Clemente's Death: A Mission of Mercy Ends in Tragedy
Weeks after notching his 3,000th hit in his final at-bat of the 1972 regular season, Clemente traveled with his wife, Vera, to Nicaragua, where he managed a Puerto Rican team in the world amateur baseball championships.
“He and Vera fell in love with Nicaragua, and Nicaragua fell in love with them,” Ruck says. “He and Vera would walk around each morning, and Roberto would just talk to children and ask what they had for breakfast and reach into his pockets to give them money.” Clemente even agreed to pay for a boy he befriended to travel to the United States to receive prosthetic legs.
Weeks after Clemente’s return to Puerto Rico, a 6.5-magnitude earthquake struck the Nicaraguan capital of Managua, on December 23, 1972. It killed thousands and left hundreds of thousands homeless. Even though the disaster happened in a country nearly 1,500 miles away from Puerto Rico, Clemente felt a sense of duty to help his fellow Latinos.
Instead of merely donating money, he tracked reports from the disaster scene on his ham radio and formed a relief committee to aid the quake-stricken country. Clemente used his fame to solicit donations on Puerto Rican television and door-to-door in wealthy neighborhoods. He worked 14-hour days, including Christmas Eve and Christmas, circling the island to stage local relief drives and conduct baseball clinics. Clemente’s committee raised more than $150,000 in donations and collected 26 tons of food, clothes and medicine.
To hasten the delivery of supplies to the disaster zone, Clemente leased two airplanes, including a propeller-driven DC-7 that, unbeknownst to him, had been recently damaged. When he received reports of corrupt Nicaraguan soldiers holding up aid shipments, a disgusted Clemente decided to accompany the relief supplies on a New Year’s Eve flight. As the final hours of 1972 dwindled, Clemente said goodbye to his wife and three sons and boarded the DC-7 laden with boxes. The improperly loaded airplane, over the maximum weight by 4,000 pounds, struggled to lift off from the runway as an engine failed on takeoff. The airplane crashed offshore into the Atlantic Ocean. None of the five people aboard survived. Clemente’s body was never recovered.