Translation from English

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Born Today: Joe DiMaggio

Joe DiMaggio biography

Died On This Day

Joe DiMaggio died on this day in 1999.

1 photo

Quick Facts

  • NAME: Joe DiMaggio
  • OCCUPATION: Baseball Player
  • BIRTH DATE: November 25, 1914
  • DEATH DATE: March 08, 1999
  • EDUCATION: Galileo High School
  • PLACE OF BIRTH: Martinez, California
  • PLACE OF DEATH: Hollywood, Florida
  • Full Name: Giuseppe Paolo DiMaggio
  • AKA: Joe DiMaggio
  • AKA: Giuseppe DiMaggio
  • Nickname: Joltin' Joe
  • Nickname: The Yankee Clipper

Best Known For

Joe DiMaggio was one of the best all-round baseball players in the history of the game, helping the New York Yankees to nine World Series titles.

Quiz

Think you know about Biography?
Answer questions and see how you rank against other players.
Play Now
Joe DiMaggio - Yankees Record Breaker watch more videos (1)

Synopsis

Born on November 25, 1914, in Martinez, California, Joe DiMaggio started and ended his major league career with the New York Yankees. Between 1936 and 1951, DiMaggio helped the Yankees to nine World Series titles, also setting a new record for most hits in consecutive games—56. In 1954, DiMaggio married Marilyn Monroe and was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame a year later.

Quotes

"I'm just a ballplayer with one ambition, and that is to give all I've got to help my ball club win. I've never played any other way."
– Joe DiMaggio

Early Life

Baseball legend Joe DiMaggio was born Giuseppe Paolo DiMaggio on November 25, 1914, in Martinez, California. He was the eighth child of Giuseppe and Rosalie DiMaggio, Italian immigrants who moved from Sicily to California in 1898. The family then relocated to North Beach, a predominantly Italian neighborhood in San Francisco, about a year after DiMaggio's birth.

DiMaggio's father, like generations of DiMaggios before him, was a fisherman, and he fervently wished for his sons to join him in his trade. While Joe DiMaggio never had any interest in fishing, his upbringing as the son of a poor immigrant fisherman helped form his popular image as the personification of the "American Dream." Ernest Hemingway captured the way DiMaggio's upbringing shaped his legend in his novella The Old Man and the Sea: "'I would like to take the great DiMaggio fishing,' the old man said. 'They say his father was a fisherman. Maybe he was as poor as we are and would understand.'"

Early Career

Instead of following his father onto his fishing boat, Joe DiMaggio followed his older brother Vince onto San Francisco's sandlot baseball fields, where he quickly distinguished himself as something of a playground legend. In 1930, at the age of 16, DiMaggio dropped out of Galileo High School to dedicate his life to baseball. He played daily at what was known as the dairy-wagon parking lot, a vast empty space where milk drivers parked their horses and wagons. "We used rocks for bases," DiMaggio recalled, "and it was quite a scramble among about 20 of us kids to scrape up a nickel to buy a roll of bicycle tape to patch up the ball each day."

DiMaggio played in a local league for a team sponsored by an olive-oil distributor called Rossi, receiving two baseballs and $16 worth of merchandise for leading his team to a league championship. In 1932, DiMaggio's older brother Vince was signed to the San Francisco Seals, the city's Pacific Coast League team; when the club's shortstop was injured near the end of the season, Vince suggested his younger brother as a replacement. After playing in the last few games of the 1932 season, DiMaggio won a full place on the Seals' roster in 1933.

New York Yankees

During that first full season with the Seals, Joe DiMaggio batted .340 with 28 home runs and put together a 61-game hitting streak. After two more spectacular seasons with the Seals in which he hit .341 and .398, DiMaggio got his shot at the majors when he was sold to the New York Yankees for $25,000 and five players. "I would like to thank the good lord for making me a Yankee," he said at the time.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Please leave a comment-- or suggestions, particularly of topics and places you'd like to see covered