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  1. 23 de fev. de 2023 · Genealogy for Henry Louis "Lou" Gehrig, Jr. (1903 - 1941) family tree on Geni, with over 245 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

    • NY
    • June 19, 1903
    • Eleanor Grace Gehrig
    • June 2, 1941
  2. 20 de jan. de 2023 · Lou Gehrig was born Heinrick Ludwig Gehrig but went by Lou. He grew up in Yorkville, Manhattan, with German Immigrant parents. At an early age, he developed a love for baseball and thrived in it with his natural athletic ability.

    • He Was The Son of German immigrants.
    • His Big Break Allegedly Resulted from A Team Member’S headache.
    • He Was The First Athlete to Appear on A Box of Wheaties.
    • The Illness That Killed Him Commonly Carries His Name in The U.S.
    • There’S No Exact Record of What Gehrig Said in His “Luckiest Man” Speech.
    • Gehrig’s Relationship with Babe Ruth soured.
    • After His Baseball Career Ended, He Worked with Prison Inmates.

    Born Henry Louis Gehrig in New York City on June 19, 1903, the future sports icon was the son of German immigrants. His father and mother each arrived in America as young adults then met and married in New York City. Gehrig, the only one of his parents’ four offspring to survive past infancy, spent his early childhood in a heavily German neighborho...

    In 1923, Gehrig, then a sophomore at Columbia University, where he played football and baseball, dropped out of school after being recruited by the New York Yankees. The team ended up sending him to play in the minor leagues, in Hartford, Connecticut, for part of the 1923 and 1924 seasons, but Gehrig got his big break in 1925. As the story goes, th...

    In 1933, Gehrig wed Eleanor Twitchell, a Chicago woman he’d met at a party when the Yankees were playing in the Windy City. While Gehrig was modest and didn’t seek the spotlight, Eleanor was ambitious for her new husband and hired Babe Ruth’s business manager to promote Gehrig. Among other endorsements, he went on to appear on a box of Wheaties cer...

    1938 was a frustrating season for Gehrig, who didn’t play as well as he had in the past. No one knew it at the time, but he likely was showing signs of the incurable disease that eventually would kill him. In the spring of 1939, his performance continued to deteriorate and he was clumsy and weak. On May 2, 1939, Gehrig told his manager he wanted to...

    A few weeks after Gehrig’s athletic career came to an end, the team for whom he’d played 14 consecutive seasons honored him with a ceremony at Yankee Stadium on July 4, 1939. During the event, which was witnessed by some 61,000 fans at the ballpark, Gehrig gave a short, inspiring speech in which he thanked the people who’d been important to him and...

    Ruth joined the Yankees in 1920, five years before Gehrig became a starting member of the lineup, and the two great sluggers played together until Ruth hung up his New York uniform in 1934. While the two were teammates, the Yankees won the World Series in 1927, 1928 and 1932 (they also triumphed in 1923, the year Gehrig signed with the team). Perso...

    After retiring from baseball, Gehrig accepted an offer from the mayor of New York, Fiorello LaGuardia, to be a commissioner on the city’s parole board. The former slugger was sworn in for a 10-year term in the fall of 1939. The job, which had an annual salary of $5,700, included interacting with inmates and determining which ones should be released...

    • Elizabeth Nix
  3. Henry Louis "Lou" Gehrig ( Yorkville, 19 de junho de 1903 — Riverdale, 2 de junho de 1941) foi um jogador de beisebol norte-americano que atuou entre 1923 e 1939 na Major League Baseball.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lou_GehrigLou Gehrig - Wikipedia

    Early life Heinrich Ludwig Gehrig Jr. was born June 19, 1903, at 1994 Second Avenue (according to his birth certificate) in the East Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan ; he weighed almost 14 pounds (6.4 kg) at birth. He was the second of four children of German immigrants Christina Foch (1881–1954) and Heinrich Gehrig (1867–1946). Christina was born in 1881 in Wilster, Schleswig-Holstein, a ...

  5. 4 de jan. de 2012 · Accordingly, Lou’s mother served as both the breadwinner and the disciplinarian for the family. Christina, already having lost three children to illness, became very protective of her only surviving child. When Lou was five years old, the Gehrig family moved from Yorkville to Washington Heights.

  6. Family . Henry Louis Gehrig was the son of Heinrich (Henry) and Christina Facke (or Fack or Foch) Gehrig, German immigrants living in the Yorkville section of Manhattan. He was born in New York City June 19, 1903. Lou was the only Gehrig child to survive to adulthood.