preview

Lou Gehrig Biography

Decent Essays

There are some people who are fortunate enough to hit a home run in their game of life. But in his usual fashion, Lou Gehrig hit a huge grand slam in his. And to this day, number 4 in pinstripes is one of the most influential baseball players to ever play the game.
Lou Gehrig was the son of German immigrants. He grew up as a very shy “momma’s boy” in the Upper East Side of New York city. His mother, Christina Gehrig, was extremely hard working and wanting the best for her family. She had a passion to ensure Lou had an education so perhaps he could become an engineer. She wanted him to get out of the series of poverty the she and her husband lived through. She always insisted that hard work was the answer to success in America.
Lou followed in his mom’s footsteps, and became a very hard working individual. In school, for instance, he was so proud of his perfect attendance that he wouldn’t allow any sickness to cause him to miss school. He was born big, uncoordinated, and not a natural baseball player. (Lou Gehrig UXL Biographies) Lou Gehrig is a noteworthy subject because he was a great role …show more content…

After his career ended, the Yankees decided to retire his number. In 1939 Gehrig was unanimously voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame and skipped the mandatory waiting period. Before his last game he delivered a farewell speech that people still quote today. In his words: “I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth. And I might have been given a bad break, but I’ve got an awful lot to live for.” Lou was always thankful for what he had. And his statistics never really showed who he was. It’s the human being that showed the real him. David Noonan of Sports Illustrated wrote, Lou Gehrig “one of the greatest baseball players who ever lived, is best known for the way he died.” (Lou Gehrig Encyclopedia of World

Get Access