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Joe DiMaggio's Streak, Game 13: All Concern No Longer on the Field

JoeDiMaggio.comMay 28, 2011

Game 13: May 28, 1941

โ€œI have tonight issued a proclamation that an unlimited national emergency exists and requires the strengthening of our defense to the extreme limit of our national power and authority,โ€ came the message from President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Most of the players gathering at the ballpark had heard most of the FDRโ€™s speech the night before on radio.

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But the morning papers in Washington were putting in perspective exactly what the president meant.

The Yankees and Senators had a lot of time to digest the newsโ€”on May 28, their contest was supposed to be special: the first night game at Griffith Stadium.

But the topic of discussion at breakfast revolved around the United Statesโ€™ potential entry into the war in Europe.

Some players pondered the ugly truth: soon theyโ€™d be enlisted to the military.

After all, the draft was already in place. Detroit superstar Hank Greenberg was the first big name snatched from a roster. Could the Smiths and Joneses of Major League Baseball be far behind?

Rooseveltโ€™s speech made Americaโ€™s involvement in the European conflict sound imminent.

But first things firstโ€”there was a ballgame at hand. More than 25,000 fans came to see the great Walter Johnson throw out the first pitch. A beam of light at home plate would supposedly be broken by the Big Trainโ€™s pitch, activating the lights at cavernous Griffith Stadium.

Johnsonโ€™s ceremonial heave was close enough (a technician somewhere in the hidden confines of the park threw a switch). Voila! The Senatorsโ€™ first night game.

Pesky Sid Hudson was on the mound for the Solons. Having an earned run average at 4.43 was miraculous, considering the sieve of a defense that labored behind him.

Hudson held a 3-0 lead until DiMaggio tripled and scored in the sixth.

Going into the eighth, Hudson held sway with one out, but Charlie Kellerโ€™s pinch-hit grand slam proved the difference in a come-from-behind 6-5 win.

Still, Rooseveltโ€™s words were ringing throughout the nation.

โ€œThere are some timid ones among us who say that we must preserve peace at any price, lest we lose our liberties forever,โ€ the president had said. โ€œTo them I say this: never in the history of the world has a nation lost its democracy by a successful struggle to defend its democracy.โ€

The president reiterated a line from his 1932 inaugural speech:

โ€œThe only thing we have to fear is fear itself."

Hitler and first-place Cleveland now worried about the Yanks closing in.

JoeDiMaggio.comย is the official and authorized Web site of Joe DiMaggio. During the 70th anniversary of DiMaggio's 56-game hitting streak, it is publishing โ€œReliving Joe DiMaggioโ€™s Streak,โ€ which follows the daily progress of Joltin' Joe in 1941ย Series Archive.

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