Doris with Hank Bauer, Mickey Mantle and Mel Allen
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from China
seen from Spain
seen from Argentina
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Maldives

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Israel

seen from Maldives
Doris with Hank Bauer, Mickey Mantle and Mel Allen
On September 5, 1957, five Yankees posed in the Stadium: Hank Bauer, Elston Howard, Mickey Mantle, Harry Simpson, and Enos Slaughter. They would go on to win the World Series that year.
Photo: Associated Press via the NY Daily News
Hank Bauer (31 July 1922 – 9 February 2007)
yogi berra and phil rizzuto give hank bauer a kiss after winning the world series, 1951
The Yankees of the 1950s were as well-known for their high-octane partying as their feats on the field. One infamous incident happened on May 16, 1957.
To celebrate Billy Martin's 29th birthday, a group of six Yankees, including Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra, Whitey Ford, and Hank Bauer, and their wives, went to the Copacabana. They had already been to two other clubs, and were pretty buzzed.
A bowling team from Washington Heights, carousing above their station in life (that is a JOKE, no nasty notes please) was also present—and similarly sloshed. The headliner that night was Sammy Davis, Jr. Shortly after the Yanks entered, the bowlers began to heckle Davis, hurling racial epithets. The ballplayers asked the bowlers to cool it, and matters quickly went downhill.
What exactly happened was a mystery for decades. At any rate, a fight ensued. One of the bowling team, Edwin Jones, a 42-year old delicatessen owner, claimed that the big and beefy Bauer had socked him. He did go to Roosevelt Hospital with a concussion, a fractured jaw and a broken nose.
"Whitey or Yogi grabbed me and said, 'Get out of here,'" Bauer said later. "So I did, and we go back to the hotel. It's 2 or 2:30 in the morning by then, and around 4:30 the phone rings, and a writer tells me, 'Some guy claims you hit him.' I was booked, fingerprinted and walked down the street with a detective, and it made me feel like a criminal."
"Nobody did nothin' to nobody" was how Yogi summed it all up. But the Yankees were fined and Jones brought a lawsuit against Bauer, which was later dismissed. And later that season, Martin was traded (the team's owner thought he was a bad influence on Mantle, who was clearly the future of the franchise), causing much bitterness and leading to his slide as a player.
Above: Mickey Mantle, Billy Martin, Hank Bauer, and Charlene Friede Bauer after a grand jury cleared Bauer of assault charges from the fight at the Copa. Photo: Harry Harris for the AP via the NY Times
It wasn't until three years ago that another version of events came to light. Joey Silvestri, a bouncer at the Copa, told the New York Times that "[t]here were no Yankees involved in the fight. Nobody threw a punch but me." He said he'd socked Jones twice, and the victim's head had hit a wall. "Hank Bauer and Billy Martin have always been maligned, when they're really the good guys. They were protecting Sammy Davis that night. If that happened today, they'd build a monument to them."
Whether Silvestri was telling the truth or just protecting his pals, we'll never know. Everyone involved is now dead.
Whitey Ford, Yogi Berra, Hank Bauer, Mickey Mantle, and Joe Collins (15) at Yankee Stadium, 1956.
Photo: Marvin E. Newman via 1st Dibs
New York Yankees teammates Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra, Whitey Ford, Hank Bauer and their wives all went to the Copacabana night club to celebrate Billy Martin’s 29th birthday on 16 May 1957.
Sammy Davis, Jr. was performing at the Copacabana, and a group of bowlers began heckling Davis with racist insults. The Yankees came to his defense and a brawl ensued, ending with one of the bowlers (a Bronx deli owner) suffering a concussion and a broken jaw.
A lawsuit was filed and the Yankees had to testify before a grand jury, with Mantle claiming he couldn’t accurately recall what happened. When the attorney asked, “Do you have an opinion as to how this could have happened?” Mantle replied, ““I think Roy Rogers rode through the Copa, and Trigger kicked the man in the head” An hour later the case was dismissed for lack of evidence.
A month later Billy Martin was traded (Yankees GM George Weiss had long believed that Martin was a bad influence on his teammates and on Mantle in particular, and used the incident to get rid of him after 7 years - and 4 World Championships - with the team).