Because of her extremely loud voice, thick
Brooklynese accent, and allegiance to the Dodgers, Chester was well-known in Ebbets Field and beyond, throughout Brooklyn. But she became famous after her first heart attack. Instructed by her doctor not to yell anymore, she returned to Ebbets Field with a frying pan and iron ladle, and made so much noise that everybody quickly knew who she was. The Dodgers' players soon replaced her noisemaking implements with a brass
cowbell as a gift. She received grandstand passes from the team, but preferred to sit in the
bleachers, where she would hang a sign wherever she sat that said, "
Hilda Is Here". In 1941, she had a second heart attack, and by then was important enough to be visited in
Jewish Hospital of Brooklyn by Dodgers' manager
Leo Durocher and several players. On one occasion, Chester influenced the events of a game, and almost its outcome. With Dodgers' pitcher
Whitlow Wyatt holding a big lead, Chester dropped a folded note onto the outfield grass and yelled to
Pete Reiser, "Give that to Leo!" Reiser picked up the paper, and at the end of the inning, ran in from the outfield, exchanging brief greetings with general manager
Larry MacPhail, who was sitting next to the dugout. Reiser then gave the note to Durocher. It said that Wyatt was getting tired, and that
Hugh Casey should start to warm up in the
bullpen. Chester occasionally accompanied the Dodgers on short road trips. In
Philadelphia, one of her counterparts for the
Phillies started to yell at and berate
Dixie Walker, calling him a has-been. "You're all through!" yelled the Phillies' fan. Chester quieted him with one comment. "Oh, yeah?" she yelled back. "Look where he is, and look where you are!" In 1946, Chester was called as a defense witness for Durocher, who was on trial for assault. The previous year, a fan named John Christian had been heckling the Dodgers' players from the Ebbets Field grandstand many times over several weeks. On June 9, 1945, Durocher had enlisted Joseph Moore, a special policeman at the game, to get Christian from his seat, and the three met under the stands. Christian wound up with a broken jaw, and Durocher was accused of using brass knuckles to beat him up. Chester testified that Durocher had come to her aid and was defending her honor because Christian had been calling her names, including "cocksucker," and "usin' langwidge that shocked the ladies." After two days of testimony from several witnesses, including Durocher, who testified in his own defense, the jury deliberated 38 minutes and both Durocher and Moore were acquitted on April 25, 1946. Of all the Dodgers' players and managers, Chester was partial to Durocher because he had led the visit to the hospital when she had her heart attack in 1941. Durocher sent her cards annually at Christmas time for many years. Chester also occasionally went to
Yankee Stadium and the
Polo Grounds, and to
Madison Square Garden to see the
New York Rangers, and although her initial allegiance was with the Dodgers, she became ambivalent between the Dodgers and the
New York Giants after Durocher became the Giants' manager. Several weeks later, she was profiled in a newspaper article in
The New York Times. ==Personal life==