DiMaggio Died Watching His Beloved Red Sox
Posted: Fri May 08, 2009 2:55 pm
Though ill with pneumonia, Dom DiMaggio was doing something he loved -- watching the Red Sox play, and play well -- when he died this morning in his Marion home.
Son by his side, the former Red Sox center fielder was watching the replay of Thursday night's game, when his team scored 12 runs in the sixth inning en route to a 13-3 victory over the Cleveland Indians.
"I was there and we were watching it together," said his son Dominic Paul DiMaggio Jr. of Atkinson, N.H. "It was peaceful."
Mr. DiMaggio's children, gathered at their parents' home today, shared recollections of the family man who was as powerful a presence while helping his wife, Emily, raise their family in Wellesley as he was at bat and in the field for the Red Sox.
"As I was telling a friend of mine, in the course of civilization, he was in the 90th percentile," his son said.
Emily Colette DiMaggio of Wayland said her father "was such a great teacher of how to live a life, and to love and pass it on. He created a loving family and just gave us so much. We were just lucky."
http://www.boston.com/sports/baseball/r ... aggio.html
Red Sox To Honor Dom DiMaggio Friday
The Red Sox formed a huge number 7 in the centerfield grass this afternoon in tribute to longtime centerfielder Dom DiMaggio, who died at 92 today. The grounds crew is putting the finishing touches on the 7 right now. DiMaggio played his entire career, from 1940 to 1953, in centerfield for the Red Sox.
Son by his side, the former Red Sox center fielder was watching the replay of Thursday night's game, when his team scored 12 runs in the sixth inning en route to a 13-3 victory over the Cleveland Indians.
"I was there and we were watching it together," said his son Dominic Paul DiMaggio Jr. of Atkinson, N.H. "It was peaceful."
Mr. DiMaggio's children, gathered at their parents' home today, shared recollections of the family man who was as powerful a presence while helping his wife, Emily, raise their family in Wellesley as he was at bat and in the field for the Red Sox.
"As I was telling a friend of mine, in the course of civilization, he was in the 90th percentile," his son said.
Emily Colette DiMaggio of Wayland said her father "was such a great teacher of how to live a life, and to love and pass it on. He created a loving family and just gave us so much. We were just lucky."
http://www.boston.com/sports/baseball/r ... aggio.html
Red Sox To Honor Dom DiMaggio Friday
The Red Sox formed a huge number 7 in the centerfield grass this afternoon in tribute to longtime centerfielder Dom DiMaggio, who died at 92 today. The grounds crew is putting the finishing touches on the 7 right now. DiMaggio played his entire career, from 1940 to 1953, in centerfield for the Red Sox.