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Dick Steinberg has resided in the city of Brookfield for 35 years. He served 34 years as municipal judge and has been an attorney for 50 years. He enjoys tennis, golf, biking and creative writing, which includes legal issues, sports, government and people.

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June 2008 - Posts

LOU GEHRIG. PART 2

By Richard J. Steinberg
Friday, Jun 20 2008, 12:30 PM

It all began while at Columbia University, N.Y., in 1923 a baseball scout saw him play and signed Lou to a contract with the New York Yankees with a bonus estimated at $500. Lou played in the minor leagues for part of that season when the Yankee parent team called him up to be their first baseman for an injured Wally Pipp. That was the start for Lou of what would lead to13 consecutive years and 2,130 consecutive games earning him the title of "Iron Man of Baseball".

Lou Gehrig was always a gentleman, very shy and quiet, and was nice to everyone. He was extremely patient with the kids who swarmed around him for his autograph, and was know to disappear at times only to be found coaching, umpiring or playing on a sandlot baseball field with some kids.

Later in life when the dreaded disease ravaged his powerful body he worked out to the limit of his endurance trying to continue his baseball career while his strength rapidly deteriorated.

During most of his days with the Yankees he was completely overshadowed by the compelling figure of George Herman Ruth, The Babe. It is said that Lou and Babe although they hit back to back in the lineup, Lou no.3 and Babe no. 4, were not good friends even though their team was winning championships and world series.

Then came the trade and virtual retirement of Babe Ruth and Lou was named Team Captain in a new era that saw Joe Dimaggio emerge and the "Bronx Bombers" were born. That team even made fans forget the infamous "Murderers Row" led by the one and only Babe Ruth.

Lou Gehrig was a poor boy who conquered life's handicaps, never thought of himself as someone special, was brave and gallient to the end when at age 38 his life was over. He never wore a hat, a vest or overcoat until his dutiful wife, Eleanor, insisted. He was not a drinker a troublemaker or a publicity seeker, and was devoted to his mother and his wife.

The Baseball statistics that led him to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y. , were and some still are out of the reach of any player today.

His lifetime batting average of .340 over 17 years in todays market would certainly earn him more money than Lou could ever imagine. In 13 seasons Gehrig averaged 147 runs batted in a season, a fete that neither Aaron, Mantle or Mays never reached, even in one season.

 


 

LOU GEHRIG----A QUIET HERO

By Richard J. Steinberg
Thursday, Jun 5 2008, 10:26 PM

My boyhood hero and my adult baseball hero has been and now is the great LOU GEHRIG.

As a youth I read the book "LOU GEHRIG, A QUIET HERO", by Author Frank Graham, and I saw the movie "Pride of the Yamlees".

My interest in Lou Gehrig became a burning desire to learn more and more about the "Iron Man of Baseball".

Over the years I have collected Lou Gehrig memorabillia and cherish my collection.

Henry Louis Gehrig was born in New York City on June 19,1903 and died on June 2, 1941 in Riverdale, New York. His playing height was 6' and weight was 200 lbs. He grew up the son of immigrant parents who could hardly make ends meet and after graduation from high school where he excelled in sports, he enrolled in Columbia University to study engineering.Instead of becoming an engineer as his devoted and hard working mother wanted, while at Columbia he was a success in football as a scholarship fullback. He went out for for the baseball team as a pitcher and first baseman and attracted the attention of sports fans and professional scouts.

His parents, Heinrich Gehrig and Christina Fack were not destined to become wealthy. His father was mostly out of work and not in good health, and his mother was his inspiration and his companion (at one time she traveled with the team and was the unofficial chef), and she was his best fan.

Lou married Eleanor Twitchel, a socialite from Chicago where he met her while playing there, and she became the love of his life and was with him at the end.                

It was on July 4, 1939 at Yankee Stadium where Lou made his famous speech on Lou Gehrig Appreciation Day, when he said,"Some people will say I had a bad break but today I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth". There are many other versions of that speech when Lou was forced to retire because of a then little known disease now called "Lou Gehrig Disease".

 

 


 

May was a special month

By Richard J. Steinberg
Monday, Jun 2 2008, 10:52 AM

May , 2008, was a special month for me.

1. Final recovery from eye surgery.

2. Presentation from common counsel and mayor at city hall of a resolution for service as municipal judge.

3. Presentation from Wis. Bar Association as a 50 year emeritus attorney at law.

4. Recognition at Elmbrook Baptist church as a public servant and Korean War veteran.

5. Appointment by Chief District Judge as a Reserve Municipal Judge.

6.Appointment by my American Legion Post as their legal counsel.

My sincere appreciation to all those who made this possible and to my physician whose skill allowed me to return to the private practice of law.And finally a vacation which was delayed 2 months.

RJSTEINBERGLAW@AOL.COm

262-784-7741

 


 
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