who was born in Ohio in 1906, had attended Ohio State University. He joined the Air Corps in 1928 and started to serve with bomber aircraft in 1937. At the outbreak of World War II, he was then a Lt. Colonel in command of the 305th Bomb Group. He took a B-17 unit to England as part of the 8th Air Force and often flew on dangerous missions. He flew and commanded the 146-plane attack on the Regensburg part of the Schweinfurt-Regensburg mission, in August of 1943. This raid was costly, and he lost 24 bombers, but it was part of a major effort to disrupt and destroy the suburban, but concentrated, German ball-bearing works centered in the Schweinfurt area.

 

By March of 1945 General Lemay was able to analyze the poor results of the early bombing missions over Japan. He was able to discern that his bombers were only able to deliver about 5% of their payload near their targets. Along with that poor success record, the accompanying losses of our planes and crews were way too high. The loss factor, along with the lack of success in hitting targets alarmed Lemay and his peers. Therefore General Lemay instituted a radical reversal in tactics. The bombing runs were now made at night at 5000 feet rather than at their previous high altitude level. All the armament was stripped from the Superforts and therefore their bomb capacity was increased. Because at the lower altitude levels, the B-29’s could fly faster and consume less fuel, this also enabled them to increase their bomb capacity. Lemay understood that the Japanese cities were mostly built of wood and that a switch to incendiary ordinance from conventional high explosives would be theoretically more affective. In this first attack 325 Superforts hit Tokyo on March 10th and were able to drop 1665 tons of incendiary bombs whiles sustaining the loss of 14 planes. Almost immediately the air war over Japan took a dramatic and positive turn for the allied effort. Over 100,000 Japanese were killed and 16 square miles in the center of Tokyo were raised. After this initial attack three more visits were made to Tokyo by the end of May and over 50% of the Japanese capital was destroyed. These actions were repeated all over Japan, and by the war’s end 69 Japanese cities were burned out.

 

In spite of that massive damage inflicted by American strategic bombing, the Japanese were thought to still have over 2,000,000 soldiers available, along with 8000 airplanes for the defense of their homeland. This of course did not include the millions of ordinary Japanese citizenry that were available as part of a home guard effort.

 

* Henry H. Arnold- the “Chief” to his subordinates- “Hap” Arnold was a graduate of West Point in 1907, spent his life devoted to the Army Air Corps –became Chief of Army Air Force in 1941, General of the Army in 1944 (5 Stars) and was the most well known advocate of air power.

 

* William Wyler- born Wilhelm Weiller to a Jewish Alsatian family- cousin of Hollywood magnate Carl Laemmle- youngest director at Universal at age 25. Academy Award director, known for Mrs. Miniver, Wuthering Heights, Ben-Hur, Roman Holiday, Little Foxes, and The Best Years of Our Lives. Flew on bombing missions and hearing was impaired by gunfire. He was the winner of the Irving Thalberg Award and the AFI Lifetime Achievement Award.

               

At the same time as General Lemay was turning around the air war over Japan, other events were happening. The United States was finishing work on the atomic bomb at Los Alamos and simultaneously developing the 509th Composite Bombing Group both in the United States and in the Pacific. The command of this special unit was turned over to Colonel Paul W. Tibbets, Jr., who was born in Quincy, Illinois in 1915. Tibbets, who led the first 8th Air Force bomber mission in Europe on August 17, 1942, later flew combat missions in the Mediterranean Theater and was the lead pilot used in ferrying members of the Allied Command from Great Britain to North Africa. He was considered one of the greatest fliers in our air force and was eventually assigned to Wendover Army Air Field in Utah. This command eventually became the 509th Composite Group, in connection with the Manhattan Project. (An excellent Hollywood production chronicles this effort in the film, Above and Beyond (1952) with Robert Taylor playing Colonel Tibbets.)

 

In the Pacific, the United States was involved in two desperate battles involving Japanese defenses of their outer home islands. With both, Iwo Jima (February 16-March 26, 1945) and Okinawa (April 1- June 21, 1945), the United States Marine Corps, under the command of General Holland “Howlin Mad” Smith on Iwo Jima and General Simon Bolivar Buckner in command of Marine and Army units met fierce and determined resistance. These Japanese units were supported by intense air support in the manner of the first massive and concentrated use of suicide fighter-bomber type aircraft, now known as the kamikaze. In the first and smaller battle for Iwo Jima, United States Marines encountered a strong entrenched force of approximately 21,700 crack Japanese defenders. After a brutal five weeks of action, starting in the first week with the raising of our flag on Mount Suribachi, 6,821 Marines gave their lives along with another 20,000 or so casualties out of a force of approximately 70,000 men. For their bravery the Marines were awarded 27 Medals of Honor. The Japanese losses were immense and only a little over 1000 survived with 200 taken prisoner out of their original force. The primary reason to take Iwo Jima was that it was halfway between Japan and the Mariana Islands where General Lemay’s 20th Air Force was located. Lemay stated to General MacArthur that the Army Air Force could not continue to sustain losses of aircraft and that he desperately needed a place to land his damaged B-29’s.  Therefore the taking of Iwo Jima would eliminate Japanese radar and fighter facilities and provide an emergency landing strip for his damaged Superforts. Over the balance of the war approximately 2000 damaged or out of fuel B-29’s made emergency landings on Iwo Jima, saving approximately 24,000 lives. The last major battle of the War in the Pacific was fought on the island of Okinawa, which is part of the Ryuku Islands. Again casualties were immense. Over 12,500 Americans were killed in action along with over 72,000 others wounded on Okinawa and in the fleet. The Japanese sustained over 110,000 killed, while only 7,455 were captured. In what was called the “Typhoon of Steel” or “Tetsu no bofu” in Okinawa, over one-third of the indigenous civilian population of 450,000 Ryukans were killed. Many of the immense losses to our naval and air personnel came at the hands of the kamikaze attacks. Hundreds of our ships were hit, with 38 being sunk. We were able to destroy over 7,800 Japanese aircraft, many on suicide missions, sink 16 of their ships, and we sustained the loss of 763 of our own planes.

 

According to Japanese official records, there were a total of 3912 kamikaze attacks, which represented 2525 from their naval air arm and 1387 from their Army air forces. The Japanese claimed that they sunk 81 ships and damaged another 195. The United States official statistics said that 2800 kamikaze planes were destroyed, 38 ships were lost and 368 others were damaged. As a result of this action, the Navy lost 4900 men and another 4800 were wounded. Almost 80% of the Navy’s casualties resulted from kamikaze action. Of all of the US Navy ships that were hit by suicide attacks, 8.5% were sunk.

 

Frankly this type of brutality frightened our commanders, both in the Pacific Theater of action, and in Washington. In the two major battles, fought from February to June, the United States had sustained almost 20,000 killed and close to 100,000 wounded. Along with those horrible losses, hundreds of ships were damaged by kamikaze attacks. Therefore with the strategic design for the invasion of Japan well under way, planners started to worry about the potential of immense and unacceptable casualties. These plans, encompassed in the overall Operation Downfall, were comprised of two separate operations regarding the invasion of the main Japanese Island, Kyushu and Honshu. Under the code names Olympic and Coronet, operations were to commence in November of 1945 and the spring of 1946.

 

Of course all of this brings us to the question of the atomic bombings of Japan. Were they necessary? Could conventional bombing have brought Japan to its knees? Could a complete naval blockade of the home islands starve Japan into submission? All those points have been discussed continuously since the close of the war. But certain points must not be forgotten. The Japanese had never lost a war and didn’t believe in surrendering. They found it culturally unacceptable. They were willing to take casualties to preserve their nation state, and they felt that they could inflict such a high price on the Allies that a negotiated peace could be achieved. Was this realistic thinking on their part? Probably not! But amazingly, in the aftermath of the Hiroshima bombing, when some military officials reported that since there was no bomb crater, many in the highest levels of the army believed that they could eventually go under ground and protect themselves from future atomic attacks. As strange as that sounds, fanatical thinking can lead to remarkable conclusions.

 

Therefore when one understands the potential threats that the kamikaze attacks held for the Allied landings one can easily accept and justify the use of atomic weapons. The Japanese plan for defeating the Allies was termed the “Virtuous Mission” or Ketsu-Go. In other words, would tremendous casualties make the price for Allied victory too high to accept. The Japanese had estimated quite accurately that the Allies would land at Miyazaki, Ariake Bay, or on the Satsuma Peninsular. They also had a strong idea when it would be launched, because they knew that the Allies would want to avoid the typhoon season. They were able to finally accumulate over 10,000 army and navy aircraft by July and expected to have 2000 more by October. During the Battle of Okinawa, with fewer than 2000 kamikazes they were able to get one hit on a ship per nine planes that were able to make an attack. At Kyushu, with shorter flight time to an off shore Allied Fleet, they hoped to raise that ration to one in six. Therefore they expected to sink more than 400 ships, and they were training their pilots to target transports rather than carriers or picket ships like destroyers. Though their navy had been greatly reduced and these ships couldn’t be adequately fueled, they had a large number of smaller or auxiliary craft that could be utilized. They also had about 100 Koryu-class midget submarines, and 250 smaller Kaiyo midget submarines. They had 1000 Kaiten manned suicide torpedoes and 800 Shinyo suicide boats for use against our Fleet. In March they had only one division in Kyushu, but by August over 900,000 men in 14 divisions and three tank brigades had been put in place. Additionally, the Japanese had organized all adult civilians into Patriotic Citizens Fighting Corps to perform combat support and ultimately combat jobs. (After the war, Japanese records indicated that our estimates of Japanese aircraft were grossly exaggerated.) But, nonetheless, as information reached Washington about the rapid build-up of troops on Kyushu, General George C. Marshall, the American Chief of Staff, looked to drastically change the Olympic Plan.

 

The American High Command even considered the use of chemical weapons. Even though the Geneva Protocol outlawed chemical or gas warfare, neither the United States nor Japan had ever signed the document. Despite Marshall’s trepidations, General MacArther dismissed any need to change his plans. He believed that the Japanese air potential was greatly exaggerated. In retrospect, regarding that threat he was more correct than the professional intelligence estimates.

 

In a study done by the Joint Chiefs of Staff in April, a 90-day Olympic campaign would cost 456,000 Allied casualties including 100,000 dead or missing. If therefore Coronet took another 90-days, the combined cost would be 1.2 million casualties with 267,000 fatalities. A study done by Admiral Nimitz’ staff estimated 49,000 casualties in the first 30 days and General MacArthur’s staff predicted 23,000 in the first 30 days and 125,000 after 4 months. A study done for the Secretary of War by William Shockley estimated that the conquering of Japan would result in 1.7 to 4 million casualties including between 400 and 800 thousand dead, along with between five and ten million Japanese dead. Nearly 500,000 Purple Hearts were manufactured in anticipation of the potential amount of wounded and killed.

 

Of course there were many more estimates from a variety of sources. We will thankfully never know what the true numbers would have been. Their estimates were all culled from earlier battles that included Normandy, Okinawa and even the Battle of the Bulge. But others thought that the Japanese were at their wit’s end and had very little fight left in them. Interestingly, and not known to the American planners, was the fact that the Soviets were planning to invade the weakly defended Hokkaido Island by the end of August. This action, following their invasions of Sakhalin and the Kurile Islands, would have put pressure on the Americans to do something by November when Operation Olympic was originally scheduled.

 

The American Fleet felt the impacts of the kamikaze suicide planes keenly. The ships’ officers saw that they were very vulnerable to a “cheap” but deadly form of warfare. These manned forbearers of the modern day cruise missile were able to penetrate a multi layered defensive screen of smaller picket ships. For the sacrifice of a pilot, who was only trained to take off, and the minor cost of an airplane, our largest capital ships were made quite vulnerable. Over 14% of the kamikaze attackers survived the intense anti-aircraft fire and scored hits on our ships. None of our carriers, battleships or heavy cruiser’s were sunk. Unfortunately our aircraft carriers were built with wood flight decks and were more vulnerable than the British ships, which had reinforced steel decks. Many ships were hit, and the smaller ones were damaged the most.

 

The atomic bomb was a product of a $2 billion effort named the Manhattan Project. The Project was directed by General Leslie Groves, (1886-1970), an engineer, who was born in Albany, NY and educated at MIT and West Point. Grove’s reputation as an engineer and a top-level manager was greatly enhanced when he directed the building of the Pentagon. He later made the controversial appointment of J. Robert Oppenhemer, (1904-1967), a left leaning physicist, who was born in NYC to Julius Oppenheimer. His father was wealthy textile importer, who had emigrated to the United States in 1888. Oppenheimer, educated at the Ethical Culture School in NYC, Harvard, and the University of Gottingen, where he received his PhD at age 22, was appointed the scientific director for the project because of his intellectual and theoretical strengths. Finally when the bomb was assembled and the joint work of the scientists at Los Alamos was finished, the first nuclear explosion was actuated near Alamogordo, New Mexico on July 16, 1945.

 

The Trinity Test, as it was called, caused Oppenheimer to recall a verse from the Hindu holy book, the Bhagavad Gita:

           

If the radiance of a thousand suns were to burst at once into the sky, that would be like the splendor of the mighty one…

Years later he would have other thoughts about another verse that had entered his head:

Vishnu is trying to persuade the Prince that he should do his duty and to impress him takes on his multi-armed form and says, “Now, I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds”

 

The completed bomb was brought to Tinian Island in the Marianas and made ready for delivery will a specially designed bomb bay. The first bomb, a uranium cored device, was code named Little Boy and was dropped by a plane named Enola Gay, and piloted by Colonel Tibbets himself. On board, only two others, Captain William Parsons and Thomas Ferebee, the bombardier had any idea of the nature of what they were doing. The rest of the crew was still in the dark. Hiroshima, a city of 343,000 persons was relatively unscathed throughout the war and few took notice of the small formation of Superforts. The bomb was released and floated down 5 miles by parachute and was detonated in the air. Most, if not all, did not know what had happened. Some histories have written that 88,000 were killed and 37,000 were wounded. One recent account said that 200,000 died immediately and 60,000 died within a few months of the bombing. Along with the deaths, over 80% of the city was heavily damaged. After a couple of days there was no sign of surrender from the Japanese, and the 2nd bomb, code-named Fat Man, a plutonian implosion device, which was much more powerful, was dropped on Nagasaki. It was just bad luck for them because Major Sweeney, the pilot of Bock’s Car, almost had to turn around because he could not find a target that he could see and was running low on fuel. They finally chose the unlucky city of Nagasaki, whose population was 250,000. Nagasaki was a supply port for military and naval supplies and was primarily located in a valley. Unlike Hiroshima that was located on a flat plain, Nagasaki’s location, to a degree, blunted the impact of the more powerful bomb. It was detonated at 1800 feet and within a few seconds 43,000 Japanese died. It was said that more than 75,000 others died in the next decade from the radiation sickness from the explosion. Bock’s Car, because of its low fuel was forced to land at Iwo Jima, where no one there was aware of its mission.

 

In retrospect many people in the ensuing years criticized America for burning down 69 Japanese cities. Others certainly criticized the American government for dropping the Hiroshima bomb, and than following it with the Nagasaki bomb. Many thought that the first bomb should have been used in a demonstration for the Japanese. Others felt if the demonstration had failed, the 2nd bomb could still have to be used on a city. In truth, the Japanese did not respond to the dire warning and the request to surrender. Therefore the Japanese did not accept the terms of the Potsdam Declaration. We also did not have another atomic bomb ready for delivery, and it is possible that if the Japanese did not surrender, we would have been in a quandary. There were few other targets to hit and it would seem that conventional bombing alone would not bring Japan to her knees. Of course others stated that the idea of “unconditional surrender” stiffened the resistance of our enemies and caused more needless casualties. And still others believed that we used the atomic bomb as a message to the Soviets. Certainly our thinking towards the Soviets was starting to change after the collapse of Nazi Germany, and problems regarding Poland and Eastern Europe were starting to emerge. It seems that the emergence of the suicide tactics both in the air, sea and land campaigns did most to frighten American planners. This intangibility led Americans to believe that this combined operation leading to the invasion would be as bloody as Okinawa. Of course Truman later stated, and I paraphrase, “that if the mothers, daughters and wives of our killed servicemen knew I had a weapon that could have ended the war, and did not use it, they would never forgive me.” For sure, state sponsored terrorism, which features suicide as a weapon can drive nation states into methods of retaliation once never imagined.

 

In conclusion, are we now facing a new and more dangerous threat from people who teach their children that dying is good? Traditionally life is generally considered and thought of as sacred, especially one’s own life! During World War II, the Western democracies that made up a large part of the collective effort against the Axis Powers (Germany, Italy, Japan, and their lesser allies; Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria and the Croatian Puppet State), basically adhered to the “rules of war” articulated from the accords of the Geneva Convention. As signatories of the Geneva Convention, most of the participants refrained from using outlawed weaponry that involved, chemicals, gas, and germs. Japan certainly used germ warfare in China and the well-published barbarisms of both the Germans and the Japanese certainly stretched the established rules of “so-called” civilized warfare. Of course one of the reasons The Hague and Geneva Conventions banned certain substances or weapons of war was because nation states were afraid to be victims of those same banned practices. The classic example was the use of mustard gas in World War I. Gas warfare was always at the mercy of the prevailing winds, and therefore both friend and foe quickly became victims of a gas attack. During World War II, state sponsored suicide in battle reached a climax with the “Divine Wind” kamikaze attacks upon our naval forces in and around Iwo Jima and Okinawa. As I have written earlier in this piece, Allied planners were so concerned with this type of warfare that their trepidations regarding the dropping of the atomic bombs became secondary to their fear of unacceptable losses.

 

Now in this new era, where suicide bombers commandeer planes, or explode themselves in crowded market places, or on trains loaded with passengers, what is our defense? What is our defense against a suicide agent bringing in a satchel with a nuclear device or another weapon of mass destruction? Can a state be held ultimately responsible for these aberrant acts of international organizations? That is the question! 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Clinton, Bush, the Middle East and the Politics of Failure 8/8/06

Clinton, Bush, the Middle East and the Politics of Failure

By

Richard J. Garfunkel

August 8, 2006

 

Thanks for the incisive letter and the perceptive thoughts. History is not rife with examples of many farsighted, sensible or brilliant individuals. For my money I have always been interested in World, American and mid-20th Century history. My focus has been our history from 1933 until 1945, with some extra thoughts on why we came to need the New Deal and the direct consequences of finally winning the war and dealing with the peace. For better or worse, every one I know, in the Tri-State metro area still generally likes Bill Clinton. If one looks back on his job ratings (CNN/Time, CNN/USA Today, NBC/WSJ, Pew, CBS, LA Times, etc) one would find that between 1997 and 2001, on a weekly tracking poll basis, he was never under 56% and was over 72% in certain weeks. With a considerable amount of animus against him, and with all the disappointments many of his friends had in his personal conduct, his poll ratings averaged in the 60's. Since then, the public's perceptions and warmth toward Clinton have only gone up. Obviously if one compares almost anyone with our current inarticulate so-called leader, they will look better. This current team of W, Rummy, and Rice-a-Roni leaves me and 10's of millions sick. But even if one thinks our policy is/was flawed, our direction miss-guided, and the reasons for its justification wrong, invented, or just stupid, no one can deny, even with the belief that it is too late to “cut and run,” our management over there is, and has been terrible and a disaster. Therefore, as it often has been said, “the road to hell is paved with good intentions.” So even if one thought, right from the start, that the Bush gang was correct about WMD's and the need for regime change, the process was flawed with mistakes of poor judgment fraught with incompetence.

 

With regards to our information agencies and their lack of direction, funding and purpose, I cannot disagree with you. Whatever Clinton did, or did not do, vis-à-vis the CIA, NSA, FBI and the like, history will have to sort it out. Remember Carter was not liked by most of the public, and for sure I was one of his critics, but Harold Brown, Carter’s enlightened and brilliant Defense Secretary, put all the weapon systems that Reagan bragged about in place. Also by the way, it was Prince Ronnie who three days after a speech on “staying the course” in Lebanon, in the wake of the loss of 241 Marines to Hezbollah, pulled out of that land lock, stock and barrel. The information and spy agencies were politicized over the years and they have become fat, expensive and lazy! What else is new? They are like most of our other institutions here in the States.

 

Israel has as much right to the land they occupy as any one. In fact, they have a greater right. The Arabs, as a whole, are a stupid, backward, and venal group. Only a few of their vast numbers have the guts to stand up and say what is right. Brigands, and their tribal blood feuds lead them and religious insanity makes them the bane of the current world. The Orthodox Jews, whether Lubavitcher or Satmar, can be quite different and difficult to understand. They may be impossible to like or even deal with, but they are not a warlike, violent, or evangelical group. They have their arcane customs and so be it. They certainly are not the picture or profile of Israel. With regards to the borders, what makes ownership of the land start at 70 AD, 1919, 1947, 1948, or 1967? In fact, the Arabs never owned the land. They owned, as individuals, parts of the land just like the Jews who had lived there. Jews always occupied some part of the land since before antiquity. There was always a Jewish presence in Jerusalem, Safad, Hebron, and Tiberias since Biblical times. Jews lived all over the Arab world, under their domination and thumb for almost two millennia. It is not like it was the reverse. But in the so-called Holy Land, the Turks controlled that area from 1516 to 1918. So the land was never “Arab.” They lived there, along with the Jews as the subjects of the Ottoman Empire as they were to become subjects of the British Empire.

 

But as Martin Gilbert has written, in Tunisia there were 110,000 Jews in 1948, was life easy? No! In 1881, as a French Protectorate, conditions improved for the Jewish Community, but in 1917 Tunisian troops pillaged the Jewish quarters of many towns. Mobs attacked Jews in 1932 because of European immigration to Palestine. Eventually with independence in 1956 conditions worsened for the Jewish population and by 1974, 2000 Jews remained. In Yemen the Jewish population went from 55,000 in 1948 to 500 in 1974. Jews had lived there for over 2000 years in 1900. In Aden there were 8000 Jews in 1948 and almost none in 1974. Anti-Jewish and anti-Zionist laws were introduced in Yemen in 1905. For example there was a re-introduction of laws that Jews could not build houses higher than those of Muslims, or to raise their voices in front of a Muslim, or engage in religious discussion with Muslims, or be in any traditional Muslim trade or occupation. Even laws were enacted that forced the conversion of Jewish orphans to Islam. In Morocco the Jewish population was 285,000 in 1948, and 20, 000 in 1974. There were Muslim attacks in 1903, 1907, and 1912 and after WWII many riots leading up to the general immigration of Jews from that land. As late as 1965, the “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” were published and disseminated again in Morocco. The Jewish population of Egypt in 1948 was 75,000, but by 1974 it had been reduced to 350. In 1844, 1881, and 1902 there were anti-Jewish riots emanating from accusations regarding the ritual use of blood. In 1882, 1919, 1921, 1924, Jews were attacked in anti-foreigner riots. In 1945 there were “Balfour Day” riots leading up to confiscation of lands, abrogation of rights and outright expulsions through the 1950's and up to 1967. In Syria, the population of Jews shrunk from 29,770 in 1943 to 4000 in 1974. The kind of anti-Jewish laws in Syria were and are unbelievable. But, historically in 1936-9, Nazi officers from Germany institutionalized violence against Jews after a visit. The story of Syria is too sick to even repeat here.   

 

The saga of persecution, discrimination, prejudice and violence is unending. Therefore Palestine/Israel became the refuge of 100's of thousands of Middle Eastern Jews, no less the ones who wished to flee from Europe where they were not welcome. FDR met with King Ibn Sa'ud, of Saudi Arabia on February 14, 1945 in the Great Bitter Lake. Which is located in the Suez Canal. He conferred with Rabbi Stephen Wise and his cabinet before he left for Yalta, and told them that he would “try to settle the Palestine situation.” He had discussed the concept of a Jewish homeland with Stalin at Yalta and said that he was a Zionist, but he recognized the difficulty of the Jewish problem. After meeting with Sa'ud on the USS Quincy, and through much discussion, the suggestion from Sa'ud was that the choicest lands in Germany be given to the Jews. Of course there is much more to the story. That issue was a non-starter, as much for the fact that no one could be positive that German anti-Semitism would not arise in the future and make life impossible again for the Jews.

 

FDR tried to convince Sa'ud with all of his charm, and with the promise of economic aid, irrigation projects and improved living standards, about the need for a Jewish Homeland, but Sa'ud wanted none of it. He had little cares for any improvements regarding the lives of his own people. Sa'ud said, “Arabs would choose to die, rather than yield their land to the Jews.” What else in new? So the Arab world, for better or worse, did not want an avalanche of European Jews into Palestine. They also wanted to dominate and abuse the 800,000 plus Jews spread under their control throughout Arab lands, and they certainly did want those Jews to move to Palestine to create their own homeland. They wanted it both ways!

 

With regards to the Death Camps of Nazism, they are not a passion with me. They are only a part of the story, but for all Jews, a big part of the story. With regards to Israel, your point about anti-Semitism not being the core issue has some vague merit. I assume that if Israel was a country of evangelical Christians, I could guess or imagine there would be similar problems. But, then again, the problem of the Middle East is not only the one of control between the more western-leaning secular Sunnis versus the more religiously extreme Shi'ites, but the problem of modernism versus tribal traditionalism. The Islamic Arab and Non-Arab oligarchs from the Fertile Crescent to North Africa are not comfortable with a republican form of democracy or what it brings. They have yet to enter the age of enlightenment, and the specter of education, equality for women, religious freedom, and personal rights is still far beyond their ken and political interests. Israel, and the Jews, represents the freethinking pluralism of the West and the Islamists fear all of that, in the same way that Sa'ud would not accept the offer, given by FDR in 1945, to uplift his people. He told FDR that he was an uneducated Bedouin and was comfortable with his values.

 

With regards to today's current struggles, the President talks of this war on terrorism as WWIII. But he fights it on the cheap, is bogged down in both Afghanistan, where most of the original problem was concentrated, and is in a mess in Iraq. We are in a diplomatic black hole because of his inept leadership and the way up and out is not easy to even imagine.

 

For sure our military is too highly concentrated in carrier task forces, and nuclear submarines, our air force is a strategically oriented one and both of those branches of our armed forces are over-funded, over manned and staffed. At the moment we need a larger infantry and more mobile shock forces. We need more anti-missile defenses and less emphasis on the Cold War mission.  No one, including ourselves can afford our military. But, with regards to North Korea, our strategic air force and our carriers groups still are vital. But how many task forces can we afford to “float?”

 

All in all, hopefully the first step is the destruction of Hezbollah. If they are put out of business, the Iran-Syria connection will degrade. We have to support regime change in Syria, which will unburden Lebanon as their vassal state. We than have to erode the mullah supported government of Iran by isolation, embargoes, boycotts, and propaganda. This action will strengthen the moderate Arab position. Syria is the heart of the problem and almost always has been. They must be marginalized. They are a poor worthless country that has no oil, and no real future accept as a conduit of violence and de-stabilization. The time is ripe to go after Assad and get him out! 

 

 

—–Original Message—–

From: Kaaren A. Hale [mailto:kaarenhale@btinternet.com]

Sent: Monday, August 07, 2006 9:25 PM

To: 'Richard Garfunkel'

Subject: RE: The Strategy of Confronting Hezbollah

 

 

If this current shoot out were just about murdering Jews it really would be

clearer to one and all.  Anti Semitism is a real phenomenon for whatever

reasons, religiously, historically,socially,  but right now the world is

dealing with issues  which are complex and troublesome in a different way.

We are dealing with an age old  schism in the Arab world, a bid for

leadership by Iran, the results of our enslavement to fossil fuels,

resentment of colonialism, and the use of the Palestine/Israel issue as a

control tool of retrograde Arab administrations for decades. 

 

The West is also paying a price for its decadence and inattention to threat.

Clinton was at fault for his lack of perception of the scope of the problem.

US Intelligence agencies have been gutted for decades and unable and

unwilling to share information effectively. Technology has impowered the war

making capacities of non nations.    Bush and Co.  has been criminally

naïve, fighting the Cold War and not the new NET war.  Europe is dealing

with a declining birthrate and a work force that was augmented by its

nearest neighbours in North Africa and the Near East, just as the nature of

America is being inexorably changed by unstaunched immigration from Central

and South America. 

 

I think the Nazi murder camps certainly are a legitimate passion and concern

of yours, but aside from moral implications,  I see little relationship to

what is happening today,  except Israelis are Jewish and they are located in

the contentious crossroads of the ancient world. The Arab press and

governments are rife with anti Israeli and Anti Jewish sentiment, but this

latest conflagration is about much more than that.  It is about who will

rule, who will have a control of the declining oil supplies to the exclusion

of others in the coming decades.

One could wring one's hands endlessly, but I believe the reality is

realpolitick, with the added fillip of a religion that has never really

reformed itself and is in the middle of a chaotic revolution with very high

stakes.  What a mess.

Kaaren