Babe Ruth
George Herman Ruth, (February 6, 1895 – August 16, 1948), better known as Babe Ruth and also commonly known by the nicknames The Bambino and The Sultan of Swat, was an American baseball player and United States national icon. He was one of the first five players elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame and he was the first player to hit over 30, 40 and 50 home runs in one season. His record of 60 home runs in the 1927 season stood for 34 years until it was broken by Roger Maris in 1961. He also was a member of the original American League All-Star team in 1933. In 1998, The Sporting News named Ruth as Number One in its list of "Baseball's 100 Greatest Players."
The 1988 book, The Babe: A Life in Pictures, by Lawrence Ritter and Mark Rucker, articulates the case well: Taking the totality of Ruth's astonishing statistical achievements as both a hitter and a pitcher; his team's championships, starting what has become statistically the greatest sports dynasty in history; his total media visibility and international fame; and his single-handed alteration of the very nature of the way the game is played; the question Who was the greatest baseball player? can have only one reasonable answer: George Herman Ruth.
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Early days
He was born at 216 Emory Street in south Baltimore, Maryland. The house was rented by his maternal grandfather, Pius Schamberger, a German immigrant who eked out a living as an upholsterer. Babe's parents, Kate and George Sr., lived above the saloon they owned and operated on Camden Street. Kate would walk to her father's home each time she gave birth to a child, eight in all. Unfortunately, only Babe and his sister, Mary, survived infancy.
To say young George was mischievous would be an understatement. He skipped school, ran the streets, and committed petty crime. By age seven, he was drinking, chewing tobacco, and had become impossible for his parents to control. Mary recalled how their father would beat Babe in a desperate attempt to bring the boy into line, but to no avail. He was finally sent to St. Mary's Industrial School for Boys, a school run by Catholic brothers. Brother Matthias, a Roman Catholic priest, and the school's disciplinarian, became the major influence on his life, the one man Babe respected above all others. It was Brother Matthias who taught him baseball, working with him for countless hours on hitting, fielding and later, pitching.
Because of his toughness, George became the team's catcher. He liked the position because he was involved in every play. One day, as his team was getting pounded, Babe started mocking his own pitcher. Brother Matthias promptly switched George from catcher to pitcher to teach him a lesson. But, instead of getting his comeuppance, Babe shut the other team down.
Brother Matthias brought Babe to the attention of Jack Dunn, owner and manager of the minor-league Baltimore Orioles, and the man often credited with discovering him. In 1914 Dunn signed 19-year-old Ruth to pitch for his club, and took him to spring training in Florida, where a strong performance with bat and ball saw him make the club, while his precocious talent and childlike personality saw him nicknamed "Dunn's Babe". On April 22, 1914 "The Babe" pitched his first professional game, a six-hit, 6–0 victory over the Buffalo Bisons, also of the International League.
Through the first half of the season, the Orioles were the best team in the league, and by July 4 they had a record of 47 wins and 22 losses, 25 games over .500; but their finances were not in such a good shape. In 1914 the breakaway Federal League, a rebel major league which would last only 2 years, placed a team in Baltimore, and the competition hit Orioles' attendances badly. To make ends meet, Dunn was obliged to dispose of his stars for cash, and sold Ruth's contract, with two other players to Joseph Lannin, owner of the Boston Red Sox, for a sum rumored to be between $20,000 and $35,000.
The Red Sox years
Though Ruth was a skillful pitcher, the Red Sox's starting rotation was already stacked with lefties, so they initially made little use of him. With a 1–1 record, he was benched for several weeks before being sent to the International League with the Providence Grays of Providence, Rhode Island. Pitching in combination with the young Carl Mays, Ruth helped the Grays win the pennant. At the end of the season the Red Sox recalled him, and he was in the majors permanently. Shortly afterwards, Ruth proposed to Helen Woodford, a waitress he met in Boston, and they were married in Baltimore on October 14, 1914.
During spring training the next season, Ruth secured a spot as a starter. With such talents as Rube Foster, Dutch Leonard and a rejuvenated Smokey Joe Wood the pitchers carried the Red Sox to the pennant. Ruth won 18 games and lost 8 and helped himself with the bat, hitting .315 and slugging his first four major league home runs. The Red Sox won the World Series by 4 games to 1, but because manager Bill Carrigan preferred right-handers, Ruth did not pitch and grounded out in his only at bat.
In 1916 he returned to the rotation, although the team's offense had been weakened by the sale of Tris Speaker to the Cleveland Indians. After a slightly shaky spring, he would make a case as the best pitcher in the American League. Ruth's 1.75 ERA was best in the AL, and was over a run below the league average. He won 23 games, lost 12 and threw nine shutouts, still the best mark for a left hander as well as a Red Sox record. Pitching again took the light-hitting Sox to the World Series, in which Ruth pitched a 14-inning complete game to beat the Brooklyn Robins as Boston again won by 4 games to 1. He repeated his strong performance in 1917, going 24–13, but the Red Sox, who could not keep pace with the Chicago White Sox and their 100 wins, missed out on a third straight postseason appearance. More importantly, however, Ruth began to show his true skill as a hitter, compiling a .325 batting average and sending 11 of his 40 hits for extra bases.
It was apparent Ruth was more valuable in the lineup as an everyday player. In 1918, he began playing in the outfield more and pitching less. His contemporaries thought this was ridiculous: former teammate Tris Speaker speculated the move would shorten Ruth's career. By 1919, Ruth was basically a fulltime outfielder, pitching in only 17 of the 130 games in which he appeared. He set his first single-season home run record that year, smacking 29 with the Red Sox, breaking the previous record, while hitting .322 and driving in 114 runs. News of his batting feats spread rapidly, and wherever he played large crowds turned out to see him. As his fame spread, so did his waistline. Since his time as an Oriole, teammates had marveled at Ruth's capacity for food and by 1919 his physique had changed from the tall athletic frame of 1916 to a rotund shape with which he was usually associated. Beneath his barrel shaped body, his powerful muscular legs seemed strangely thin, but he was still a capable base-runner and outfielder. His contemporary Ty Cobb would later remark that Ruth "ran OK for a fat man".
Despite the box office appeal of Ruth, the Red Sox were in a perilous financial position. In his desire to attract the best players, owner Harry Frazee had paid relatively large salaries throughout the war years. However, the team's failure to make the 1919 World Series and Frazee's own failings as a theater promoter meant that by the end of the year, he needed an influx of cash to stay afloat. His only available source of money was his players, and so he offered the best of them to the New York Yankees, until then a perennial second division team. For a sum of $125,000 and a loan of more than $300,000 (secured on Fenway Park itself), Ruth was sold to the Yankees on January 3.
Ruth's sale to the Yankees started a phenomenon known to many sports fans as the "Curse of the Bambino" as well as one of the most heated rivalries in professional sports. Many fans believed "The Curse" to be the impetus behind the Red Sox being unable to win a World Series until the 2004 World Series.
Ruth the Yankee
Almost immediately, Ruth began to pay off on his investment. He trained extensively over the winter, which was by no means always the case, and turned up at spring training in fine condition. As a result, he supplanted a rather average outfielder who went on to forge the Chicago Bears and the NFL. George Halas was miffed about being cut, so he gave up on baseball when Ruth took his roster spot. When the season started, it was clear that the more hitter-friendly Polo Grounds suited him, and that he would soon eclipse his previous mark for home runs. As rumors of the Black Sox scandal slowly leaked out, Ruth was terrorizing opposing pitching, and putting together an offensive season that stands among the finest ever recorded. In addition to hitting 54 home runs, smashing his year-old record, he hit .376 (4th in the league), drove in 137 runs and scored 150 (both best in the league) and his 150 walks contributed to him getting on base in more than half his plate appearances. He stole 14 bases and his slugging percentage (a monumental .847) set a record that would not be beaten for over 80 years (Barry Bonds eclipsed it in 2001).
He followed the unprecedented success of 1920 with more of the same the following year. Hitting .378 in 152 games, he drove in 171 runs and scored 177, and finished just percentage points below his 1920 figures for slugging and reaching base. Most astonishingly, he broke the home run record for the third straight year, clouting 59 round trippers. Along with the pitching of Carl Mays, Waite Hoyt and Bob Shawkey, the bats of Ruth and Bob Meusel would carry the Yankees to their first ever World Series, a 5–3 loss to their NY rival Giants. Game 4 also saw Ruth hit his first post season home run.
During 1921, Ruth was invited to Columbia University for a battery of tests. The findings were illuminating. Doctors discovered that the pitch he could hit hardest was just above the knees, on the outside corner. And when he hit perfectly, in still air, with the bat moving at 110 ft/s (34 m/s), the ball would carry 450 to 500 feet (140 to 150 m). In a clinical test of steadiness, by inserting a charged rod successively into small holes of different sizes, Ruth proved to be the best of 500 volunteers. His eyes responded to flashing bulbs in a darkened chamber 20 ms quicker than the average person—very valuable for picking up a ball as it left a pitcher's hand. Science corroborated what baseball fans already knew: Babe Ruth was born with seemingly preternatural gifts. As some have written, perhaps teammate Joe Dugan put it best: "Born? Hell, Babe Ruth wasn't born! The son of a b*tch fell from a tree!"
The World Series appearance would lead to problems for Ruth. Seeking to avoid diminishing the meaning of the fall classic, organized baseball prohibited World Series players from playing in exhibition games during the off-season. Ruth, typically, decided this rule did not apply to him and embarked on his usual lucrative barnstorming tour with two teammates. Commissioner Landis came down hard on the recalcitrant players, suspending Ruth for the first six weeks of what was to be a turbulent 1922 season. On his return the Yankees management named Ruth their first on-field captain. Five days later, on May 25, he was ejected for arguing an umpire's call at third, and exacerbated the situation by climbing into the seats to confront a heckling fan. The captaincy was stripped, and Ruth's aggressiveness would see him suspended three more times in 1922, for arguing with umpires.
While Ruth suffered his first professional setback, his personal life was in a worse state. Helen, who disliked the celebrity lifestyle to which the Babe was drawn, lived on their farm near Boston with their adopted daughter, Dorothy. Free from the eyes of his wife, Ruth embraced the lifestyle even more fully. His love of fine food, undiminished over the years, was matched only by his appetites for then-illegal liquor, nightlife and casual sex.
Helen died in a house fire on January 11, 1929. She and Babe had separated some years before, but did not seek a divorce because they were Catholic. By the time of her death, Ruth was involved with a widowed socialite named Claire Merritt Hodgson. They married that April 17, and stayed together until his death. Claire—a cousin of Hall of Fame slugger Johnny Mize—was a sophisticated and somewhat hard lady who managed to do what no other woman before her had – keep the high-flying home run king grounded.
His boisterous social life, as well as missed playing time, seemed to affect his on-field play. His batting, on-base and slugging averages all fell dramatically (to a still-impressive .315/.434/.672) and for the first time since he became a full-time outfielder he failed to win the home run title, hitting 35, two fewer than Tilly Walker of the Philadelphia Athletics. His poor form would continue into the World Series, when the Yankees were again defeated by the Giants (4–0, with one tie) in a series in which Ruth hit only one single and one double in 17 at-bats.
In 1929, the Yankees introduced uniform numbers. Since Ruth batted third in the order, he was assigned number 3. Eventually, uniform numbers were associated with players without regard to batting order, but Babe Ruth was associated with number 3 and the Yankees retired the number on June 13, 1948—the second uniform number (the previous one being Lou Gehrig's) to be retired by the Yankees.
- 1920–23—amazing seasons
- 1925—"the bellyache heard round the world"
- 1926—return to peak
- 1927—60 home runs; "Murderers' Row"
Called Shot
During The 1932 World Series featuring the New York Yankees and the Chicago Cubs Ruth hit a home run that would come to be known as the "called shot". The Yankees had won the first two games in New York. Game 3 was played on October 1, 1932 at Wrigley Field in Chicago. According to William Hartell's 1994 book, A Day at the Ballpark, Ruth got things off to an interesting start by making this comment about the Cubs' compact ballyard, "I'd play for half my salary if I could bat in this dump all the time!" Wrigley itself was barely 18 years old then, and was clearly not a legend yet. Ruth came to bat in the 5th inning having already hit one home run that day. The Cubs' bench jockeys had been merciless, calling Ruth every name they could think of. Ruth was giving as good as he got, yelling and waving at them.
Cubs pitcher Charlie Root worked the count to two balls and two strikes on the Babe, who continued his gesticulations. On the next pitch, he hit a towering home run to the deepest part of center field, near the flagpole, at least 440 feet on the fly. As he rounded the bases, Ruth continued to wave and gesture at the Cubs dugout. This would prove to be Ruth's final World Series home run. Lou Gehrig followed up with a long home run into the temporary bleachers in the street behind right field. The Yankees went on to win the game 7–5, and closed out the Series with a win the next day.
The intrigue started when a lone reporter made the casual, matter-of-fact comment that Ruth had "called his shot". The writer might have seen the Babe's gestures and interpreted them as such. The story quickly took on a life of its own, and soon grew to legendary proportions. Ruth himself did nothing to clarify the matter, initially stating that he was merely pointing at the Cubs dugout to tell them that there were only two strikes, that he still had one strike left. But soon the media-savvy Ruth was going along with it, even embellishing the original story as he voiced-over newsreel footage with the statement that "I pointed... I said I'm gonna hit the next pitch past the flagpole... and the good Lord must have been with me!"
The newsreels did not help either. They showed only the game action, including Ruth waving at the dugout as he rounded the bases, but not the between-pitches banter between Ruth and the Cubs' bench jockeys that had preceded the homer. Some versions of the newsreel went so far as to insert an after-the-fact closeup of a man's hand pointing. The debate over this incident raged among the hot stove league for decades. Then a discovery was made that, instead of proving or disproving the story once and for all, only added fuel to the debate.
Years later, a grainy home-movie of the event surfaced. It had been taken by a spectator named Matt Kandle, who was sitting in the lower grandstand looking toward the right field side, giving a clear view of the main participants. The film showed that Ruth was very visibly gesturing, although seemingly toward the Cubs dugout behind third base rather than center field. The home movie also showed Ruth swinging and connecting, then it panned to deep center field as the outfielders watched the ball disappear into the seating area.
Charlie Root went to his grave saying that if Ruth had done something so brazen, the next pitch would have been "in his ear." Cubs catcher Gabby Hartnett also always vehemently denied that The Called Shot had ever happened; however, the home movie showed that Hartnett was facing away from Ruth at the moment Ruth was gesturing, actually facing the umpire for a few seconds. The Cubs long-time public address announcer, Pat Piper, who had no apparent motive to misrepresent the facts in favor of the "enemy" team, and whose station was by the backstop giving him a good view of the scene, later asserted that Ruth did call his shot.
Some who have studied the film closely assert that, in addition to the broader gestures, Ruth made a quick finger-point in the direction of the pitcher, i.e. in the direction of center field, just as Root was winding up. If so, maybe Root and Hartnett did not even see that gesture. But someone saw something, and the legend was born.
After more than seven decades, this mystery remains unsolved. Unless more conclusive photos or film footage are discovered, this moment will have to remain forever in the realm of baseball legend.
There was an amusing footnote to all of this. Not long after that famous home run, the Chicago-based Curtiss candy company installed an advertising sign on the rooftop of one of the apartment buildings on Sheffield Avenue. It was just across the street from where the home run had landed. So for several decades, until the sign was finally removed in the 1970s, Chicago Cubs fans were constantly reminded of "Baby Ruth"!
Decline and end with Yankees
Despite his heroics in the 1932 World Series, Ruth was informed in 1933 by Ed Barrow that his salary would be cut 33%, from $75,000 to $50,000 a year. Ruth's salary had been cut before the 1932 season, but it was only a $5,000 cut. It was the Great Depression, and teams were losing money, although the Yankees themselves were still making a profit. Barrow and owner Jacob Ruppert were also looking to phase Ruth out from the Yankees. In these days, even players who had been superstars were often subject to having their salaries cut for even slightly diminished productivity, and sometimes for no reason at all. As it had been in baseball up to this time, (and would continue until the mid-1970's) owners had a virtual stranglehold over players in negotiations. The only recourse a player had in those times was to hold out (almost always only an option when the player was in his prime) and hope public pressure from teammates, fans, and media might make the owners give in somewhat, but this was no guarantee. The real problem was baseball's reserve clause, which a player was locked with his team until he was traded or released. Even with all his stature, Ruth was not immune from this. Ruth eventually settled to play for $52,000, although he was still the highest paid player in the game. Ruth was quite unhappy with the pay cut, but with 25% of Americans unemployed in 1933, no one felt sorry for him.
Ruth remained produtive in 1933, batting .301, with 34 home runs, 103 rbi's, and led the league in walks with 114. Although most major league players could only dream about these type of numbers, they were well below Ruth's previous standards. The batting average and slugging average were down over 40 points and 100 points respectively from his career averages, and he was slow in the field. It was clear Father Time was eroding Ruth's skills. The Yankees did finish 2nd to the Washington Senators, but never seriously threatened to win the pennant. At least to Barrow and Ruppert, Ruth and the Yankees season justified his pay cut, and the next year, Ruth took another big pay cut down to $25,000 a year, a 50% cut.
One highlight of the season was Ruth hitting the very first home run in the very first All-Star game, held July 6, 1933 at Comiskey Park in Chicago. His 2-run shot of Bill Hallahan helped the A.L. to a 4–2 win over the N.L., and he also made a fine defensive catch in the game.
After the season Ruth continued to press Barrow for a chance to manage the Yankees, but Barrow had no intentions of getting rid of manager Joe McCarthy. Ruth never got along well with the disciplinarian style of McCarthy, and had stated he could do a better job managing the team, but the Yankees never gave him the chance. The most they offered him was a chance to manage the Yankees farm team in Newark, New Jersey, an offer Ruth scoffed at with justification. Players such as Ty Cobb, Tris Speaker, and a 26-year-old Joe Cronin had been given big league managerial jobs with no previous managing experience. At one point Frank Navin, owner of the Detroit Tigers, seemed serious about hiring Ruth to player manage the Tigers. Ruth however put off a meeting with Navin to take a trip to Hawaii, and Navin, never a particularly congenial man anyway, essentially retracted any meeting with Ruth. Ruth never received a chance to manage, as owners apparently took to heart a statement Barrow had made about Ruth when he said, "How can he manage other men when he can even manage himself?"
Ruth's play continued downward in 1934, finishing with a .288 average and 22 home runs. It was understood during the season it would be Ruth's last season in a Yankee uniform, and Ruth himself stated it might be the last year he played.
After the 1934 season, Ruth went on a baseball barnstorming tour in the far east. Players such as Jimmie Foxx, Lefty Gomez, Earl Averill, Charlie Gehringer, and Lou Gehrig were among 14 players who played a series of 22 games. 17 of the games were played in Japan, and the reception there was completely enthusiastic. Ruth was by far the most popular player there. Baseball had been big in Japan for decades, so many Japanese baseball fans were well aware of Babe Ruth. Riding in a car, Ruth waved the American and Japanese flags, and a crowd of Japanese waved American flags back at him. The games were played in two Japanese stadiums, Tokyo's Meiji Stadium, that held over 60,000, and Osaka's Koshien Stadium, which held over 80,000, and both cites had been sold out for weeks. Ruth would excite the crowds with 13 home runs in the 17 games. The tour was a complete success in Japan, and in just a couple years, Japan organized its first professional baseball league, the Japan Professional Baseball Association.
The Last Act: Return to Boston
In 1935, Boston Braves owner Emil Fuchs was looking to jumpstart the Braves franchise. A perenial bottom dwelling team, the Braves had improved somewhat, but the Depression killed off attendance, and Fuchs was desperate to revive fan interest and hence revenue. Fuchs was very interested in Ruth and a complex deal was worked out with Barrow and Ruppert, both eager to get Ruth out of McCarthy's hair and off the Yankees. The deal was finalized in February 1935, an offer which Fuchs promised Ruth a share in the teams profits, an assistant managerial job to Braves manager Bill Mckechnie, (with a good chance to succeed him next year), and Ruth could play whenever he wanted. All parties seemed happy with the deal, and with much media hoopla, Ruth returned to the city that gave him his major league start.
On opening day, before a home capacity crowd of over 25,000, Ruth was responsible for all the Braves runs in a 4–2 win over Carl Hubbell and the New York Giants. Fan excitement for the Braves was as high as it had ever been, but the euphroria quickly died away. Ruth completely stopped hitting, was clumsy in the field, and soon missed a dozen or so games. The Braves were as bad as they had ever been, and the few fans that showed up booed the team. Ruth was also miffed Mckechnie managed the way he wanted, ignoring any advice from Ruth. Soon Ruth realized Fuch's promise to a stake in the profits was hot air, as who would want to invest in a losing team.
On May 25, 1935, at Forbes Field, Pittsburgh, Ruth gave one last glimpse of how a great a player he was. He went 4–4, drove in 6 runs, and hit 3 home runs in an 11–7 lost to the Pirates. The last homer would be the longest ball ever hit at Forbes Field. It was his 714th and last home run, and his last hit. He hung on another few days, and on May 30 in Philadelphia, played in his last major league game. He struck out in the first, and playing the field the same inning, hurt his knee and left the game. He would never play another big league game.
Fuchs and Ruth's relationship soured badly. Fuchs blamed Ruth for the failures of the Braves, and Ruth believed Fuchs had lied to him about the Braves franchise. After another argument with Fuchs, Ruth stated to reporters, "I'm quitting." The experiment with Fuchs, Ruth and the Braves was a complete failure for all parties. Fuchs, who had borrowed much money, saw revenue and attendance continue to fall, and soon lost ownership control of the team. Ruth had played in only 28 games, and batted a dismal .181 in 72 at-bats (striking out 24 times) in his last season as a player. The season for the Braves was an unequaled disaster, as they finished 38–115, the worst record for a National League team in the 20th century.
Later Years
In 1939, the years of fast living began to show signs of catching up with Ruth. During a round of golf with his playing partner Ben Curry, Ruth said to him, "I feel terrible." He was taken to the clubhouse where a doctor observed his condition. It wasn't diagnosed then, but Ruth probably suffered a mild heart attack. About a year later, he suffered a similiar attack. By this time Ruth's weight had ballooned to over 270 pounds.
In 1942 Ruth was asked to play a part (as himself, in his athletic prime) in the film The Pride of the Yankees, a film biography of Lou Gehrig, who had passed away in June of 1941. Ruth would need to lose a great deal of weight to play the role, and a vigorous workout schedule had him losing 40 pounds. He did a respectable job of acting in a bit part, but the strict hours of filming did not suit his night life. He caught a bad cold (he caught frequent colds his whole life), which developed into pneumonia. At one point, a report circulated that he was near death, but he recovered in a couple of weeks, finished the film part, and was soon back to playing golf again.
During World War II, Ruth did some charity work for the Red Cross, and himself bought over $100,000 in war bonds. He even organized a charity golf game with his old rival Ty Cobb (the two had despised each other in their playing days). Ruth appeared at many benefits during the war, and a few times donned his old baseball uniform. During one benefit at Yankee Stadium, he batted against the former great pitcher Walter Johnson, and another time, pinch hit in a game made up of teams from the armed forces. Later, in 1943, in another charity game at Yankee Stadium, he pinch hit, drew a walk, but tore cartilage in his knee when running the bases, and this would be the last time he would play in a formal game.
After the war, Ruth continued to look for a chance to manage in the big leagues, something he had wanted to do even as a player during his heyday. While times before he had essentially been blackballed by owners, who for various reasons didn't trust him, this time it was his health that would prevent the opportunity. In 1946, he began experiencing severe pain over his left eye. He wasn't concerned, thinking it was sinus problems, but this situation would be much more grave than his health problems of the past. In November, 1946, a visit to French Hospital in New York revealed Ruth had a malignant tumor in his neck that had encircled his left carotid artery, and he would need surgery to have the cancerous growth removed. During the surgery, part of his nerves that led to the larynx had to be cut, and as a result his voice (which some have compared to Clark Gable's) was reduced to a whisper. He would be unable to swallow foods, and had to be fed with feeding tubes. He also was given radiation therapy, then a relatively new approach to fighting cancer, to control the cancer doctors could not remove.
Released from the hospital in February 1947, Ruth was now 80 pounds lighter. Although he regained some of his strength to play golf, hunt, and other activities he had enjoyed, it was still obvious to all those who saw him that his health was not good. The tumor had continued to grow, and he was in so much pain he required morphine. He did manage to attend Babe Ruth Day, an appreciation of what Ruth had done for the game, held April 27th, 1947 at Yankee Stadium. It was on this occassion where Ruth spoke in a disheartening croaking voice to a capacity crowd of 60,000. He made an impromptu speech, which included the line "The only real game in the world, I think, is baseball."
In June, 1947, Ruth was in so much pain physicians tried and experimental new drug on him, a drug that was a synthetic form of folic acid. The ongoing treatments seemingly improved Ruth so much, his case was cited at an International Cancer Congress held in St. Louis. He seemed to have recovered some of his health, and with renewed energy started the Babe Ruth Foundation, a charity for disadvantaged children. Another Babe Ruth Day held at Yankee Stadium in September helped raise money for his newest charity.
Unfortunately, the apparent recovery was only a brief remission of the cancer. His health gradually declined, and he became sick and was in as much pain as he had ever been. On June 13, 1948, a weak Ruth barely was able to attend the Yankee's 25th anniversary celebration of the opening of Yankee Stadium. He met old teammates from the 1923 Yankee team, and stood for photographs. The highlight of the day was when his name was announced over the loudspeaker, and the crowd erupted into a loud roar. Ruth spoke a few words a the microphone, saying how much he enjoyed seeing his old teammates and being a Yankee. After a 2-inning game played by the old players, Ruth left Yankee Stadium for the last time. Shortly before, he had a conversation with former teammate Joe Dugan. Ruth told Dugan, "Joe, I'm gone, I'm done Joe", a statement which had Ruth breaking down and crying, and Dugan crying with him.
Death
Shortly after the event, Ruth was again back in the hospital. By now, he knew it was cancer, even if no one had told him, which apparently no one ever did since his cancer was diagnosed back in 1946. He received hundreds of well-wishing letters daily, many requesting autographs and photos, and with his wife Claire's help, made sure he answered every one. He was still able to walk and get out even nearing his end. On July 26, 1948, he attended the premier of the film about his life, The Babe Ruth Story, which starred William Bendix (ironically Bendix had been a Yankee bat boy in the 1920's.) Ruth however was feeling very ill, and left well before the film was finished.
Ruth returned to the hospital, and this time he would never leave. The cancer had eaten away at his body, leaving him with an emaciated appearance, and his voice was reduced to a bare whisper. Only a few visitors were allowed to see him, one of which was the current National League President and future Commissioner of Baseball, Ford Frick. Frick had been a good friend of Ruth's since Ruth's early days as a Yankee. (It was Frick who later put the infamous asterisk by Roger Maris' home run total of 61, in 1961, since Maris's total occurred in a 162 game-season, while Ruth's home run record of 60 in 1927 was set in a 154 game-season. The asterisk was officially removed in 1991 by an 8-man Committee for Statistical Accuracy, and Maris's record has been surpassed several times since 1998.) In the last days, scores of reporters had hovered around the hospital, almost anticipating the end. The day after Frick's visit, Babe Ruth was dead at the age of 53. He was buried in the Cemetery of the Gate of Heaven in Hawthorne, New York (about 25 miles North of New York City.) His wife Claire was buried next to him on upon her death in 1976.
Ruth's birthplace has been preserved as a combination Babe Ruth museum and Baltimore Orioles museum, and is just a short walk from Oriole Park at Camden Yards.
Statistics
Career Statistics:
Hitting
| G | AB | H | 2B | 3B | HR | R | RBI | BB | SO | AVG | OBP | SLG | OPS |
| 2,503 | 8,399 | 2,873 | 506 | 136 | 714 | 2,174 | 2,213 | 2,062 | 1,330 | .342 | .474 | .690 | 1.164 |
Pitching
| W | L | GP | GS | CG | Sh | SV | IP | BB | SO | ERA | WHIP |
| 94 | 46 | 163 | 148 | 107 | 17 | 4 | 1,221.1 | 441 | 488 | 2.28 | 1.16 |
Notes
For the first 40 years of his life many people, Ruth included, believed his birthdate to have been February 7, 1894. Most contemporary accounts, therefore, will contain inaccurate accounts of Ruth's age.
He threw and batted lefthanded, but wrote righthanded.
In her book, "My Dad, The Babe," his adopted daughter Dorothy claimed she was his biological child, the product of an affair between Ruth and a long-time family friend.
See also
Reference
"Babe: The Legend Comes to Life" (1973) Robert W. Creamer
External links
- Baseball Hall of Fame
- Baseball-Reference.com – career statistics and analysis
- Quotecafe – Quotes by Babe Ruth
- Lovable Ruth was everyone's Babe, an ESPN article by Larry Schwartz
- Info about the Ruth "called shot" home movie
Categories: 1895 births | 1933 American League All-Stars | 1934 American League All-Stars | 1948 deaths | Baseball Hall of Fame | Baseball players | Boston Braves players | Boston Red Sox players | Major league left fielders | Major league pitchers | Major league right fielders | New York Yankees players | People from Baltimore