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Baseball Biography

Lou Gehrig

“The Iron Horse/Lou”

American · Manhattan · Born 1 January 1903

First Base
493
home runs
0.34
avg
1995
rbi
1941
died

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The Iron Horse — 2,130 consecutive games played, two World Series, a career .340 average, and a farewell speech that remains the most moving in American sporting history.

Henry Louis Gehrig was born in Manhattan in 1903. He played for the New York Yankees from 1923 to 1939 and set a record of 2,130 consecutive games — the Iron Horse streak — standing until Cal Ripken Jr. in 1995. He won the Triple Crown in 1934, hit .340 lifetime and drove in 1,995 runs. He won six World Series with the Yankees. His partnership with Babe Ruth was the most feared in baseball history. In 1939 he was diagnosed with ALS — amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, now known as Lou Gehrig's Disease — and gave his farewell speech at Yankee Stadium on July 4 calling himself the luckiest man alive. He died in 1941 aged 37. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1939.

Famous For

2,130 consecutive games streak, ALS diagnosis

Playing Style

How They Played

Power hitter, exceptional fielder, team leader

Legacy

Lasting Impact

The Iron Horse - symbol of durability and courage

Best Known For

World Series Champion 6x

His farewell speech at Yankee Stadium — delivered while dying from ALS — is considered the most moving moment in the history of American sport.

Did You Know?
Honours & Achievements

Career Honours

  • World Series Champion 6x
  • 2x AL MVP
  • 2,130 consecutive games
  • The Iron Horse Farewell Speech
Career Journey

Timeline

1923 📌 MLB debut with New York Yankees
1927 🏆 First World Series championship
1927 🥇 First AL MVP Award
1936 🥇 Second AL MVP Award
1938 🎯 2,000th consecutive game played
1939 🎯 Consecutive games streak ends at 2,130
1939 📌 Retirement due to ALS diagnosis
1939 🎯 Famous farewell speech at Yankee Stadium
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

3 common questions about Lou Gehrig

Lou Gehrig was born in 1903 in Manhattan.

Lou Gehrig is American.

Lou Gehrig played as a First Base.

Career Timeline — Lou Gehrig
1923
MLB debut with New York Yankees
1927
First World Series championship
1927
First AL MVP Award
1936
Second AL MVP Award
1938
2,000th consecutive game played
1939
Consecutive games streak ends at 2,130
1939
Retirement due to ALS diagnosis
1939
Famous farewell speech at Yankee Stadium
World Series Champion 6x
2x AL MVP
2,130 consecutive games
The Iron Horse Farewell Speech