Wednesday, May 3, 2023

The Wreck of the Western Reserve.

 

True story: The Steinbrenner family came into its first fortune when a Great Lakes steamer sunk in 1892.

The ship in question was a big new, steel freighter, christened the Western Reserve. Valued at $200,000, it was the biggest insurance loss of any Great Lakes freighter in the 19th century. And it was built and operated by a little corporation called the American Ship Building Company, out of Cleveland. 

The ship was the pride of the American side... 

On the night of August 30th, the Western Reserve was making for Twin Harbors, Minnesota. It was running empty, apparently more of a vacation excursion for the captain and the owner of American Ship Building, one Peter G. Minch, who was on board along with his wife, two of his children, and his niece and sister-in-law. 

Around 9 PM, without warning, the Western Reserve (left), broke in half without warning. Two lifeboats were launched, but both capsized—the second one just a mile from shore. The only survivor was the 24-year-old wheelman, Harry W. Stewart, who managed to swim to safety and tell the tale.

They might have split up or they might have capsized

They might have broke deep or took water...

What went wrong? It may well have been a design flaw. Less than 60 days later, the Western Reserve's sister ship, the W.H. Gilcher, sailed into a "moderate gale"—and was never seen again. Neither ship was ever located.

Superior it's said never gives up its dead when the gales of November come early...

After the Western Reserve went down, though, control of the American Ship Building Company passed to one Henry Steinbrenner—George's great-grandfather—who had married a Minch daughter. (I will refrain here from any tasteless speculations about how well Henry might have known Harry W. Stewart, or who had been in charge of ship design for the company.)

(Bizarrely, a freighter named for old Henry went down in 1953, though about half the crew survived, thanks to a dramatic rescue.)

Point is, this started a Steinbrenner tradition of—as Ann Richards once said about a certain other individual—being born on third base and thinking that you hit a triple.

Steinbrenner after Steinbrenner went on basically screwing the pooch, generation after generation—only to be handed some greater opportunity on a silver platter.

George himself initially tried to break into sports ownership with the Cleveland Pipers in the old American Basketball League (ABL). Thanks to a great coach and GM, he won the league's only title—and then brought it crashing down, so alienating everybody and anybody that the ABL failed and no owners got to merge into the NBA.

About 10 years later, George decided he would become a baseball owner. In 1972, he was all set to buy the Indians for $9 million, cash, from Vernon Stouffer, the frozen foods king. But at the last minute, Stouffer backed out, still angry about how he felt George had screwed over his son, Jim Stouffer, when he had been a co-owner of the Pipers.

Rumor had it that George had been screwing Jim's wife, as well, but never mind. Soon after, George was able to acquire control of the New York Yankees, having to put up a mere $168,000 of his own money. It was the steal of the century—though George insisted it didn't matter. 

Asked a few years later if he could have made such a big success out of the Indians, Steinbrenner replied:

"No doubt about it. The same strong group of owners that Vern Stouffer turned down followed me to the Yankees. We had the money and Cleveland then had the biggest ballpark in the country. We would have filled it."



George even insisted that he could have lured Reggie Jackson to the Mistake by the Lake:

"He would have come to Cleveland in a minute. I would have had him thinking Lake Erie was the Riviera. He wouldn't have known the difference."


And so it would go for George and his heirs, year after year, decade after decade.

Despite numerous bribes to politicians, and numerous public subsidies, George would managed to drive American Ship Building, the thriving company he inherited, into bankruptcy.



Didn't matter.

Suspended for one such bribe, he sat on the sidelines while a savvy baseball man, Gabe Paul, built him a winner.

Suspended "for life" a few years later, for engaging in a criminal collaboration against one of his own ballplayers, he got to sit on the sidelines...while a trio of savvy baseball men, Gene Michael, Buck Showalter, and Bob Watson, built the greatest team ever seen for him.

About to sell out to the Dolans, he changed his mind at the last minute, and reaped the rewards of a new era in television sports that he neither understood—see remark concerning Cleveland, above—or cared much about.

And so it goes. 

Now, at last, it appears that a Steinbrenner heir will actually have to DO something—make some decisions, learn the business he is in, maybe fire an old pal.

Can he do it? Will he?

I would bet on another ship going down first.




RIP, Gordon Lightfoot.

46 comments:

AboveAverage said...

Terrific post, Sir. Make that two IPAs.

Celerino Sanchez said...

The old man brought us Reggie Jax, the son brings us Harrison Bader. Need I say more.

The Hammer of God said...

Amen, Hoss! Great to know. Steinbrenner family, midwest American style nepotism at its finest! Did King George really say all that about how he would've enticed Mr. October to the mistake by the lake? I hope he was just kidding, braggadaccio out of control. Because no way would that have happened. That rich bum just got lucky that CBS was desperate to sell.

HoraceClarke66 said...

Thanks, guys. And Hammer, sadly, he did. To a reporter named Bob Sudyk, on the Cleveland Plain-Dealer. It's hard to believe he didn't have his tongue planted at least a little bit in cheek, but who knows?

In an alternate universe, George spends 30 years as the miserable owner of the Indians, before his kids finally institutionalize him and sell the team.

On the other hand, he might well have insisted on moving them to Florida. And the Dolans might have then bought the Yankees, or they might have moved to the Meadowlands. Or both.

Hey, it can always be worse!

Carl J. Weitz said...

If the Dolans had purchased the Yankees, there would currently be no Old Timers Day. James "The Drunken Fool" Dolan would have alienated most of the team's former stars and banned them for life. Furthermore, there would be much fewer season ticket holders as Jim would have security remove anyone who booed the team and revoked their tickets.

Scottish Yankee fan said...



What a fantastic post thank you for sharing

Doug K. said...

Really good post.

Now that I know that building vessels that have major flaws and are destined to fall apart is a Steinbrenner family tradition, this shipwreck of a season make a lot more sense.

Thank you.

Hazel Motes said...

At least a decade in the desert for this team. No miracles in sight.

BTR999 said...

Not much hope for tonight

AboveAverage said...

I’d be shocked as well if we pulled out a win

Doug K. said...

Schmidt is so bad that when the umpires check him for sticky stuff they offer to get him some.

BTR999 said...

Good one Doug!

AboveAverage said...

Cashman has Spoken!

Spread the word!

Read what the Genius has to say!

TheWinWarblist said...

Go Go Little Tony!!!





Fuck Fuck Dickless Hal!!

Beauregard Jackson Pickett Burnside said...

If the Yankees were actually a Boston team…

“Ball gone soon, by the Calhoun”

Beauregard Jackson Pickett Burnside said...

Jake Bauer, man of the hour. Meh

How about “He hit that one to the Bowery!” as a follow up.

DickAllen said...

The only saving grace for the Yankees offense tonight is that the Guardian’s offense is even more offensive.

But not by much.

Publius said...

Cash crawled out of his hole. After a win. A very unlikable fellow.

ranger_lp said...

IKF is not an OF…

ranger_lp said...

Bader already injured…

BTR999 said...

LMAO

Game over / Bader hurt

Doug K. said...

bornto - you beat me to it. I also laughed. Which if you think about it is totally fucked up.

JM said...

Yeah, that Holmes sure is a closer.

I am fucking pissed. This is insane.

ranger_lp said...

Maybe we will see Cole DH soon…

ranger_lp said...

Shouts of fire Boone from the crowd…

TheWinWarblist said...

Fuck Boone with the bones of dead and buried King George.

AboveAverage said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
BTR999 said...

Peraza hurt

Just stop the fuckin’ game

Doug K. said...

Peraza hurt Hicks in the game. They are cursed.

BTR999 said...

@ Doug - Yup!

Publius said...

Boone's inexplicable pitching change (arguably best bullpen arm for arguably the worst) in a very high leverage situation not only results in falling behind in the 8th but also Bader leaving the game with an injury. Now Rizzo's hurt. Your 2023 New York Yankees.

ranger_lp said...

At least we tied this thing…

Publius said...

Peraza, not Rizzo. My apologies. I think the principle holds though.

AboveAverage said...


so much for iPhone spontaneity :)

As I was saying - maybe Meredith will let B0o0ne know that he was fired during the post game manager's report

Beauregard Jackson Pickett Burnside said...

And Suzyn gets to spend another inning in the rain.

ranger_lp said...

And Abreu is in the game…loss incoming…

ranger_lp said...

How did that happen?

ranger_lp said...

Yankees Win!!!

ranger_lp said...

Abreu actually gets the win…

AboveAverage said...

It’s a miracle. Plain and Simple

Publius said...

Boone's sentence commuted by Trevino

AboveAverage said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
AboveAverage said...

Look for Cashman in uniform tomorrow and in the outfield for tomorrow’s game.

His number……… 666

BTR999 said...

Well played AA, unlike IKF’s fly ball

take the win and run

Hazel Motes said...

The Master was hilarious in his abrasive, exasperated second-guessing of Boone's pitching change with two outs in the eighth inning.

Kevin said...

Horace great post! I especially liked the bribery, swindling, and ship design stories. That remark about Reggie, amazing that it wasn't "leaked". R.I.P. Gordon


P.S., funny thing, I never saw the story in the Post, was it just me? He was in the short list of greatest Twentieth Century songwriters.