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James Moore

James Moore

Posted: May 5, 2010 12:02 AM

The Sound of Summer: A Farewell to Ernie Harwell

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"People ask me what I do in the winter when there is no baseball. I'll tell you what I do. I stare out the window and wait for spring." - Rogers Hornsby

When I got the news that Ernie Harwell had died, I was, appropriately, at a baseball game. I looked at the message on my phone and then heard the distracting crack of a bat. A five foot, ten inch, 215 pound, left-handed, designated hitter for a university team had just gotten the better part of a high and outside fastball. The baseball appeared to rise into the cloudless evening sky of Central Texas and hang there in the light that shimmers between the ending of a day and the arrival of night. Momentarily, though, the ball rose on a gentle breeze before spinning to the ground in a bullpen beyond the fence in left field. I had no other thought than to contemplate how Mr. Harwell might have described that home run.

If America had a voice, it would sound like Ernie Harwell. He was resonant and reassuring without being intrusive. Listeners heard confidence and kindliness as a subtext to his descriptions of baseball games. We thought we knew Mr. Harwell but he definitely knew us. Harwell understood that there was an almost sacred connection between fans and their teams and he always gave us reason to believe in happy outcomes. If only we got one more runner on and the tying run came to the plate, who knew what might happen? This was the optimism with which he lived his life and it is narrative he told so well in Michigan, a place where hope can be a transient thing. He spoke the story of America in the metaphor of baseball. Learn to lose with grace and win with humility and never stop trying.

Mostly, though, the Tiger's legendary broadcaster sounded like summer and when I heard him describe a bounding ball to second there were visions of watermelons and picnics and the lake in front of my eyes, almost dancing over the melting Michigan snow banks. Mr. Harwell's voice on the radio meant that the sun was moving northward across the equator and all the rhythms of the world were swinging sweetly to a song of vacation and ninth inning walk off homeruns. As soon as I heard him broadcasting each spring, I became convinced I had seen my last snowfall of the winter. Mr. Harwell was the boy eternal who never quit loving his childhood game and refused to think there was anything more important than being a kid excited about stolen bases and strikeouts and the beautiful line made by a well-struck ball. Who can say he was wrong?

We lived among the southern families that came up from Dixie to work in Michigan's car plants and there was an overgrown field on the edge of our neighborhood we turned into a diamond. Our worn out baseball was covered with electrician's tape and our wooden bats were usually taped and tacked where the handles had been broken. We shared a few gloves and when we played the game we dreamed of making the clutch hit or the diving catch in the big leagues, usually for the Tigers, and always with Ernie Harwell describing our great achievements. On days that there were little league games, we would play catch near the radio, which had been placed next to a back door, and we listened to Mr. Harwell call the Tiger games until it was time to leave for our own contest.

Ernie Harwell's voice was the mood music to those lovely Michigan days when cottony clouds drifted overhead, dandelions bloomed on lawns, and almost anyone who wanted to work had a job. He was the texture to a world where cars were coming off of assembly lines and families were buying homes and people from California were trying to get to the Midwest to be a part of Motown. The jobs and the technology and the music were all being made in that magical place and the Tigers were leading the Yankees in the chase for the pennant. Al Kaline and Norm Cash were giants but Ernie Harwell sent them out to live in our houses and cars and made us feel a part of a rush to greatness.

I do not recall a summer day of my youth where I did not hear the voice of that good and gentle man. I never knew Mr. Harwell but I had heard that he was moral and humble and always had time for the fans that loved him as much as they loved the players. On my visits back to Michigan as an adult, when I heard him on the radio, I was able to close my eyes and go back instantly to the days when I dreamed of replacing Rocky Colavito in left field for Detroit. I believed in the place that was implicit in the sound of Ernie Harwell's voice and it was hopeful and responded to effort and led to success. As a homesick professional broadcaster living on the Texas border, I once wrote a letter to Mr. Harwell and told him how I aspired to become the Tiger play-by-play man when he retired. Predictably, he sent back a gracious note wishing me well and thanking me for being an unfaltering fan.

The year Detroit caught fire with race and riots the only voice that I thought was informed by reason was Mr. Harwell's. In 1967, when Americans were fighting with each other over differences in skin pigmentation, I hid in baseball and was comforted by the constancy of the game. Tiger baseball brought us back together and Mr. Harwell's voice stitched us into a single city. The next year we triumphed when the hometown team won the pennant and the World Series in the last year of division play. I was beside a radio and can still recall the description by Mr. Harwell. "Swung on and there's a line drive base hit to left field. Wert is rounding third; he'll score and the Tigers will win the pennant. Let's listen to the bedlam in Tiger Stadium."

I choose to believe there is a place where baseball is always being played; the sun shines perpetually, there is a gentle breeze to left field, and the players are eternally young and strong. The stadium is filled with fans and excitement and there is a gentle voice on the radio telling everyone who is not there to, "Come on out to the ballpark. There's still a lot of great baseball to be enjoyed." Those of us who have not made it to the game yet can still hear Ernie Harwell describing how wondrous things will be as soon as we arrive and look out on that perfect green diamond.

We are still listening, Mr. Harwell. We always will.

Also at www.moorethink.com

 
 
 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sam1jere
Open-minded, sports lover, Red
06:15 AM on 05/10/2010
In an era of obsession with remuneration over passion for the shirt they play for - and by extension, respect for the fans who pay and follow the game - such people as Ernie Harwell are titans of the game. While we drool over the exploits of gifted athletes or the tactical genius of coaches, how about the unheralded, the announcers, grounds men or anyone who contributes to the progress of their team? We need, as societies, to change our approach towards competitiveness and winning and revisit the team concept. Who or what constitutes a team? Commonness of purpose primarily. When a group of disparate individuals act as one, massive energy is released and harnessed, something individuals, no matter the level of gifting can muster on their own. For every offensive player, there must be a defender doing the unglamorous, but critical "dirty jobs" behind him. For every end product, we must remember there's a starting point and in-between, all of which lead to that glorious end. This is the gap that the likes of Ernie Harwell fill. I don't follow baseball much but appreciate the role played by such fans. RIP Ernie Harwell. I pray that you find baseball waiting in your new destination.
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VANDERGRAAFK
Teacher
11:26 AM on 05/06/2010
I never had the opportunity to idle a summer evening away listening to the late, great Ernie Harwell. I did have the opportunity to listen to Whitey (Ashburn) and Harry (Kalas) as a Phillies fanatic. However, when Ernie Harwell joined the ESPN crew, I got a chance to hear this wonderful radio announcer. Though the time was short, his voice reverberated. Alas, the ranks of this great generation of announcers - including the late great Jack Buck - is getting shorter. At least, as a resident of Los Angeles, I still have Vin Scully. He's the last of a generation - and it's with great irony that his position with the then Brooklyn Dodgers was made possible by the vacancy created by Ernie Harwell moving on. Ernie, you've got great company in broadcast heaven: Mel Allen, Jack Buck, Harry Kalas, Whitey Ashburn and now you. Have a great time calling that great baseball game in the sky!
05:29 AM on 05/06/2010
He was the summers of my youth, if not the focus of my days, certainly the comforting background undertone that strung those days together. He was the twinkle of the nighttime stars and the forever present favorite neighbor, if not family member. in our home.

My eyes have been full of tears for two days now as I mourn my unmet friend of 40 years and I think of the lake and barbecues and clear summer nights and mom and dad , aunts, uncles and cousins just like those summers of my youth, all of them now gone.

Or, are they? In the quiet moments, I can close my eyes and still hear bits and pieces of "Stormin' Normin", "Buckeye Joe", and "Hammerin' Hank", Wilcox's near perfect game, Bergie's
greatest at bat ever, and stories about Texas Leaguers, Cans of Corn, and Lance Parrish as Tina
Turner's bodyguard.

Yours is the piece that has touched me the most Mr. Moore. I would not imagine Mrs Harwell, Miss lulu to be a regular reader of this blog but I sincerely hope that someone who knows her can forward this to her in the coming days. It should provide some manner of comfort to her as it has to me.

Thank you
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Strateshooter
05:21 AM on 05/06/2010
I'm 50 yrs old. I live in Denver, but I was born & raised in Detroit. I'll NEVER forget Ernie Harwell's call the night the Tigers won the '68 pennant. Anyway, Ernie Harwell will always be missed. He was an older white southern man- But he was progressive-minded and brought all peoples together.

REST IN PEACE ERNIE...YOU BROUGHT A LOT OF JOY TO THE PEOPLE OF MICHIGAN!!!
03:26 AM on 05/06/2010
Teddy Salad,
I'm sorry for your loss in never knowing such a wonderful man - if you truely are a baseball fan, you're life is smaller for not knowing of, much less experiencing Mr. Harwell.

If you think you are a baseball fan, I would suggest you spend the balance of the summer listening to one of the last of the truely great broardcasters, Vin Scully of the Dodgers.since he plans to retire this year.

I've hated the Dodgers for 40 years, but I never miss a chance to listen to Vin Scully because he, like Mr. Harwell, can convey the true elegance of baseball.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sardonica
Gimme the chocolate & no one gets hurt.
11:00 PM on 05/05/2010
The stories that are coming out about Ernie Harwell are fantastic. Incredible gracious, humble man. Detroit was lucky to have him.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
iwant2no
09:31 PM on 05/05/2010
Remember Faygo, New Era potato chips, A&W, the boat races on the Detroit River,etc............
Detroit was a good place to be.
10:02 PM on 05/05/2010
Good ol' Faygo.....anything that's NOT made for children, can't be all bad....
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iwant2no
09:22 PM on 05/05/2010
My father had one baseball game on the radio, and one on tv. But with all of that gong on, I remember the voice of Ernie Harwell. I was not a big baseball fan, but since my dad was in to it, I listened. You knew summer had arrived when you "that voice" on the radio. May he rest in peace!
07:37 PM on 05/05/2010
I'm not even a baseball fan but I vividly remember Ernie Harwell's voice. I was a grad student in Ann Arbor and WJR was the only radio station I listened to. I recall J.P. frequently playing the song, "Move Over Babe, Here Comes Henry" and I knew that Ernie Harwell had written it. I felt so foolish when, months later, I realized that the song was about Hand Aaron on the way to beating Babe Ruth's home run record. Yes, Ernie Harwell's voice was like no other. A great man.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
smileylib
07:33 PM on 05/05/2010
As a born & raised Detroiter, Ernie Harwell WAS summer. From that first spring training game to the final out (hopefully in October), Ernie was the voice of the Tigers. I remember listening to the radio late at night in bed for the West Coast games with Ernie's voice making the trip into slumber so easy. His kindness and good deeds here in our state are unparalleled by any other sports figure. RIP Ernie and deepest sympathies to Ms. Lulu.
06:35 PM on 05/05/2010
There was a time when the radio airwaves, then television broadcasts, were populated by men who understood their role was to bring the game alive for the fan. With individual nuance and sometimes their own vocabulary, they were guests in our home for six months or more sharing with us the sights they saw on the playing field. Great broadcasters such as Ernie Harwell are literally a dying breed. We shall miss you Ernie and we shall lament that we are left with those who think talking constantly about anything is a fair substitute for actual broadcasting. I know you'll be broadcasting those 'Angels' games now.
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Tom Strait
05:39 PM on 05/05/2010
Whenever I think of baseball, this is the voice that I hear.
04:44 PM on 05/05/2010
Hold onto your Stroh's!
04:26 PM on 05/05/2010
My Grandma turned me on to Ernie back in the mid 60's. I remember her sitting in her chair, lights down low, smoking a cigarette, relaxing and listening to our beloved Tigers on the radio. The announcer of course was Ernie Harwell, whose voice and description of the game of baseball remain unsurpassed. Those memories and of the Tigers 1967 season when we lost out on the last day, then the 1968 season when the Tigers won the American League championship, then beat the St Louis Cardinals in a seven game World Series made me a life long Tigers fan. Ernie guided me through the whole season, always on the money with his description of the game on the field, while paying homage to the history of the game of baseball. The games were not all on television back then, we listened to Ernie to keep up on the Tigers. I clearly remember listening to the broadcasts on a transistor radio tucked under my pillow and falling asleep to the voice of Ernie Harwell, sweet dreams.
What a great man, a true gentleman, a class act all the way.
Even in accepting his fate, he thanks the fans for their support, comforting them, while we just wanted to hug him and thank him for the memories and showing us how to live and die with dignity and class.
Ernie Harwell was one of a kind, his memory will remain with us forever.

RIP Ernie.
04:19 PM on 05/05/2010
Your loss Teddie Salad, in not knowing anything about Ernie Harwell. He's not only a notable figure in Detroit, he's a name and person recognized in all of baseball. My husband and I met him in 1984 following a playoff game that we had attended. A humble gentleman who was kind enough to share his autograph with us. Even though Ernie was no longer broadcasting for the Tigers, he was still part of what is good and right about the hard working people of Detroit. It was a blow to us when Granderson was traded and here is another loss we must deal with. I'm so glad I live in a time when audio and video of those who leave us is only a click away.