There were New Yorkers in my parents' day, who, if asked Who Are The Three Most Evil Men of the Twentieth Century? they would fast say:
Adolph Hitler
Josef Stalin
Walter O'Malley.
And it was somewhat more than a darkly comic joke.
Among my favorite books, and I'm recommending it here as we're approaching the end of another season, is one that lays blame for The Bums' move from Brooklyn not at the feet and stone-cold heart of the Dodgers' owner. Michael Shapiro's social history, The Last Good Season, tells the day-by-day on-field tale of the Dodgers' last Miracle Summer in Brooklyn and the intrigue behind Mr. O'Malley's devastating, gut-wrenching decision to move the team west.
The Giants, now in the Series of course, made a similar trip a year after Pee Wee, Don, Roy, Sandy, and the rest. Shapiro recounts this last, glorious Brooklyn campaign from the perspectives of all the old Dodger Greats, from Robinson, to Campanella, to Koufax, Snyder, and Newcombe...all of them.
At the same time, Shapiro lays bare in poignant detail the back-office and governmental machinations that, at one point, considered a re-do of Ebbets Field as well as the then wholly radical idea of new-stadium funding as a combined public-private venture. Could the Brooklyn shrine have been saved, could baseball in Brooklyn have been saved, had New York's movers understood where the future was headed? Los Angeles clearly 'got it', so it wasn't an idea doomed to die at jump simply because too new. The real 'bad guys' in this saga may not be whom you imagine them to be.
This is one fast-paced, electrifying read for anyone who loves The Game as well as those interested in the origins of modern America's urban politics. 


Salon.com
Comments
From what I have read, it was a true shame, because the Dodgers' departure tore the "heart and soul" out of Brooklyn - but, other accounts do detail how attendance had lagged in the year or two prior to the move to L.A. so (blasphemy, I know) perhaps the Borough residents may also have themselves to blame, at least partially.
I am NOW a baseball fan.
Go Giants!
Rated with hugs
GO GIANTS!!!!
As the song goes, "Those were the days, my friend~~".
I went to my first White Sox game in the 1940s.
The then Wa Senators had lost over 10 games in a row.
My father took me to Comiskey for a Sunday double header(Remember those?) and, the Senators won both games.lol
Can you imagine what it would be like to go to where Ebbets was today?
Bring yer gun.
I'll read the book, Wolfie.
Also, people might want to check out "The Boys of Summer" by Roger Kahn. This is an excellent account of the team too.
Buddy
R.