My Part in the Greatest Election Upset in American History

The baseball game was interesting, I guess, but the stadium was even moreso; I'd never seen anything like it, and wandered around, looking. I didn't know much about baseball in those days, since I'd been living on Mountain Avenue with Mom and aunts for the duration of the war (which at that point had been half my life), so there was no baseball or talk of baseball. The men were all off in the war or working overtime, so my wartime neighborhood was mostly populated by little kids and moms, grandmas and aunts with their hands way full.
Finally I gave up trying to figure it all out right then and there, turned from the screen and found myself face to face with a strange man sitting there in a front row seat right behind the plate, wearing a suit and tie in that heat, with a high forehead, an unusual hair arrangement at the top of it and an unbecoming mustache, all in a combination I'd never seen before, so I stared kind of hard at him.
He smiled in reply, revealing a slightly gap-toothed situation there, reached out a hand and patted me on the head. Everyone for some distance around chuckled with appreciation. The chuckle rippled out through the audience. All very odd. I ran back to Dad and his buds. Why is everybody laughing, I asked. That was Governor Dewey just patted you on the head. Governor? Dewey? Neither meant anything to me, and no grownup explanation seemed to help. All I could do was put that in my wonder basket, along with baseball games and peanut shells.
Then one day, by the time I could crack open peanuts and was playing baseball, I saw Grandpa Brady wearing a Dewey button in his lapel, must've been just before the Truman-Dewey election of 1948. Dewey was a shoo-in everyone said,

Of which more later, when it gets written.
Labels: albany, Baseball, Democrats, Dewey, new york, peanuts, politics, Republican, Senators, States Rights, Thurmond, Truman, WWII