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Bart Giamatti

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Bart Giamatti
OccupationBaseball
SpouseToni Smith
ChildrenPaul Giamatti
Marcus Giamatti
Elena Giamatti
Parent(s)Valentine Giamatti (father)
Mary Claybaugh Walton (mother)

Angelo Bartlett "Bart" Giamatti (April 4, 1938September 1, 1989) was the former President of Yale University, and later, the seventh commissioner of Major League Baseball in the United States. Giamatti agreed to the deal that terminated the Pete Rose betting scandal by permitting Rose to voluntarily withdraw from the sport, avoiding further punishment.

Personal life

Giamatti was born in Boston and grew up in South Hadley, MassachusettsHis father, Valentine Giamatti, was chairman of the Department of Italian Language and Literature at Mount Holyoke College. Giamatti's mother, Mary Claybaugh Walton (Smith College '35), was the daughter of Bartlett and Helen (Davidson) Walton of Wakefield, Massachusetts. His maternal grandfather graduated from Phillips Academy Andover and Harvard College. His paternal grandfather, Angelo Giammattei (so spelled) immigrated from Italy through Ellis Island around 1900.

Giamatti attended South Hadley High School, spent his junior year at the Overseas School of Rome, and graduated from Phillips Academy in 1956. At Yale University, he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon, and as a junior was tapped by Scroll and Key, a senior secret society. He graduated magna cum laude in 1960. That same year, he married Toni Smith, who taught English for more than 20 years at the Hopkins School in New Haven, Connecticut, until her death in 2004.

They raised three children, sons Paul and Marcus are actors, and daughter Elena is a jewelry designer. In the movie Sideways, a photograph of the younger Miles Raymond (Paul Giamatti) with his late father is really a picture of Paul and Bart Giamatti.

Giamatti's friend, Fay Vincent, wrote in The Last Commissioner that Giamatti's official religion was agnosticism.

Yale

Giamatti stayed in New Haven to receive his doctorate in 1964. He became a professor of Comparative Literature at Yale University, an author, and master of Ezra Stiles College at Yale. He spent a brief period teaching at Princeton, but was at Yale for most of his teaching life. Giamatti's scholarly work focused on English Renaissance literature, particularly Edmund Spenser, and relationships between English and Italian Renaissance poets. His work on the genre of pastoral and on the influence of Ludovico Ariosto in England remains influential.

When Giamatti's tenure as Stiles master ended in 1972, he was so popular that his students wanted to honor him with a present. Giamatti told them he wanted a joke gift and they got him a moosehead (from a yard sale), which was ceremoniously hung in the dining hall. As the new master took over, Giamatti told him in a serious tone, "I have only one solemn duty to convey to you. Take care of my moose." [citation needed]

Giamatti served as President of Yale University from 1977 to 1986. He was the youngest President of the University in its history. He also served on the Board of Trustees of Mount Holyoke College for many years, participating fully despite his Yale and baseball commitments.

Baseball

Giamatti had a lifelong interest in baseball (he was a die-hard Boston Red Sox fan). He became President of the National League in 1986, and later Commissioner of Baseball in 1989. During his stint as National League president, Giamatti placed an emphasis on the need to improve the environment for the fan in the ballparks. He also decided to make umpires strictly enforce the balk rule, and supported "social justice" as the only remedy for the lack of presence of minority managers, coaches, or executives at any level in Major League Baseball.

While still serving as National League president, Giamatti suspended Pete Rose for 30 games after Rose shoved umpire Dave Pallone on April 30. Giamatti also suspended Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Jay Howell, who was caught using pine tar during the National League Championship Series.

Giamatti, whose tough dealing with Yale's union favorably impressed Major League Baseball owners, was unanimously elected to succeed Peter Ueberroth as commissioner on September 8, 1988. Giamatti was commissioner on August 24, 1989 when Pete Rose voluntararily agreed to permanent ineligibility from baseball. As reflected in the agreement with Pete Rose, Giamatti was determined to maintain the integrity of the game during his brief commissionership.

While at his vacation home on Martha's Vineyard, Giamatti, a heavy smoker for many years, died suddenly of a massive heart attack at the age of 51, just eight days after banishing Rose and 154 days into his tenure as commissioner. He became the second baseball commissioner to die in office, the first being Kenesaw Mountain Landis. Giamatti was immediately succeeded by his close friend and baseball's first-ever deputy commissioner, Fay Vincent.

On October 14, 1989, before Game one at the World Series, Giamatti – to whom this World Series was dedicated – was memorialized with a moment of silence. His son threw out the first pitch before the game.

James Reston, Jr. notes, in his book Collision at Home Plate: The Lives of Pete Rose and Bart Giamatti, that Giamatti suffered from Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, an inherited neuromuscular disease affecting peripheral nerves.

Works

  • The Earthly Paradise and the Renaissance Epic (1966)
  • Play of Double Senses: Spenser’s Faerie Queene (1975)
  • The University and the Public Interest (1981)
  • Exile and Change in Renaissance Literature (1984)
  • Take Time for Paradise: Americans and their Games (1989)
  • A Great and Glorious Game: Baseball Writings of A. Bartlett Giamatti (ed. Kenneth Robson, 1998)

References

  • James Reston, Jr., Collision at Home Plate: The Lives of Pete Rose and Bart Giamatti (1991)
  • Anthony Valerio, A Life of A. Bartlett Giamatti: By Him and About Him (1991)
Academic offices
Preceded by President of Yale University
1977–1986
Succeeded by
Sporting positions
Preceded by National League president
1986–1989
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commissioner of Baseball
1989
Succeeded by