Last
Monterey Clipper in Martinez at Eagle Marine
(iPhoto
by Jamie Jobb)
When’s
a Clipper
Not
a Clipper?
“Where
have you gone Joe DiMaggio?
A
nation turns its lonely eyes to you.”
–
Paul Simon
By
Jamie Jobb
Baseball
recalls Giuseppe Paolo DiMaggio as “Joltin’ Joe” but he was
also famously known as “The Yankee Clipper”. Understanding this
background is key to any baseball fan comprehending the significance
of that name as it applies to the Martinez Clippers, the new Pacific
Association ballclub which plays the Sonoma Stompers in its inaugural
game here tomorrow night.
In
the 1930s, windy New York sportswriters considered DiMaggio as speedy
and graceful in center field as a 19th Century “clipper
ship” was on the horizon. Like Joe’s gliding outfield strides
that smothered line drives – these tall-masted sailing vessels were
capable of making the world’s difficult waters ride easy.
At
the time, tall ships had not been seen on the docks of New York City
and San Francisco for half a century. But readers knew what the
sportswriters meant when they hung that antique maritime nickname
onto the lofty Yank.
They
thought the term “clipper” honored the man’s fishing heritage.
However, the sporting scribes were referring to exactly the wrong
“clipper”! “Tall ships” – indeed!
Although
his father and older brothers – not to mention their Sicilian
ancestors – were commercial fishermen, Joe DiMaggio detested that
immigrant lifestyle. He was lucky to get wrapped up in the national
pastime after his family moved from Martinez to San Francisco’s
North Beach. Originally these relocated Sicilians fished like their
ancient Roman and Greek ancestors – from traditional “feluccas”
powered by oar and a single sail known as a “lateen”. The
fishing life was not easy on these slow boats.
Eventually,
the DiMaggios became professional enough to fish local waters in
“Monterey Clippers”. Oddly enough, these low boats had replaced
actual tall Clipper ships on the docks of Martinez before the demise
of Contra Costa’s grain farms which originally fed Grangers Wharf
with wheat bound for Europe.
Monterey
Clippers were slow two-man vessels powered by clunky one-stroke
motors made and serviced in Benicia. These working wooden fishing
boats required constant maintenance and were used by Italian
fishermen to set their gillnets, also high-maintenance tools of their
trade. A well-preserved fleet of Monterey Clippers still floats in
San Francisco Bay, mostly to benefit tourists visiting Fisherman’s
Wharf.
Martinez writer Harlan Bailey, a respected fisher poet and salmon fisherman, also believes the term “clipper” was used to describe the unique cut of the bow of these ships, a sharply angled curve climbing quickly out of the water. It “clips” through the water. Bailey points out that the clipper ships of yore had the same cut bow as the Monterey clippers.
Confounding
things further is the fact that upon his retirement, the New York
Yankees gave their “Clipper” an inboard Chris Craft Cruiser
called “The Joltin’ Joe”. Forget the sportswriters, what part
of “tall ships” did the Yanks not understand?!?
Joe’s
pleasure craft suffered from years of neglect on the local
waterfront, but was carefully restored over a period of several
months by Sons of Italy and other volunteers for the Hometown
Hero Project, which expects to display the refurbished Joltin’
Joe at Clipper home games this season. The last Monterey Clipper
residing in Martinez is also out of water – in dry-dock at Eagle
Marine.
Public
Works Superintendent Bob Cellini with Joe DiMaggio’s restored Chris Craft
pleasure boat
(photo
by Jamie Jobb)
* * *
Thanks
for assistance in research: Harlan Bailey, Julian Frazer and Bob
Cellini.
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