A member of the Baseball Hall of Fame, first baseman Johnny Mize was one of the most prolific home run hitters in the game’s history. Graceful at the plate, the 6-foot-2-inch Mize was immortalized as the “Big Cat.”

John Robert “Johnny” Mize was born on January 7, 1913, in Demorest (in Habersham County). Gifted at both tennis and baseball, Mize early on caught the attention of the baseball coach of nearby Piedmont College (now Piedmont University). Invited to join the team, Mize played his first college game when he was only fifteen. He broke into the majors on April 16, 1936, with the St. Louis Cardinals and soon became one of the most feared sluggers in the National League. As a Cardinal, he captured home run titles in 1939 (28) and 1940 (43). Later, as a member of the New York Giants, he won two additional home run crowns: fifty-one in 1947 (an honor he shared with Ralph Kiner of Pittsburgh) and forty in 1948.

Johnny Mize
Johnny Mize

Mize joined the American League’s New York Yankees in 1949. As a pinch hitter and part-time first baseman, he helped lead the Yankees to five consecutive World Series titles (1949-1953). Mize retired after the 1953 campaign with 359 lifetime home runs; 2,011 hits; 1,337 runs batted in; and a .312 career batting average. In contrast to most sluggers, especially today’s long ball artists, Mize rarely struck out, fanning only 524 times over the course of his career. On six occasions he hit three home runs in one game—a record. He was enshrined in the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame in 1973 and the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1981.

After living for several years in Florida, Mize moved back to Demorest in 1974, settling in his old family home. He died there on June 2, 1993, and is buried in nearby Yonah Cemetery.

The Johnny Mize Athletic Center and Museum, located on the campus of Piedmont University, is named in his honor.

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Johnny Mize

Johnny Mize

A member of the Baseball Hall of Fame, first baseman and Georgia native Johnny Mize was one of the most prolific home run hitters in the game's history. Graceful at the plate, the 6-foot-2-inch Mize was immortalized as the "Big Cat."