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Bill Johnson

Hal Trosky

Hal Trosky played first base for the Cleveland Indians and the Chicago White Sox in the 1930s and 1940s. His career reached its apex in 1936 when he led the American League in runs batted in with 162. Despite his remarkable career, Trosky has been consigned to relative obscurity because his career overlapped the triumvirate of Hall of Fame first basemen Jimmie Foxx, Hank Greenberg, and Lou Gehrig.


Born Harold Arthur, he arrived on November 11, 1912, to John and Mary (nee Siepman) Trojovsky. The family, second-generation immigrants from the region of Germany called Bohemia, moved to their 420-acre farm outside Norway, Iowa, in 1917. He had two sisters, Annette and Esther, and a brother, Victor.


After an impressive schoolboy and amateur career, Hal was courted with varying degrees of intensity by the Athletics, the Cardinals, and the Indians. After graduating from high school, he was offered a minor league contract by the St. Louis Cardinals. Not confident in how to proceed, Trosky called on Bing Miller in nearby Vinton. Miller was then a member of Connie Mack’s powerhouse Philadelphia Athletics, a team that had just played in its second of three consecutive World Series. Miller was delighted to speak with the boy.


Miller knew Trojovsky’s reputation and advised him to do nothing until Mr. Mack was consulted. Hal drove home quite content, but upon returning to Norway found his father seated in the kitchen with Cleveland Indians scout and Cedar Rapids native, Cyril C. “Cy” Slapnicka.


Trosky later told Gordon Cobbledick, the baseball columnist for the Cleveland Plain Dealer, “I liked Slap, and after we talked baseball for a while he suggested I sign with him.” Evidently, Slapnicka had been aware of Hal’s prowess, but hadn’t felt any urgency in pursuing him until he got wind of the Athletics’ possible interest.


After almost no deliberation, Hal chose the Indians. He signed his first contract “Harold Trojovsky”, but from then on used the shorter “Trosky,” as did his siblings. Ironically, a contract offer from Connie Mack arrived three days later. Hal returned the unsigned document with a note explaining what had happened and apologizing for the inconvenience. He was touched that Mack took time to respond with his best wishes for the player’s future career.


Trosky reported to the Cedar Rapids Bunnies in early 1931, playing for a $65 monthly salary. He was signed primarily as a pitcher, one who had the odd habit of hitting cross-handed but from the right side of the plate. Slapnicka, in a visit to the park to check on his prospects, took player and manager aside and suggested Hal retain his grip but switch to a left-handed batting stance. The change was providential, as Trosky played 52 Mississippi Valley League games that summer as a converted first baseman and, in 162 at-bats, managed 49 hits (including 3 home runs) for a respectable .302 batting average. He followed that mark in 1932 by hitting .307 in 56 games in the Three-I league, first with Springfield and, after that team folded, with Burlington, and then .331 after promotion to Quincy. His 15 home runs in 68 games with Quincy attracted attention in Cleveland, and in 1933 Hal Trosky began the season as a two-hundred-dollars-a-month player with the Toledo Mud Hens of the American Association.


At the close of the Mud Hens season, Cleveland called, and on September 11, 1933, Hal Trosky started at first in place of Harley Boss. Hal went 0-for-3 against the Senators’ Monte Weaver, and would wait a full week before collecting his first major-league hit on September 18, a home run off the Red Sox Gordon Rhodes.


The day before that first hit, September 17, provided a brush with baseball royalty. In the second game of a doubleheader against the Yankees, Trosky was playing deep behind first base when Babe Ruth hit a screaming line drive down the line that carried the novice’s mitt almost halfway into right field. Hal later had the glove bronzed for his personal collection.

After retrieving the glove, the rookie had to sift through the conflicting emotions of awe in the presence of a living legend and of fear in the form of Lou Gehrig striding to the plate. If possible, Gehrig represented an even greater hazard to Trosky’s well-being than the Bambino, because Ruth generally hit high, arcing fly balls, while Gehrig could rip a vicious line drive off any pitch.


Trosky had to cover the bag with second base open, but against Gehrig the only chance to reel in a hard drive was found in playing farther back on the outfield grass.


The Babe must have divined Trosky’s fielding dilemma, because he whispered out the side of his mouth, “Don’t worry about holding me on, kid. I ain’t going no place. Just drop back a little and play it safe. If he hit one at you up here, it would take your head off.” Hal backed off and, true to his word, Ruth stood just a few feet from first and awaited the Yankee onslaught. It wasn’t that big a deal to the Babe, but Trosky never forgot that small kindness.


In 44 at-bats that month, spread over 11 games, Hal hit .295 with a double and two triples and drove in eight runs. That winter, Trosky married Lorraine Glenn in Norway, Iowa.


In 1934, his first full year in the major leagues, he was little short of spectacular. Hal played every inning of all 154 games, hit .330 with 35 home runs (at the time the fifth highest total ever by a first-year player), drove in 142 runs, and posted a slugging average of .598. He finished seventh in balloting for American League Most Valuable Player. (Even Triple-Crown winner Lou Gehrig could muster no better than fifth place in the vote.)


The 1935 season marked an increase in Hal’s confidence and an erosion in his performance. When he was mired in a September slump, a stretch in which he’d had exactly one hit in 40 at-bats, coach Steve O’Neill, his former manager at Toledo, suggested Trosky try hitting from the right side against the Senators.


The next day, in the opener of a doubleheader in Washington, Hal came up in the first inning and took a right-handed stance. He stunned his teammates by smoking an Orlin Rogers curve for a single. After a left-handed out in the fifth, he hit from the right side again in the eighth inning and knocked a Leon Pettit pitch into the distant reaches of Griffith Stadium’s left-field bleachers for his 23rd home run of the year. Overall in the two games, Trosky punched five hits in ten at-bats. Three singles and a home run came from the right side, and one long double from the left.


After the “Sophomore Jinx” season of 1935 (.271/26/113), Trosky announced during spring training in 1936 that he wouldn’t be switch-hitting anymore. It proved unnecessary.

The 1934 model Hal Trosky returned for the ’36 campaign. A mid-June spell in Lakeside Hospital, a result of a clot in his leg that developed following a batting practice accident, caused him to miss his only three games of the year. Despite the setback, Trosky put together a 28-game hitting streak and broke his own team record for home runs in a single season when he hit number 36 against the Senators. Although the AL pennant went to the Yankees, 1936 was a memorable year for Trosky, as he led the league in RBIs (162) and total bases (405). His RBI total over his first three seasons was greater than the totals amassed by Gehrig, Foxx, or Greenberg over their first three years.


Following the 1933 call-up, Hal had wed long-time sweetheart Lorraine Glenn (from Norway, Iowa), and in September of an already-spectacular 1936, they welcomed their first son, Harold. Baseball ran in the genes. Twenty-two years later Hal Junior made it to the major leagues for a late season, two-game cup of coffee as a pitcher with the White Sox.

By 1939, Hal was named team captain. Trosky agreed not only for the extra $500 stipend, but because he felt that he could serve as a buffer between some of the less confident players and their acerbic manager, Oscar Vitt.


In midseason, though, Hal did the unthinkable: he lifted himself from the lineup and let understudy Oscar Grimes play a few games at first. Trosky never admitted it to the team, but there were times when his head absolutely ached. The season ended with Trosky recording only 448 at-bats, the first season since his 1933 overture that he appeared in less than 150 games. It was becoming difficult for him to bring the necessary intensity to the park each day. He was only 26 years old when the season ended, but the pain from the headaches sapped his vigor.


Over the winter the headaches faded. Hal consulted several doctors in Cleveland and in Cedar Rapids, but none was able to pinpoint the source of his discomfort. As the frequency of attacks decreased, Hal threw himself into his farming and family life, and by the end of the offseason, he was eager to return to baseball.


Events in 1940’s spring training provided unmistakable indications of how the Indians would perform on the field, but not even the closest observers could have predicted the off-field show that was gradually unfolding. The players felt their manager was antagonistic and spiteful, despite the press’s portrayal of him as suffering and misunderstood. The first week in June brought the cauldron to a boil.


On June 10, after a week of inconsistent play, the Indians were rained out in Boston and the players spent the day in the hotel lobby dissecting their misfortune. The blame for the team’s struggles fell on Vitt. Some of the players advanced the idea of trying to dump the manager, but team captain Trosky counseled patience. The slugger was a proud man, and wanted no part of pointing public fingers at anyone, even though Vitt’s words had repeatedly stung him.


The next evening, after an afternoon Red Sox blow-out of the Indians, Trosky spoke with Frank Gibbons of the Cleveland Press. He told the scribe that the Indians could win the pennant with their current players, but had no chance as long as Vitt was the manager. Gibbons cautioned Hal to wait and see how things turned out before doing anything rash. Ironically, it was the same advice Trosky had given his teammates earlier.


The following morning the players checked out of their rooms early. At breakfast they again discussed solutions for the “Vitt problem.” Later, on the train ride from Boston to Cleveland, veterans Ben Chapman and Rollie Hemsley reportedly called Lou Boudreau and Ray Mack to their berth and told the young infielders that some of the players were circulating a petition calling for Vitt’s ouster. Boudreau and Mack, along with Al Smith, Beau Bell, Mike Naymick, and Soup Campbell, were excused from participating.


In a meeting with the rest of the players, pitchers Mel Harder and Johnny Allen told the team that they would go to owner Alva Bradley alone to discuss the problems. The team disagreed, but appointed Harder as their collective voice.


On June 13 real tragedy found Trosky. As the team’s train pulled into the Cleveland station, Hal received word that his mother had died suddenly in Iowa. Trosky went straight from the train station to the airport, while Harder called Alva Bradley’s office seeking an appointment with the owner.


Instead of sending Harder alone, ten more of the dissidents went to Bradley’s office en masse to show him the sincerity of their grievance. The players were all seasoned veterans, men who worked in the off-season not by choice but by necessity, and they were men who understood the consequences of their actions. Clearly, this was no idle grumbling about a stern taskmaster. Vitt had wounded them deeply enough to spur those extraordinary measures.


The players told Bradley that Vitt had to go if the team was to compete successfully. They outlined four specific grievances, each of which Bradley later confirmed as true, and demanded the owner take action.


Trosky even telephoned Bradley from the airport to ensure his absence wouldn’t be misconstrued. Despite his personal misgivings about the action, the team captain would not even consider standing idly by while his teammates pressed the issue.


Bradley told the players that he would look into the matter and warned them that if word of the meeting was released, the players would be ridiculed forever.


Gordon Cobbledick found out almost immediately. The Indians won the game that afternoon, but it was the insurrection that was front-page news in the Plain Dealer the next morning. The headline for the story was physically larger on the printed page than that afforded to Hitler’s invasion of Paris. Bradley went on the record saying that he would take no immediate action regarding his manager or his players until he had a chance to talk with the team captain.


As far as Trosky’s involvement in the “Crybaby” incident, rumored so heavily by the writers, it probably was not nearly as great as some supposed. Three days after the story broke, on the back page of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, an apology of sorts was printed that stated that neither Oscar Vitt nor Hal Trosky had ever claimed that Trosky was bent on usurping Vitt’s authority.


A memo from Alva Bradley concerning the incident was discovered and published by the Cleveland News in 1951: “We should have won the pennant…our real trouble started when a group of 10 players came to my office and made four distinct charges against (Vitt) and asked for his dismissal. The four charges made against Vitt, on investigations I have made, were 100% correct.”


On August 11 in St. Louis, Hal swung his way into the record books by becoming the seventeenth player in major league history to clout 200 home runs. He finished the season batting.295. His 93 RBIs marked the first full major-league season he had played in which he failed to drive in at least 100 runs. He hit 39 doubles and a team-leading 25 home runs. The headaches hit hard again in August and September, but Hal loathed missing any game in the tight pennant race. The Indians finished second, just one game behind Detroit.


The 1941 season began with none of the flourish that surrounded Bob Feller’s no-hitter the year before. One constant was Trosky’s headaches. They were striking with no notice and leaving a wake of debilitating agony. For a hitter who made a living off fastballs, he was powerless against a blurry white apparition that he said sometimes looked “like a bunch of white feathers.”


Hal played less and less. The migraines were now almost unbearable, so on August 11, Cleveland began a seven game road trip without their slugger. Trosky was left home with Oscar Grimes assuming first-base duties, primarily because the headaches frequently left him non-functional on the diamond.


Hal rejoined the team for its last stop in Chicago. In the sixth inning of the opener of a doubleheader at Comiskey Park, Trosky’s Indian career came to an abrupt end when he fractured his thumb in a collision with White Sox pitcher Ted Lyons. The slugger missed the final 39 games of the season and, as it turned out, never wore Cleveland colors again.


The Indians finished in a tie for fourth place with the Tigers and Hal drove in only 51 runs in 310 at-bats. In February 1942, Hal told Gayle Hayes that he wouldn’t be playing baseball that year. It was, he was quoted, “for the best interest of the Cleveland club and for myself that I stay out of baseball…I have visited various doctors in the larger cities in the United States and they have not helped me. If, after resting this year, I find that I am better, perhaps I’ll try to be reinstated. If I don’t get better, then my major-league career is over."


Trosky passed 1942 on his farm in Iowa. He devoured news of the war, farmed, and despite some interest from the Yankees, waited for a call from the draft board. Hal was evidently a decent farmer, averaging production of over 90 bushels of corn per acre in a time before the advent of modern farming technology, but he wanted to contribute on the front lines.


Hal worked out for the White Sox and in November the Indians sold his contract to Chicago for $45,000. In March 1944, the army officially declared Hal Trosky “4-F,” unsuitable for military service, due to his history of headaches. Despite a treatment protocol of vitamin shots, the army wasn’t willing to take a chance. After three days of evaluation, the doctors stood by their judgment.


The White Sox took advantage of the army’s concession. Hal played baseball in 1944 like a man with great talent who had been out of the game for two seasons. In April he logged several multi-RBI games, but he showed no consistency. His play was marked by a succession of solid games followed by mediocre performances.


Headaches notwithstanding, Trosky managed ten home runs in 1944, which was enough to lead his team in that category. Including his 1944 season, Hal led his teams seven times in home runs. According to the SABR Home Run Encyclopedia, Trosky homered in nine different parks and off 112 different pitchers; his most frequent victims were Tommy Bridges and Bump Hadley. Of his 228 home runs, 106 were hit on the road, and 122 at home. No one but Earl Averill hit more at Cleveland’s League Park.


At the end of 1944, with the White Sox in seventh place after winning only 71 times, Hal called it quits again. He headed home for some hunting and farming, and to await another possible call-up to support the war effort.


1945 found Trosky working again at the Amana Refrigeration plant. The headache pain had been, in part, controlled by vitamin B-1 shots and by a significant reduction in his daily intake of dairy products. It was ironic that an Iowa dairy farmer was allergic to the very stuff his animals produced, and that he consumed so frequently in order to maintain his athletic frame. The treatments, along with some emotional distance from his time with the Indians, helped lessen the migraines considerably, and the end of the war presented Trosky with one more opportunity.


The White Sox offered Hal a contract for $21,000 to play in 1946. Hal hit only .254 with two home runs and 31 RBIs. Despite Chicago’s offer of $25,000 to suit up again in 1947, the thirty-four-year-old Trosky knew it was time to hang up the spikes. His baseball career complete, he was able to devote more of his time to the infinitely greater demands of being a father not only to Hal Junior, but also to sons James and Lynn and to their youngest, daughter Mary Kay.


Following his official release in February 1947, the White Sox hired Trosky as a scout. Between 1947 and 1950, he traveled the tiny towns of eastern Iowa looking for “the next Trosky.” In 1947 he also managed a semipro team, the Amana Freezers, sponsored by Amana Refrigeration. That team consisted largely of former University of Iowa baseball and football players and included future baseball major leaguer Jack Dittmer and NFL Hall of Fame star Emlen Tunnell. Dittmer played second base for Milwaukee for years and Tunnell intercepted 79 passes for the New York Giants during his professional career. The Freezers went 27-2 and just missed qualifying for the Amateur World Series in Kansas.


Hal left the Freezers the next year, and the White Sox in 1950, to settle down to farming (owning two over the next 25 years) before taking up agricultural real estate sales around Cedar Rapids in 1962.


Trosky was, in many ways, a typical midwestern man. He raised his family with a firm sense of discipline; he hunted, played cards, and went to church. His primary contact with baseball came in his participation with the Iowa High School Baseball Coaches Association. The archives of that organization, later run by Trosky’s nephew Harold “Pinky” Primrose, show that he was an active lecturer for many years, until the mid-1970’s.


Hal suffered a heart attack in early 1978 and by 1979 was only moving around with the support of a cane. On June 18 he collapsed. The doctors said the heart attack was so massive that Trosky was dead by the time he reached the floor. He was officially pronounced dead on arrival at Mercy Hospital in Cedar Rapids, and is buried in St Michael’s cemetery on a hillside overlooking his hometown of Norway, Iowa.

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