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-
- Jason Mayo
- 5/16/95
- Period 6
-
- Book Report- "I Had a Hammer, The Hank Aaron Story"
-
- The book I read, I had a Hammer, The Hank Aaron Story by Hank Aaron with Lonnie Wheeler is
- the autobiography of Hank Aaron, the home run king of major-league baseball. The
- historical period this took place in was from the mid-1940's to the mid- 1970's. The
- setting in this story was very historically accurate. A quote that demonstrates the
- environment of the 1940's is "...when white workers started rioting for two days at Alabama
- Dry Dock and Shipbuilding because black workers had been promoted in their stead. Another
- that shows the 1950's is "The Korean War was going on and... I had to register for the
- draft." A quote showing the environment of the 1960's and the bigotry against blacks is
- "We'd sit in the stands and hear Aaron being called "nigger" and "jigaboo." And finally a
- quote demonstrating the attitudes of whites in the late 60's and early 70's is "... and you
- may replace Babe Ruth in the hearts of the liberal sportswriters, the liberal newspapers,
- TV, and radio, as well as the hearts of the long-haired Hippies... so roll in your
- undeserved glory, Black Boy. Hank Aaron encountered countless obstacles in his quest for
- equality in baseball, as well as his own personal freedom. In every situation he responded
- effectively, and his motto was "Just keep swinging," which meant that as long as he just
- played ball he would be fine. A few specific examples are racist and bigoted managers,
- racists in the stands, and teammates, the always judgmental media, and he had to deal with
- death threats to his family and him during his chase for the home run record. He also had
- to deal with segregation from the rest of the team in hotels, restaurants, etc. To deal
- with racist managers and teammates he tried to avoid them as much as possible. He would
- sit away from them on the busses and in the locker rooms. One time on the Milwaukee Braves
- there was a player, Lew Burdette, who happened to become famous, who was a pronounced
- racist. Hank Aaron dealt with this by just getting to the field before him or not staying
- near him in hotels. While playing he tried to push all the people yelling and screaming at
- him out of his mind and just play ball. But even while he was playing he faced racism
- because of all the pitchers who disliked blacks that threw at him. It is sometimes
- justified to throw at a player if someone on your team has been hit or the game is a
- blowout, but sometimes pitchers threw at Aaron with the game on the line in the late
- innings. During the home run chase he was forced to hire a bodyguard because of all the
- death threats. The bodyguard followed him around like a shadow, he was with Aaron every
- second from the hotel to the ballpark. He had to do this even though most of the threats
- were just meant to scare him. An event that had a big impact in Hank Aaron's life was when
- he was 14 years old. Jackie Robinson, the first black person to play in the major leagues
- came to his town to speak. Jackie was to speak in the auditorium on the main street in
- Aaron's home town, Toulminville This event inspired the young and impressionable Aaron to
- become a major league ball player. A passage from the book showed Aaron's idolism for
- Jackie Robinson is as follows: "Jackie Robinson was the hero of Davis Avenue- he and Joe
- Louis. When Louis would fight, everybody would get together and crowd around a radio, and
- when the dodgers were on- a Mobile station carried pirated broadcasts from an announcer
- named Gordon McLendon- it was practically the same thing. The day Jackie Robinson came to
- town in 1948, I skipped shop class to hear him speak in the auditorium on Davis Avenue.
- That same day, I told my father that I would be in the big leagues before Jackie retired.
- Jackie had that effect on all of us- he gave us our dreams. He breathed baseball into the
- black community, kids and grown-ups alike. Before then, whenever I said I wanted to be a
- ballplayer, Daddy would set me straight... I said okay then I'll be a ballplayer. He said,
- 'Ain't no colored ballplayers.' But he never said that anymore after we sat in the colored
- section of Hartwell field and watched Jackie Robinson." The one person that was the most
- influential for Hank Aaron was the person mentioned above, Jackie Robinson. This person
- was influential at first because he gave confidence to a little black kid from Mobile to
- strive to become a professional baseball player. But he was most influential later in
- Hank's life, when Hank got to the major leagues and achieved stardom. During the summer
- Hank would go barnstorming, that is to play exhibition games day after day all throughout
- the country, with a team of black players assembled by Jackie. During this time Jackie
- told Hank of all the injustices going on towards black players in the major's in that day.
- He told that only the best black players could make it to the major leagues while marginal
- white players could. He also said that blacks could not obtain any front office jobs on
- teams. Later, when Aaron had achieved the home run record he was an avid activist for
- blacks to obtain front office jobs in major league clubs. And he told of how white racist
- pitchers threw at him and the other few black players with the intent of injuring him while
- they were batting. He said that his main goal in baseball was to open the doors for the
- rest of the black players in the Negro leagues. This gave Hank the will to fight for black
- rights and to stand up for what he believed in later when Jackie had fallen out of the
- spotlight. If Jackie had not been around to inform Hank of these great injustices Hank
- would probably not have continued to fight for equality in professional sports. Jackie
- also made Hank realize that his true purpose in baseball was not to achieve greatness but
- to achieve equality. Once Aaron had broke the home run record he might have just sat back
- and enjoyed the glory but Jackie made him think he should use his notoriety to influence
- people so that baseball would become equal for all races. There were many sources of
- support, strength, and wisdom available to Aaron during his baseball career. But most of
- all, the black ballplayers that took Hank under their wing while in the minors and early in
- his major league career and showed him the ropes of the business. People like Wes
- Covington for the Eau Claire Bears and Spec Bebop of the Indianapolis Clowns explained to
- Aaron how it was and just told him to take it in stride because they knew he would be great
- someday. They would room with him and make sure he did not get into trouble. They would
- go into restaurants and get food for him so he wouldn't have to encounter white people
- because he was inexperienced. They also told him how to react to problems with white
- people. They told him how to act around white people and they taught him his manners.
- Other sources of support available to Aaron were his first wife Barbara Lucas, and his
- manager for the Jacksonville Braves Ben Geraghty. Barbara Lucas was a source of support
- because she always consoled Aaron when he thought about leaving baseball because of all the
- racism. Once, when Aaron was booed and had things thrown at him at a promotional
- experience after he won the league MVP, Aaron began questioning whether all the pain and
- suffering was worth it. She told him that if he left he would be disappointing Jackie
- Robinson, as well as the rest of his race.. Ben Geraghty was a source of support because
- even though he was white, he treated young Hank very well. Geraghty was the first white
- person Aaron met that treated him like an equal. On situation that demonstrated this was
- when a restaurant would not let the team eat there because of Hank, he was the only black
- on the team, so Geraghty said everyone had to get back on the bus and they searched for a
- restaurant that would serve the whole team. This made Aaron think that all white people
- were not racist. The single action that worsened race relations the most was the fact that
- a black man had become superior to a white man in one of the most coveted records of all.
- Another event that caused race relations to worsen was when Jackie Robinson came into the
- major leagues. The people could not fathom a black man playing on the same field as white
- players. This caused people to become negative toward him and many other black players
- after him for a long time. Also, every single obstacle or milestone Aaron hurdled or
- surpassed race relations became worse. When he got rookie of the year people were mad.
- When he got MVP people were negative towards him. At every single baseball achievement
- people resented Aaron more and more. The insight I gain form all of this is that the main
- cause of worsening race relations is the superiority of a minority over the majority. I
- guess the white people who were racist did not like the idea of a black person being on top
- of a white person. I would say that a good thesis for this phenomenon is "superiority of
- the minority". Man of the events that improved race relations in this book were headed by
- open-minded white people that accepted blacks as equals. People like Ben Geraghty and
- Warren Spahn, a teammate of Aaron's were especially open-minded towards Aaron. The insight
- I gain through this is that the people who catalyze the strengthening of race relations
- should be pushed to the forefront of their professions. If this happens then they can
- speak their mind and influence other people to change their opinions. If they are not
- noticed, then they will not be heard and will be forgotten along with any chances for
- racial equality. Also, for these people not to be ridiculed and put down, many figures
- must emerge so that once the racist people se there is a large number of people who think
- this way they may be more inclined to change their minds. One insight I gained after
- reading about the story of Hank Aaron and all the obstacles he had to overcome was that
- perseverance will win out over the destructive forces of racism. In each obstacle Aaron
- encountered he had to figure out a way to tolerate and ignore all the racism and bigotry
- toward him and his family. I can apply this concept in relationships in that by dealing
- with a relationship that goes forward, and not coloring my feelings about someone based on
- feelings about preconceived negative ideas about an individual, especially someone who is
- black. In other words, you should not rely on assumptions to form an opinion about
- somebody, but you should form your opinion based on social interactions. Another insight I
- can gain from the Hank Aaron story is that minorities tend to strive to over-achieve in an
- effort to remove from consideration their minority status. I can apply this in the real
- world is that if I can recognize that this is occurring then I can look just at someone's
- accomplishments and not their color. The part of the book that I enjoyed the most was that
- it showed very effectively all the trouble and turmoil Hank Aaron went through while trying
- to surpass Babe Ruth on the all-time list for homeruns. Before reading this book I did not
- know of all the people objecting to a black man holding a record in professional sports. I
- was appalled to read that some people are so racist that they don't want to see someone of
- a specific race hold a minuscule record. I said to myself, "Why do they care whether a
- black man beats out a white man who has been dead for a couple decades, and why do they
- care that black people play on the same fields as whites?" The aspect of the book I liked
- the least was that it did not give much attention to what happened after he broke the
- record and retired from baseball. I would have liked to know if the hate male kept coming
- or if he was ever a victim of hate crimes, or even if his kids were victimized. I would
- have liked the book more if it went into greater detail in what he did for civil rights,
- and equality in baseball after he retired.
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