I might say the weather was prophetic.
A thunderstorm blew in that Tuesday morning, June 14, 1949 before
dawn. It must have felt a relief at first, breaking a ten day dry
spell. But when the thunder faded, the sky remained so uninviting
that only 7,815 showed up at the corner of North Clark and West
Addison, to file into Wrigley Field. Last place Chicago was hosting
fourth place Philadelphia, but the real draw was the first return of
two popular players, first baseman Eddie Waitkus, and pitcher Russ
“Mad Monk” Mayer, who had both been traded to the Phillies the
previous December. At first it seemed unlikely the ex-Cubs would get
their revenge, but after noon the clouds parted, and by game time the
sun was driving temperatures into the low eighties.
“Rowdy Russ” pitched his typical
game. While there were no temper tantrums this time, the scowling
screw ball pitcher went eight and two-thirds innings, gave up ten
hits and made two wild pitches, while allowing only one walk. Eddie, who was such a good defensive player he was known as "the natural", also rose to the occasion, going two for four, with a walk, and he
scored twice. The Cubs staged a ninth inning rally on two solo home
runs, but 2 hours and 12 minutes after it began, the Phillies had
won 9 to 2, improving their record to 29 and 25, while the Cubs sank
to a dismal 19 wins against 32 losses. As morality plays go it was a
very satisfying for the pair of exiled heroes. But it was only the
opening act.
Two miles north of the ballpark, the
Edgewater Beach Hotel (above) had opened on Chicago's North Shore in 1916,
just in time for the Roaring Twenties. With a thousand rooms and
twelve stories over looking Lake Michigan, a private beach, tennis
courts, swimming pools, a golf course, hiking and riding trails, a
five star restaurant, and sea plane service to the downtown Chicago
lakefront, the Spanish stucco hotel was the Midwest coast du jour for
a decade. During the thirties, Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw played in
the outdoor and the indoor ballrooms, and were broadcast over the
hotel's own radio station – WEBH. However the depression eventually
grew so great it forced the owners to sell, and by 1949, 'The Sunrise
Hotel” was an aging dame, concealing the mends in her petticoats -
hiding the truth that fame and fortune, and youth and health are
merely temporary distractions.
The Phillies team bus got back to the
Edgewater at 5349 North Sheridan by four, and after showering, Russ
met with his parents and his fiance Dorthy, who had driven the 80
miles up from their homes in Peru, Illinois. Eddie joined them taking
a cab to a restaurant. Eddie Sawyer, the Phillies manager, had set a
ten o’clock curfew. Although Myer usually paid little attention to
such restrictions (one teammate admitted he roomed only with Russ's
bags), this night he and Eddie made the check in. After escorting
Dorthy and Meyer's parents to their room, the ball players returned
to their own quarters in room 904. There they discovered a note
addressed to Eddie, taped to the door.
Written on hotel stationary, the note
read: “Mr. Waitkus; It's extremely important that I see you as soon
as possible. We're not acquainted, but I have something of importance
to speak to you about. I think it would be to your advantage to let
me explain it to you. As I am leaving the hotel the day after
tomorrow, I'd appreciate it greatly if you would see me as soon as
possible. My name is Ruth Ann Burns, and I am in room 1297a. I
realize this is a little out of the ordinary, but as I said, its
rather important. Please come soon. I won't take up much of your
time, I promise.”
Eddie would say later he thought the
note was from an old girl friend from his hometown of Boston. But
whatever his reason, instead of just calling the twelfth floor room,
despite the late hour, Eddie decided to go there directly. It was about eleven thirty, and another thunderstorm was ripping the
darkness, when 29 year old Eddie Waitkus stepped off the elevator on
the twelfth floor.
The door of room 1297a was opened by a
tall, dark haired young woman, who introduced herself as Marry Brown.
She told Eddie, “Ruth Ann will be back in a few minutes. Why don't
you have a seat.” Eddie squeezed past the fold out bed in the small
room (above). As he sat in a nondescript chair (right) he noticed three empty
drinking glasses sitting on the dresser (left) – a daiquiri and two
whiskey sours. Eddie realized with a start the woman was staring at
him. He remembered, “She had the coldest looking face I've ever
seen.” And then he realized the woman was holding a rifle. As he
stood up, she shot Eddie in the chest.
The bullet drilled through Eddies'
right lung, causing it to collapse, and lodged in the muscles of his
back, next to his spine. Stunned, Eddie asked the woman, “Oh Baby,
what did you do that for?” As he fell the blinding pain hit him.
And as he struggled to catch his breath, Eddie heard the clinking of
the telephone dial. After a moment, he heard the woman's voice.
“I've just shot a man, in my room” she said. Then she hung up,
walked out and waited beside the elevator for the police to arrive.
When the attendants carried Eddie out of the room, Rowdy Russ heard
his friend Eddie asking, over and over, “Why?”
The shooter willingly identified herself as 19 year old Catherine
“Ruth” Ann Steinhagen (above), a typist for the Continental Casualty
insurance company. She told the detectives, “I went to Cubs Park
and watched Eddie help the Phillies beat the Cubs 9 to 2. It was
wonderful.” But then she said, “If he had just walked into the
room a little decently, I would have told him to call the police.
However he was too confident. He swaggered.” Asked to describe her
relationship with Eddie, Ruth Ann said, “I just became nuttier and
nuttier about the guy. I knew I would never get to know him in a
normal way...Then I decided I would kill him. I didn’t know how or
when, but I knew I would kill him.” She added, “I'm sorry that
Eddie had to suffer so, but I had to relieve the tension that I have
been under the past two weeks.”
The cops checked out Ruth Ann's apartment, at 3600 North Lincoln
Avenue, where it crossed North Addison. From the Brown Line station
on the corner, her apartment was less than five minutes from The
Loop, where CC Insurance had their offices. It was also less than
half a mile west of Wrigley Field, where Ruth Ann had been a regular
during the 1948 season, attending 50 games – before Eddie had
been traded to Philadelphia. And on the walls of Ruth Ann's room, the
detectives found a shrine to Eddie Waitkus, a collage of photos cut
from magazines, and newspaper clippings, even on the ceiling above
her bed.
Her mother admitted the girl had developed an obsession with the
Boston native, even regularly eating baked beans. Ruth Ann studied
Lithuanian, because Eddies' parents had immigrated from that nation.
In 1948, when Ruth Ann started setting a place for Eddie at the
family dinner table, her parents sent her to a psychiatrist. She told
the doctor, “I used to go to all the ball games to watch him. We
used to wait for them to come out of the clubhouse after the game.”
When Eddie was traded to Philadelphia, Ruth Ann cried “day and
night.” As spring training approached in 1949, she moved out of the
family home to her Lincoln Avenue apartment.
At her arraignment on June 30, 1949 –
17 days after the shooting - Dr. William Haines diagnosed Ruth Ann
as suffering with schizophrenia, and her lawyer affirmed that she was
“unable to cooperate with counsel in her own defense”. Judge
James McDermott committed her to the Illinois Eastern Hospital for
the Insane at Kankakee.
Meanwhile, Eddie had suffered through four
surgeries, and came close to dieing more than once. But he was
young, in good shape, and his combat tour in the Philippines in
1944-45, where he had earned four Bronze Stars. had left him
disciplined. He would miss the rest of the 1949 season, and he never
again achieve the .306 batting average he had achieved by June 14,
1949. But on opening day of the 1950 season, the Philadelphia first
baseman went three for five.
Ruth Ann spent three years in Kankakee,
repeatedly under going electroconvulsive shock therapy, as well as
hydro and occupational therapy. In April 1952 the doctors deemed her
to be “cured”. The prosecutors office asked if Eddie want to
pursue a case against Ruth Ann, and he said no. Ruth Ann was never
tried for her shooting of Eddie Waitkus. When the 22 year old was
released into the custody of her parents (above), Ruth Ann told reporters she
was going to go to work at the Kankakee hospital as a physical
therapist, but she never did.
Most of the Edgewater Hotel was
demolished in 1968, leaving a single pink colored apartment tower,
and the once private beach. The site is now Park Tower Market.
Eddie retired in 1955 at 35 years of
age, with a life time batting average of .285. He had married one
of his nurses, and they had a son. For many years he was an
instructor at a Ted Williams baseball camp, teaching future major
league players. But Eddie also showed the symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder, from his war experiences and his shooting at the Edgwater.
He became an alcoholic, and a recluse. Said his son, “His nerves
were shattered for awhile...and he didn't recognize the problems, but
they hampered him for the rest of his life.” Edward Stephen
Waitkus died of esophageal cancer on September 16, 1972, at just 53
years of age.
Catherine Ruth Ann Steinhagen lived
quietly with her family in a nondescript north west Chicago home until her
parents died in the early 1990's. Her sister died there in 2007. Just
after Christmas of 2012 Ruth Ann fell in her home (above), hit her head and
suffered a subdural hemotoma. She died on December 29 in the Swedish
Convent Hospital, at 5145 N. California Avenue, two-and-a-half miles
north of Wrigley Field, and about two miles west of the old site of
the Edgewater Beach Hotel. She was 83 years old..
The incident inspired the book and
film “The Natural”. But as you can see, legend often has only a
passing acquaintance with reality. And reality, often has only a passing acquaintance with legend.
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