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Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:40 AM
I'm going to do a Babe Photo Thread. Yes, we now have a lot of them, but none of them satisfies me. They do have some great shots, but also many pedestrian ones. And the best Babe Ruth photos are presently scattered among about 10 other threads. So, I will consolidate the best ones into a single great Babe Ruth Photo Thread.

So, I want to create one that will have only the good ones, so no one will have to wade through pages of hum-drum, so-so Babe photos, on 10 different threads, which are only for Babe's staunchest fans.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------My Sincere Eulogy To Babe Ruth

Babe Ruth was many things to the game of Baseball. Its mightiest slugger, most loved player, most famous celebrity. He was the most-photographed athlete of all time. He made the most money/caused all players to make more money. He filled ballparks with more fans, created more new fans, hit the hardest/longest home runs, created more home run records than anyone else. He created more records than anyone besides Ty Cobb.

Babe Ruth created the best/greatest hitting stats of any player. His hitting stat record had the most productive, graceful decline ever, with the lone exception of steroid abuser, Barry Bonds.

He probably also drank the most beer, ate the most food/hot dogs, drank the most soda, tipped the best to service people, appeared at more charity events, visited more kids in hospitals, raised the most hell, had the most fun, patronized the most brothels than any athlete before or since. His death caused more pain, more sense of loss than any other player's.

More words have been spoken about Babe Ruth than any other several players combined. More books have been written about him than any other player, by far. Over 100. He will no doubt continue to be the most discussed baseball player in history. He was the most influential player in terms of changing the way the game was played. And in that respect, the game's most important player. After Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth is the game's Most Decorated Ballplayer. He probably inspired more kids to take up baseball than anyone else. Along with Jack Dempsey, Babe may have been the most famous athlete of his time. And Dempsey's sport, boxing, was much more universally known/practiced.

His very name has become an adjective - Ruthian. He is the common yardstick used to compare a great player to a sport. Hence, Tiger Woods is the Babe Ruth of Golf. His name is used to imply great size/power.

Babe Ruth will be remembered the longest of any player the game produced. He will be universally remembered as the most important player who ever played baseball.

Since the 1970's, Babe has been widely recognized as the game's best/greatest player. It is by no means unanimous, but his consensus of support cuts across all categories, and may never be reversed. On Baseball Fever, Babe's support has consistently polled about 58%, with the remaining support divided among Cobb, Mays, Wagner and others.

So, I tip my hat to Babe Ruth, one of the greatest/best players the game ever produced. Here's to YOU, BABE RUTH!

May I ask no one to post their own photos here. Please, NO BABE RUTH PHOTOS. And oh, by the way, I'm going to raid all the other Babe photo threads, starting with my own.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
If you enjoy this photo gallery, you might also like our other ones, too.

Historical, Archival Photographs (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=40306)---Pre-1900 (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?102911-19th-Century-Historic-Photographic-Archive)---Negro L. (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?102913-Negro-Leagues-Historic-Photographic-Archive)---Vintage Panoramic Pictures (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=75607)---Members' Gallery (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?102920-Members-Photo-Gallery)---Runningshoes Presents: Photo Op (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=46723)---Meet The Sports Writers (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=57538)

Photos of the following individual players---Hank Aaron (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=58318)---Pete Alexander (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=54211)---Ty Cobb (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?102826-Bill-s-Ty-Cobb-Photos)---Eddie Collins (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=54920)---Sam Crawford (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=71637)---Jimmy Foxx (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=55628)---Lou Gehrig (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?104799-Lou-Gehrig-Photo-File)---Rickey Henderson (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=54995)---Rogers Hornsby (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=56377)---Joe Jackson (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?p=1305036&highlight=Greenville#post1305036)---Walter Johnson (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=54344)---Nap Lajoie (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=72124)---Connie Mack (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=59240)---John McGraw (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=68164)---Mickey Mantle (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=67997)---Christy Mathewson (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=33507)---Willie Mays (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=54723)---Mel Ott (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?104840-Mel-Ott-Photo-File)---Babe Ruth (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=21998&page=7)---George Sisler (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?p=960330#post960330)---Tris Speaker (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=38504)---Pie Traynor (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=37345)---Rube Waddell (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?p=308179#post308179)--- Honus Wagner (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=13366)---Ted Williams (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=58624)---Zack Wheat (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?84754-Zack-Wheat-Thread)---Rare Ty Cobb (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?102921-Rare-Ty-Cobb-pictures) ---Rare Babe Ruth (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=73654)---Bill's Babe Ruth (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?103022-Bill-s-Babe-Ruth-Photos)---Rare Ted Williams (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?102923-Rare-Ted-Williams-pictures)---Bill's Rare Finds (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=75602) ---Babefan's Fantastic Vintage Baseball photos (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?102924-Fantastic-Vintage-Baseball-Photos-!)---GaryL's Boston Public Library Baseball Photo Project (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?103426-Boston-Public-Library-Baseball-Project)

We also have some very nice, attractive team photo collections---New York Yankees (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?102934-The-New-York-Yankees-Team-Photo-Collection)---New York Giants (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?102932-The-New-York-Giants-Baseball-s-1st-Dynasty)---Detroit Tigers (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?102937-Detroit-Tigers-Team-Photos-Collection)---Pittsburgh Pirates (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?102935-Pittsburgh-Pirates)---Brooklyn Dodgers (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=41860)
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Support/Feedback:


Posing with young kid.There is something about this photo that moves me greatly.

Goodness! I've never seen such rare and extravagant Babe photos. I would've never thought the Elvis of baseball had secret treasures like these!

As usual, great work Bill Burgess, lots of great pics. I always get a kick out of any pic of the two greats on the same field, Tyrus and Babe. What I wouldn't give to have sat in on a game with these two greats facing off, electricity in the air.
The sly fox and the bear going at it.

I have always regretted that those 2 weren't allowed to grow old managing against each other. Would have added so much more to the game. What a waste. At least Honus was allowed to grow old coaching. They at least earned and deserved that much.

Just went back and again read that eulogy you wrote Bill and again I say great work. Also that eulogy followed up with some other words on Babe and a great number of fine pictures, from you.

As you know August 16, 2008 marked the 60th year of his passing and a memorial mass is planned.
I got an invite to a mass for the Babe that will take place where the original mass took place St. Patrick's on Saturday September 6, 2008 at 5:00 PM.

Closing, you do your usual when taking on a project, some great work on this one just like all your other work.

Bill, I want to personally thank you for for your postings. You can't imagine what delight I get from them. I, along with many others, owe you a debt of gratitude that we simply can't repay. Again, many thanks for all the Ruth material and all the rest of those great photographs.

Bill, thanks for the best of the best. I simply can't get enough of this stuff, especially those photos of the Babe when young. I just read that Joe Sewell told a story about scoring two times from second base on sacrifice flies by Ruth. In the same game! Sewell: "That's how far he hit 'em."

Thank you so much, Badge714. I am committed to finding the best photos I can find and bringing them to you. This is my passion. I love that you appreciate them as much as me.

Everyone has abit of a different taste when it comes to photos. I happen to personally like the photos to blend so it is hard to tell what was touched up and what wasnt. I think your efforts are amazing and I think you hit the mark on several of them. There are a few that are abit strong for the image which causes you to only see the face before you see anything else. I know that will change with time & practise. One thing is for sure. You are getting better at it so keep going. "X number of times thru equals certainty". You will be teaching me how to do this in the very near future.

Great, great pictures.

Just one phrase comes to mind when looking at Ruth's swing "Wha-bam".

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:41 AM
Babe Ruth, Yankees' OF, April, 1923, Yankee S.------1920-21, Polo Grounds
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Player%20Tributes/Image7-21-1.jpg
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"Too bad about Ruth. If he had remained a pitcher, he might have lasted a long time and become famous."
Tris Speaker, Ruth's team mate in 1915, on hearing the news in January, 1920, that the Yankees had acquired Babe and planned to use him full time as an OFer.

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:41 AM
Babe Ruth, Yankees' OF, Polo Grounds, 1920---BB Reference (http://www.baseball-reference.com/r/ruthba01.shtml)
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Player%20Tributes/71989165.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:42 AM
Babe Ruth, Red Sox, 1918
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image10.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/The252520Babe252520warms252520up-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:42 AM
----------------------------------------1918 --------------------------------------------------------------------------1921
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image4-3-2.jpg

----------------------------------1931-34
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-7.jpg

-----------------------------------1927-30
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image4.jpg

----------------------------------1931-34
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-8.jpg
-------------------Old Orioles Park, 1931------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1932 World Series.

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:43 AM
Babe Ruth, Red Sox, OF/P, 1918,----BB-Reference (http://www.baseball-reference.com/r/ruthba01.shtml)------------------------------------------------------------------------Babe Ruth, Yankees' RF, 1926
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Player%20Tributes/2011-12-21_133256.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Player%20Tributes/2011-12-21_133409.jpg

-------------------------------1920-23
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image1-3.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:43 AM
August, 1928 (incoming pitch is under the 'W".)
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/August7252C1928ball2520under2520-1.jpg

October 6, 1926 World Series. He's just hit his 3rd HR at Sportsman's Park, St. Louis.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image3-1.jpg

June, 1915
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image10-2.jpg

----------------------------------------July, 1929
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Oct_320192620WS-1.jpg

------------------------------------1920
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image4-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:44 AM
October 13, 1921: New York: In the Yankee clubhouse at the
Polo Grounds this afternoon, George Herman "Babe" Ruth was crowned
the "King of Swat," Miller Huggins placing the silver crown valued at $600
on "Babe's" worthy brow. "King Ruth" is the inscription on the crown. The
crown stands more than one foot in height, its lower rim that fits over Ruth's
forehead is studded with a row of 49 engraved miniature baseballs.------------------------------1931
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image6-2-2.jpg

Opening Day, April 16, 1935, Braves Field, Boston. Babe about to hit his 1st HR as a Boston Brave, agaist Carl Hubbell, of the NY Giants.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Babe_Braves-1-1.jpg

---Babe Ruth-------------------------------------------------------Babe Ruth, Yankee OF, 1920-21
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/The2520Babe2520in2520a2520silk25-1.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/untitled-5.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:44 AM
And now for something just a little bit different. Here a little perk for all of you. A little Valentine.
---------------------------------------------
Just thought I'd list as many Babe books as I could. You/Joe might want to archive this, and try to compile all the Babe books ever written. Just a cool little project. And this list should get you started. There must be at least 150-200. In fact, if you use the search engine, I once did list over 50. But since you asked . . .
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1. The Life that Ruth Built: A Biography, by Marshal Smelser, 1975, 592pp, isbn#0812905407;
2. Babe: the Legend Comes to Life, by Robert Creamer, 1974, 443pp isbn#067180393X
3. The Babe Book: A Life in Pictures by Lawrence Ritter/Mark Rucker, 1988, 282pp, isbn#089919768X;
4. Babe Ruth: His Life and Legend, by Kal Wagenheim, 1974
5. The Babe and I, by Mrs. Babe Ruth, 1959
6. My Dad, The Babe; Growing Up with an American Hero, by Dorothy Ruth Pirone (w/Chris Martens), 1988, 250pp, isbn#1557700311
7. Babe Ruth, The Big Moments of the Big Fellow, by Tom Meany, 1951
8. Babe Ruth: The Real Story of the King of Swat, by Tom Meany, 1948
9. Babe Ruth, by Art Berke, 1989, isbn#0531104729
10. Babe Ruth: His Life and Legend, by George Beim, 1974
11. Babe Ruth: a Daughter's Portrait, by Julia Ruth Stevens, by (Donald Hall, 1998?), (George Beim, 1992?), 192pp, isbn#0878339957
12. Babe Ruth: Major League Dad - A Daughter's Cherished Memories, by Julia Ruth Stevens, with Bill Gilbert, 2001, 160pp, isbn#1892049279
13. Babe Ruth's Own Book of Baseball, by Ford Frick, 1928
14. Babe Ruth: Baseball Boy, One of Baseball's Greatest, (#77 Childhood Of Famouse Americans Series) by Guernsey Van Riper, Jr., 1983, 192pp, isbn#0672527545;
15. The Story of Babe Ruth: Baseball's Greatest Legend, by Lisa Eisenberg, 1990, 107pp, isbn#0440402743;
16. Babe Ruth, by Wayne Stewart, 2006
17. Babe Ruth; His Story in Baseball, by Lee Allen, 1966
18. Babe Ruth and the 1918 Red Sox, by Allan Wood, 2000, 436pp, isbn#0595148263
19. 1918: Babe Ruth and the World Champion Boston Red Sox, by James Haskins
20. Babe Ruth, by William R. Sanford, Carl R. Green, 1992, 48pp, isbn#0896867412
21. Babe Ruth: Home Run Hero, Keith Brandt, 1986, 48pp, isbn#0816705534;
22. The Real Babe Ruth, by Dan Daniel, 1948
23. The Year Babe Ruth Hit 104 Home Runs, by Bill Jenkinson, 2007
24. Babe Ruth: Legends In Sport, by Glenn Stout and Matt Christopher, 2005, 91 pp.
25. Babe Ruth, by Martin Weldon, 1948
26. Babe Ruth: Launching the Legend by Jim Reisler, 2004, 288pp, isbn#0071432442
27. Mighty Babe Ruth (32 pages), by Syd Hoff, 1979
28. Babe Ruth (American Legends Series), by Don McLeese, Timothy Noakes, 2002, 24pp, isbn#1589523040
29. Babe Ruth's Incredible Records and the 44 Players Who Broke Them, by John A. Mercurio, 1993, isbn#1561712213
30. The Babe Ruth Story, by Bob Considine, 1948
31. Babe Ruth, by Ray Bains, 1985, 32pp isbn#081670144X;
32. Babe Ruth: People of Destiny, by Kenneth Richards, 1967 (A Humanities Series, by Children's Press, Chicago, IL)
33. Babe Ruth, Sultan of Swat (Baseball Legends series), by Charles Spain Verral, 1993
34. Babe Ruth in Florida, by Kevin McCarthy, 2002 216pp, isbn#074141225X
35. Babe Ruth: Sultan of Swat, by Lois Nicholson, 1998, 119pp, isbn#0962542717
36. The Bambino Visits Cuba 1920. (Unedited Notes Regarding The Visit Of Babe Ruth To Cuba In 1920), by Yuyo Ruiz
37. The Babe In Red Stockings: An In-Depth Chronicle of Babe Ruth With The Boston Red Sox, 1914-1919, by Kerry Keene, 1997, 250pp isbn#1571671129
38. The Big Bam: The Life and Times of Babe Ruth, by Leigh Montville, 2006
39. Babe Ruth, Baseballs Legends; Norman L. Macht, 1991
40. Babe Ruth: A Biography, by Wayne Stewart, 2006
41. Home Run: The Story of Babe Ruth, by Robert Burleigh, 1998, 32pp, isbn#0152009701;
42. The Babe Book: Baseball's Greatest Legend Remembered by Ernestine Miller, 2000, 176pp, isbn#0740710125
43. Young Babe Ruth: His Early Life and Baseball Career, from the Memoirs of a Xaverian Brother, by Brother Gilbert, 1999, 220pp, isbn#0786406526
44. Babe Ruth: (Collector's Book # 1 in the Classic Sports Shots series), by Bruce Weber, 1993, isbn#0590470183
45. Babe Ruth (31 pages), by Richard Rambeck, 1993, (Publisher: Childs World)
46. Babe Ruth: His Life and Times, by Paul Adomites and Saul Wisnia, 1995
47. Babe: The Sports Careers Of George Ruth, Hahn Photographs, 1981
48. Babe Ruth: (Champion Sports series), by James Duplacey, 2001
49. Babe Ruth (Illustraded Lives Series) by Heroes of America
50. The Babe: The Game That Ruth Built, by Lawrence Ritter, 1997 304pp isbn#0965694909
51. The Babe Chases 60: That Fabulous 1927 Season, Home Run by Home Run, by John Robertson, 1998, 176pp, isbn#0786405031
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Well, at this moment, this is the list that is available on www.Bookfinder.com
http://www.bookfinder.com/search/?au...ic&st=sr&ac=qr

Normally, they have a lot more. But if 48 are listed as available at this moment, you can imagine how many are not available until tomorrow

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:44 AM
---------------------Babe Ruth
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/192020Babe20Ruth20x120020by20Paul20.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:45 AM
Arkansas spring training---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Red Sox
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Babe2520with2520the2520Red2520So-1.jpg

Muddy Ruel/Babe Ruth. He was safe, 1927.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image6-1.jpg

October 10, 1923, Polo Grounds, exhibition playing with Giants. Yes, you are seeing right. Babe in a Giants' uniform.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Oct_20102C2019232C20Polo20exhi-1-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:45 AM
Jack Dempsey/Babe Ruth: Ansonia Hotel, NYC, 1927----------------------------------------------Babe Ruth/Frank Baker: 1921
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/hjhjhhj.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/untitled-2-1.jpg

1916: L-R: Babe Ruth, Bill Carrigan (Mgr.), Jack Barry, Vean Gregg.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image1-1.jpg

1921, Polo Grounds.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------Johnny Vander Meer, June 16, 1938, after his 2nd no-hitter.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image8-2.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Johnny20Vander20Meer2C20Jun20162-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:46 AM
1942: Publicity shot for the movie, Pride of the Yankees.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/untitled-3-1-1.jpg

1947: With Benson Ford, discussing his involvement with the film, The Babe Ruth Story, with William Bendix, who later found fame in TV sitcom, The Life of Riley.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-1.jpg

Lou Gehrig/Babe Ruth: July 4, 1939, Lou Gehrig Day, Yankee Stadium.
The Luckiest Man on the Face of the Earth. With that hug, Babe ended their 5 year 'feud'.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Player%20Tributes/Image2-94.jpg

April 17, 1929 5AM; Church of St. Gregory the Great, NYC; Wedding Day to Claire Hodgson.
L-R: George Lovell (witness), Groom Babe, Bride Claire, Mrs. Lovell (witness), Father William Hughes.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/loiu-1-1.jpg

With his Cadillac. Babe was always a clothes horse. Wife Claire saw to that. Probably the 1930's.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/With20his20Cadillac-1-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:46 AM
1931
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/1931-1.jpg

May 28, 1924: Babe Ruth on General John J. Pershing's 1924 visit to Washington, DC, to report as a new recruit for the National Guard.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-10.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:47 AM
Another little perk for Babe's fans. I collect quotes and here on some on Babe's fielding. Enjoy!
------------------------
Historical Quotes of Babe Ruth's Fielding:

Ban Johnson (AL Pres., 1901-27) Cincinnati sports writer, 1887-93, President Western League (minor league)

1929 - And then I thought of Cobb, Speaker and Ruth and I discarded all others. These men represent the pick of all-time in any man's league. You simply can't escape them. Cobb is unexcelled - unequaled I should have said. The greatest runner, the greatest hitter and the most powerful attacking force the game ever knew, - In addition a great fielder in his prime. And as to Ruth, well, he is still with us and going at his best. Many believe Ruth just a slugger and a home run showman. That is not the truth. Ruth is a great player as well as a great hitter. He is a splendid fielder and a good base runner for his size. He is a better thrower than Cobb was, and Ty was good in his earlier days. He has the baseball instinct, as shown by the fact that he has played first base and has pitched, and at each position he has been successful to a high degree. In my opinion, Ruth is not outshone by the other two outfielders named. He is one of the greatest players that ever lived, in my opinion. (Sporting News, March 14, 1929, pp. 5, column 2)

George Sisler (AL 1B, Man., 1915-28)(NL 1B, 1928-30)

1931 - "He is really a great outfielder, one of the greatest. He plays batters correctly, covers a lot more ground than you'd think he'd be able to do with his bulk, and has one of the deadliest throwing arms ever known. Besides, Babe has an accurate baseball judgment and never throws to the wrong base." (Baseball Magazine, April, 193l, pp. 484, "The Greatest Players I Ever Saw, Comprising an interview, by George Sisler, pp. 484-485)

Shirley Povich (Washington sports writer, 1922-74)

1959 - "As a defensive outfielder he was top-hole despite his great bulk, and his throwing arm was one of the most feared." (Baseball Digest, March, 1959, Washington Post, pp. 42, 43)

Christy Mathewson (NL pitcher, 1900-16)
Cincinnati manager (1916-17), Giants' coach (1919-20), Reds Pres. (1923-25)

1924 - "Most enthusiasts think of Ruth only as a mighty batsman. As a matter of fact, he is a very finished outfielder with a marvelous throwing arm. . . Ruth plays a hard-hit ball as well as any outfielder in the business. He goes after a ground ball like an infielder, and for all his size he is a smart and daring base runner. (Collier's, The National Weekly, October 11, 1924, pp.45)

Ed Rumill (Christian Science Monitor sports writer (1930-72)

1947 - "Few modern fans may realize it, but Babe Ruth was a great outfielder. We mean defensively. The Babe rarely dropped a ball he got his glove on and nobody can remember when he threw to the wrong base. How did he get that way? Not by sitting around, watching other outfielders practice." (Baseball Magazine, September, 1947)

Joe Wood AL pitcher & OF (1908-22)

1975 - ". . .Ruth?. . . But he wasn't just a great pitcher and a great hitter, he was a great outfielder. His throws were very accurate and he made long throws. He was a good ballplayer. Great ballplayer. (Baseball Research Journal,1987, #16, pp. 54) (This was a reproduced 1975 interview by Mark Alvarez)

Hugh Fullerton (Chicago sports writer, 1893-1930's)

1936 - "By common consent, Ruth was the hardest hitter of history; a fine fielder, if not a finished one; an inspired base runner, seeming to do the right thing without thinking. He had the most perfect co-ordination of any human animal I ever knew.

John B. Foster NY sports writer (1888-1941)
Editor-in-Chief of the Official Spalding Base Ball Guide (1908-41)
NY Giants business manager / secretary (1912-1919)

1938 - "Ruth could make marvelous catches of fly balls that were as spectacular in their cleverness as made by any outfielder playing ball. Especially was this true of those long high flies which, to a slower man, it would have been impossible to get under." (Spalding Official Baseball Guide, 1938, put out in early 1938)

Tris Speaker (AL OF & Man., 1907-28)

1928 - "I have been asked my opinion of great outfielders I have known. By outfielders I mean solely the ability to play the position quite apart from batting or base running talent. I will say, without hesitation, that Babe Ruth is one of the half dozen greatest outfielders I ever saw.

This is aside from his slugging ability, which is unrivaled, and his base running ability which is much greater than is commonly supposed. Purely as an outfielder, Babe will rank among the game's greatest. He was not always so.
When he first shifted from the pitching slab to the outfield, he did not seem to take his work seriously. His thoughts were mainly devoted to his batting. No doubt they still are. But for all that, Babe has become a great outfielder. He covers a lot of ground, primarily because he plays the batter correctly. He has a sure pair of hands, a wonderful throwing arm and he always knows exactly what to do with the ball when he gets it. (Baseball Magazine, October, 1928)

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:47 AM
1941 Golf Matches With Ty Cobb

June 25, 1941 - Commonwealth Country Club of Massachusetts, West Newton, MA, Ty won, 3-2, Cobb 80, Ruth 83.
June 27, 1941 - Fresh Meadows on Long Island, NY. Babe won. Were tied at 85, after 18th hole, Babe won the 19th hole, 5 shots to 6 for Ty. 250 spectators.
July 29, 1941 - Grosse Ile Golf & Country Club, outside Detroit, Michigan. Ty won, 3-2. Cobb 86, Babe 89. 2,500 spectators. Proceeds to United Services Organizations.
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Randy:
Cobb took the first match in Boston, but Ruth had been two up before squandering the lead.

The last match was a foursome that Ruth and Montague won, but in Ruth vs. Cobb, he took it.
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Never one to turn down a chance to contribute to charity, but I wonder how much Gehrig's death on June 2 was still on his mind. Had to put things into perspective a bit.

July 29, 1941 - Grosse Ile Golf & Country Club, outside Detroit, Michigan. Ty won, 3-2. Cobb 86, Babe 89. 2,500 spectators. Proceeds to United Services Organizations.
For this final, deciding 'rubber match', Babe and Ty were joined by Walter Hagen and Mysterious John Montague. Babe's duo won, but he individually lost to Ty.
L-R: John Montague, Babe, Ty, Walter Hagen.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image4-2.jpg

Source below, left: 'Ty Cobb: The Tiger Wore Spikes', by John McCallum, 1956, pp. 176.
Fresh Meadow Country Club, 2nd match, June 27, 1941.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image6-3.jpg

June 25, 1941 - Newton, MA
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image9.jpg

Fresh Meadow Country Club, 2nd. match, June 27, 1941.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image11.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:47 AM
Some special compliments that Babe picked up from some special ballplayers.
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Christy Mathewson lauds The Babe: (The Outlook, August 30, 1922, pp. 704, Interview by Frederick M. Davenport)

We fell to discussing the salaries of big players. "They are very much larger now than they were in my day," said Mathewson. "I began at $250 a month for six months' work. Even at the height of the period the best players got only from $7,000 to $10, 000 for the season. Now I hear that Babe Ruth gets somewhere near $40,000 a year."

Here was an opening. I said, "Isn't Babe Ruth growing irascible and showing pretty poor self-control?" Instantly the poise and breadth of sympathy of Mathewson showed itself. "Well, I don't know," he replied. "Self-control is a wide word. Sometimes the management doesn't think a player has self-control because he exercises his own judgment at the bat instead of following implicitly the directions of the coach. Ruth is what he is. It is his temperament which makes him so valuable to baseball and so worthy of his salary. The mass of people on the bleachers care most for a man whom they can cheer to-day and jeer to-morrow, and Ruth fits into that picture. He is on the heights when the bleachers rock with applause, and he is correspondingly depressed and irritable sometimes when the great crowd turns on him because he doesn't produce the thrills. It is all in the mercurial temperament. And it is the very thing which gives Ruth great money value.

Now there is Sisler, of the St. Louis team--he is every bit as valuable a player as Ruth, some people think more valuable. But he has another temperament. When he makes a great hit or a great play and the crowd are ready to idolize him, he modestly touches his cap and fades away out of sight. He doesn't fit into the picture."
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Hans Wagner Lauds Babe: On January 11, 1924, Honus Wagner chose an All-Time Team for the Los Angeles Times. Here is a tid-bit. His remarks on Babe. Interesting article.

No all-American team would be complete without Babe Ruth, either as a regular or extra man. His hitting alone gives him a place. And, let me tell you, Ruth is a much better fielder and a faster man on base than a lot of people think. He looks slow on account of his immense size, but that boy can get about. Babe Ruth is without a doubt the longest hitter that baseball ever knew.

I have seen all the long range boys but nobody in the world could ever hit a ball like Ruth. Many pitchers are justly afraid of pitching to Ruth. They fear he may hit a ball directly back at them that would be fatal. They pass him for that reason as any other. If I had him in the two-three hole you can bet I'd let him walk rather than put one in the groove.
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John McGraw - With respect to Ruth's historic 1919 spring training Tampa, FL HR, I thought you all might be interested in what John McGraw had to say about it. This is taken from his memoirs, written in 1923.

"The longest hit I ever saw, and I feel pretty sure that it was the longest ever made, was a wallop by Babe Ruth in an exhibition game down in Tampa, Florida, off "Columbia" George Smith, who was pitching for the Giants.

I didn't believe it possible for a man to hit a baseball as far as that. He caught the ball squarely on the nose and it started like an ordinary long fly. Instead of coming down, though, it kept rising.

"My God," exclaimed one of the players, "where is that ball going?"

The drive cleared the field, a race track and then the fence. Interest in its length was greater than in the game itself. For the rest of the game that was all we talked about.

To be sure of its length a party of newspaper men and players went out and measured the distance accurately. That ball had traveled 587 feet. Mind you, that is just thirteen feet short of two hundred yards! Can you imagine such a drive?

That hit by Ruth would have cleared the bleachers and the center-field fence in the Polo Grounds. It was easily the longest hit I ever saw, or ever expect to see.

Often I am asked if any of the old-timers like Dan Brouthers or Ed Delahanty could hit a ball as hard as Ruth. My answer is "no." I don't think a man ever lived who could put such force behind a ball. (John McGraw: My Thirty Years in Baseball, by John McGraw, (as told to Boze Bulger), 1923, pp. 183-184.)

Elsewhere in his book, McGraw had this to say about Babe.

"I have chosen him because of his spectacular hitting. Nobody could ever hit a ball like Babe Ruth. He can play any of the outfield positions and as a pinch hitter is supreme. Despite his great bulk and apparent slowness Babe Ruth is a corking good base runner. He has been the greatest drawing card that the game has ever produced.

I have to smile when I realize that I have picked a team for the American League and, in my opinion, have made it so strong as to necessitate keeping Babe Ruth on the bench as a utility outfielder." (John McGraw: My Thirty Years in Baseball, by John McGraw, (as told to Boze Bulger), 1923, pp. 235.)
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Walter Johnson discourses on The Babe.---Baseball Magazine, October, 1929-------------------------

People have asked me if I didn't consider Babe Ruth the greatest of natural hitters. I certainly do not. There are many times when Babe looks terrible at bat. I've seen him miss a ball by two feet. Nobody ever saw Joe Jackson miss a ball two feet. Babe has his particular specialty where no one can equal him. He can hit a ball harder than anybody who ever lived. But why go outside that specialty and make claims for him that aren't true?

Babe is certainly a terrific slugger. No one can convince me that his equal ever lived since baseball graduated from the rounders stage. I, for one, do not expect to live long enough to see any other player come up who can hit the ball, day in and day out, as hard as Ruth. Some kind friends have claimed that Lou Gehrig can hit the ball nearly as hard as Babe. Perhaps he can, but if so, it's just nearly. Gehrig may be second best, but he's not and never will be Babe's equal in sheer slugging.
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-----------------The Greatest Batters I Have Ever Faced-----------------Baseball Magazine, June, 1925.[/COLOR]

Babe Ruth is the most dangerous hitter I ever saw, but he is not the best hitter. Like Ty Cobb, Babe has other talents which help out his batting. He is so big and strong that sheer strength works for him just as speed worked for Ty Cobb. Ty would beat out an infield hit by fast footwork. Babe will beat out an infield hit by sheer strength, for he will top a ball and still drive it through the infield for a hit.

The public figures a batter altogether by results. His average is what counts. But a pitcher figures a batter by his ability as a batter. Ruth will look worse in one game than Lajoie would look all season. He will sometimes get crossed up and miss a ball by two feet. Lajoie was a well nigh perfect hitter. Ruth, at times, is about as imperfect as anybody you could think of. But he is, with it all, naturally a good hitter and his prodigious strength and knack of driving the ball for long clouts makes him the most dangerous batter in the game.

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:48 AM
I once wrote this little biography on Babe, trying to limit myself to lesser-known stuff.
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The Babe: A Personal Glimpse

As a final contribution to this tribute to the Babe, I'd like to donate this piece, where I put as many little-known facts of the Babe's life into this as I knew of. Hope it entertains.

George Herman Ruth, Jr. was born February 6, 1895, in Baltimore. His father, George Herman Ruth, Sr. was born in Baltimore also, on January 31, 1871. His mother, Catherine (Schamberger) Ruth was born in Baltimore in July, 1873. The Ruths were German Catholics. His parents were married on June 25, 1894. So apparently, Babe was conceived before the Wedding Day. Babe was born in his mother's home at 216 Emory St., now home to the Babe Ruth Museum.

Babe was baptized a month after he was born, March 1, 1895, by Father J. T. O'Brien at the Catholic Church down the street from where he was born.

Babe's sister, Mary Margaret (Mamie) (Ruth) Moberly, was born Aug. 2, 1900 and died on July 1, 1992, in Hagerstown, MD 21740 at age 91. She had married married Wilbur Moberly.

After Mary Margaret, Katie had 6 other children before she died in 1912, but they all died at birth or at an early age.

As soon as he could stand, he was difficult to handle. So his Dad dropped him off at St. Mary's industrial School on June 13, 1902. He was only 7. He was raised Catholic, and the Xaverian Brothers saw to it that he went to Mass, etc. He was assigned shirt-making as his future profession. And Babe always knew a good quality shirt after that, and sewed his own collars too.

The Xaverian Brothers, hadn't known that Babe had already been baptized, and baptized him again on Aug. 7, 1906, by Father Francis. On May 9, 1907, he received the sacrament of Confirmation. He received his first Holy Communion on Aug. 15, 1906. Babe was taken in hand by Brothers Gilbert and Mathias. Brother Mathias taught Babe how to play baseball. Babe caught and pitched for the school team.

One of the reasons that Babe's Dad had put him in the school, was the fragile health of his mom. She died August 11, 1912, at the age of 38. Babe was still at the school and aged 17. 18 months later, he signed his 1st pro contract. Her death certificate states "exhaustion" as cause of death.

Lest any misunderstanding arise from what has been written here, the core essence of this man was love, not rancor. He was always seeking the love from life, that which he was denied from day one. And he was always willing to give it out, to all near him. He never held his love/goodwill/affection back from anyone. Man, child, animal.

Babe was signed by Jack Dunn, who owned the minor league team, the Baltimore Orioles, on Feb. 27, 1914, as a pitcher. Before the mid-season, Dunn would sell him to the Boston Red Sox, as a pitcher.

On July 11, 1914, Babe debuted with the Boston Red Sox. He got into 5 games, and batted 10 times, got 2 hits. He started 3 games, went 2-1, as his W-L, pitched 23 innings, gave up 21 hits, and struck out 3 batters, walked 11. Not bad for a 19 yr. old kid. He was 6'2, weighed a svelte 180 lbs.

On August 15, 1914, the Red Sox sent Babe to Providence, to acquire a little seasoning. Babe won 11, lost 2 while there. They won the pennant. Carl Mays had been his team mate, and both were brought back to Boston to stay.

He probably faced 1,000 batters, hit 11 of them, had 11 wild pitches. He also hit .231, with 28 hits, 1 HR, 2 doubles, 10 triples.

The next season, he became a full-time pitcher star, and from 1915-17, he was the best LH pitcher in the AL. It was also noticed that, on occasion, he hit the ball so hard and so far, that the fans got excited. The right-fielder on the team, Harry Hooper, encouraged him to convert to the OF, and play every day. Manager Ed Barrow scoffed at such a notion at first, but by 1918, had been persuaded to play Babe in the OF, between his pitching assignments. It was a decision which would alter the course of the game.

During his year in the minors, with Baltimore, Babe married Helen M. Woodford. She had been born in East Boston, MA in Oct. probably 1897. They were married on Oct. 17, 1914. They would stay married until her accidental death in a fire, on Jan. 11, 1928. But they were separated since the early 1920's.

Babe says that his Dad never visited him at the school, but Babe visited home often, but always was returned to the school soon after. During the 1915 World Series, in Oct., Babe visited his Dad's bar, and a famous photo was taken. The resemblance between father/son was striking. Babe's Dad apparently didn't care about his son in the least, and was killed outside his bar, trying to mediate a scuffle, on August 25, 1918. He was stabbed with a knife by his brother-in-law, who claimed it was self-defense, and was later determined to be an accident. Babe was 23.

Life passed quickly. Babe had made good as a pitcher, and was signed by the Boston Red Sox in July, 1914. He was good from his first day. A born ballplayer, by 1917, he had shown good promise as a hitter, and he wanted to stop pitching. As stated earlier, his manager, Ed Barrow, who had previously managed Detroit in 1903-04, wouldn't hear of it. He insisted Babe take his regular turn on the mound every 4th day, in between his OF assignments. Babe balked. Said his arm was tired. He even once ran away to Philadelphia in protest. They had to go get him and bring him home.

But he was a handful. Refused to obey any curfew, etc. By 1920, Babe had become a great HR champion and was sold to the hated rival Yankees, who converted him into a full-time OF, which he wanted. And the NY press welcomed him to NYC like a conquering hero.

After the 1920 season ended, Babe went to California to play ball in the Pacific Coast L, and had an affair with Juanita Jennings, a Latino beauty. She got pregnant. Babe told her if she ever came East, to look him up. She called him not long after, from Cal. Told him she was knocked up. Babe convinced her to come to NYC to have the baby. She trusted him and came. Babe made arrangements to have her put up in a nice apartment, and then the hospital to have the baby.

This was all hush-hush, because he was married, and having a huge sports season. A scandal might have turned his fans against him. And he couldn't afford that, since his drawing power was what gave him a lot of his value.

So the baby girl, Dorothy was born, and Babe coerced Juanita into giving up her baby, so Babe could raise her. Babe arranged for him and his wife Helen to adopt the baby legally. And everyone assumed baby Dorothy was not his biological baby, even Dorothy herself, until told the news by Juanita herself in Oct., 1980, 2 weeks before she died. This info is found in Dorothy's book, "My Dad, The Babe," by Dorothy Ruth Pirone, with Chris Martens, 1988, pp. 194.

Juanita, as a strategy to stay near to her daughter, found ways to be near her. From 1960 to 1975, Dorothy took care of her, never suspecting her to be her true, biological mother. Two weeks before she died, she revealed to a shocked Dorothy that she was, in fact, her mother, and showed her photographic proof, as evidence. It was quite a shock, but a relief also.

In 1923, Babe, estranged from wife Helen, who went back to Boston, met a young, 26 year old, attractive, Georgian woman, named Claire Hodgson, a divorcée. Babe was immediately taken by her, and they became a couple right away. But Babe couldn't afford to tell her the truth about Dorothy, since Claire could have held that info over his head, as a weapon.

When Babe met her, he was 28, but thought he was 27, due to a mixup of his birth certificate. So Claire believed him to be 27. Claire herself was 26, having been born near Athens, GA on Sept. 27, 1897. For reasons unknown, Claire always falsified her age. She introduced herself to Babe as being 23, and always told him and others that she was born Sept. 27, 1900. Georgian birth records confirm the truth. She was born Clara Merritt. http://baseball-fever.com/showpost.php?p=489705&postcount=391

[http://baseball-fever.com/showpost.php?p=489681&postcount=390]

Not long after Babe married her, Claire moved her mother, her 2 brothers, & daughter, Julia, into their Riverside Dr. apartment, with Babe & his daughter, Dorothy.

They were presumably very nice people. One of the brothers, Eugene Merritt, presumably jumped to his death, in a suicide from the 15th floor, on January 12, 1936, at the young age of 45. He had been very ill from WWI, and had since been a shoe salesman (1920); clerk in Siegel Pharmacy, & conductor on Hudson Tube railroad.

Incidentally, by one of the quirks of fate, Claire had known very well a 20 yr. old Ty Cobb back in her childhood in Georgia, and had flirted with him around 1907, when she was only 10. In his biography, by Al Stump, Cobb wrote, "I met a girl named Claire Hodgson, and for a while it got interesting."

When estranged wife Helen died in a fire in 1929, Babe was freed to marry Claire, which he did on April 17, 1929. She had a daughter Julia, by a previous marriage. Julia was born in 1915. Babe adopted Julia, and Claire adopted Dorothy. Babe & Claire got along reasonably well. But by 1937, he had had enough of her domineering ways, and had taken up with a tall, attractive redhead named Loretta, and lived with her for months at a time every year, in a small hamlet in NY called Greenwood Lake. He loved to fish, hunt, and enjoyed the taverns, restaurants, bars, lodges, etc.

Around 2 weeks before Babe died, 2nd wife Claire, went to his hospital room, with her lawyer in tow, and had Babe sign papers. It was a new will, which transferred his main assets, a trust fund for Dorothy, which he had since 1928, to herself, Claire, as the beneficiary. It had $400,000.

So Claire stole Dorothy's inheritance, and lived on it the rest of her life. But Loretta surprised Claire, by showing up at the hospital before Babe died. She demanded $25,000. from Babe's will, or she'd go to the NY Times with her story. She got the money.

Much of the information in this article came from the following sources, which are specialized documentation, available to the public through SABR.

My Dad, The Babe, by Dorothy Ruth Pirone, with Chris Martens, 1988

Babe Ruth: The Dark Side, by Paul F. Harris, Sr. He is a native Baltimoran, a retired attorney.

Babe Ruth and the New York City Press: 1919-1932, by Craig Lynn Irons, 1996.

The Life That Ruth Built, by Marshall Smelser, 1975. (Info on Babe's minor L. career.)

The 2nd/3rd 2 papers are available via SABR (Research Exchange, Len Levin, 282 Doyle Avenue, Providence RI 02906-3355.)
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Not long after Babe married her, Claire moved her mother, her 2 brothers, & daughter, Julia, into their Riverside Dr. apartment, with Babe & his daughter, Dorothy. They were presumably very nice people.

Thought some of my readers might be curious to learn what became of this warm, little family.

Dorothy Helen (Ruth) Pirone(daughter) was born Jun.7, 1921, in NYC, & died May 18, 1989, at the age of 68, in Durham,CT. Born St. Vincent's Hospital, 7th in Greenwich Village. Married Daniel J. Sullivan, on January 11, 1941, a Brooklyn employee of the Railway Express Co. Had daughter on Nov. 8, 1941. Had 4 other children. She married Dominick Pirone, a NY contractor, in NYC, on December 8, 1948. She was separated from him from 1965-71. Raised Arabian horses in Durham, CT.

Hubert L. Merritt (Claire's brother) was born October 8, 1894, in Georgia, and died October 14, 1948, in NYC, at the age of 51. Arrived in NYC in 1920. Worked for Harry M. Stevens Co. 1923-48, had served as a soldier, Camp Funston, Riley, Kansas.

Eugene Merritt (Claire's brother), was born July 24, 1890 in Georgia & died January 12, 1936 at the age of 45 in NYC. Was shoe salesman(1920); clerk in Siegel Pharmacy, conductor on Hudson Tube railroad. d. suicide,jump from NYC 15th, floor while he was residing with his sister, Claire, mother, Cassie Merritt, brother-in-law, Babe Ruth and Ruth's biological daughter, Dorothy and Claire's daughter, Julia.

Julia Hodgson)(Ruth) Stevens (Claire's daughter) was born July 7, 1916 in GA, & is still alive & living in Conway, NH at the age of 89.

(Clara Mae Merritt) Claire (Hodgson) Ruth ( wife 2), 5'2. Was born September 11, 1897 near Athens, GA. & died October 25, 1976, in NYC 10024, at the age of 79. Married the Babe April 17,1929. Claire always claimed 1900 as her birth year, when it was really Sept., 1897. She was flirting with Ty Cobb before he married another in August, 1908, that would have made her 10. After 1937, Babe spent long periods away from home with his girlfriend. d. cancer

Cornelia (Carrie) Lou (Rylle) Merritt (Claire's mother) was born March, 1872 in Gainesville, GA & died April 13, 1943 in NYC at the age of 71. The Merritt clan arrived in NYC, after the father died in Georgia on May 29, 1920.
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Others in the Babe story.

Frank Bishop Hodgson (Claire's 1st Husband) was born December 25, 1883 & died February 16, 1921 at the age of 37 in Fulton County, GA. Was a small hotel owner.

Juanita (Jennings) Ellias (Dorothy's mother) was born November 29, 1894 & died October, 1980, at the age of 86 in Durham, CT. Bore Babe his only biological child.

Colonel James Monroe Merritt, (Claire's father) was born March, 1862, in South Carolina, and died May 29, 1920, in Barrow County, GA. Was a lawyer, teacher.
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I'd like to continue some of Babe's story.

I'd like to pick it up in Nov., 1920. At that time, his future 2nd wife, Clara Merritt, then Claire (Merritt) Hodgson, arrived in NYC, with her 5 yr. old daughter, Julia, and her 20 yr. old black friend/maid, Marie Martin, and checked into the Waldorf.

She immediately sought work as a model, with Christie, the famous portrait artist. She posed from 9AM to sundown, and also posed for Harrison Fisher and Penrhyn, but mostly for Christie, for $10./day. She soon was able to move herself, Julia and Marie into a 4 room flat on 70th Street bet. Brdwy./Columbus.

Her father died May 29, 1920, in Georgia, and her mother then moved to NYC, to stay with her. Christie had connections, which led to Claire getting a small part in a Brdwy show, Dew Drop Inn. One day, one of the cast asked if she and another would like to go to the ballgame, and see the Yanks and Babe Ruth. It was in 1923. Dew Drop Inn was on tour in Washington. They went to Griffith Stadium. She went, met Babe, wasn't too impressed, but Babe started to call her regularly.

When Babe met her, she was tiny. 5'2, 100 lbs., 26 yrs. old, brunette, attractive. Coming from Georgia, she had an accent like Jimmy Carter. She'd have pronounced it, Jimma Cata. Talked just like Ty talked. Soft Atlantan tones.

And so began Babe's long courtship and going steady with future 2nd wife Claire. From 1923-1929, they dated as a steady couple. But on the road, Babe did what his liberty allowed him to do. Women constantly threw themselves at him. But when he was in town, NYC, he presumably behaved himself. At some point, Claire's 2 brothers re-located from Georgia to NYC, and they all lived together. Not the Babe, of course. He was still married, but separated from 1st wife Helen.

Babe became a regular staple at the Merritts' home. This went on for 7 years, until one day, word came that Babe's wife, Helen had died in a Boston fire. Babe was frantic to get his daughter, Dorothy, with him. He knew she was his biologically, but no one else did, beside Juanita Jennings, who at that time was not in the picture.

Babe married Claire on April 17, 1929, and on January 14, 1930, he formally adopted Claire's daughter Julia, and she formally adopted Babe's daughter Dorothy. Only thing was, Claire never knew Dorothy was Babe's actual biological daughter. She always introduced Dorothy as "our adopted daughter, Dorothy"! Tacky as hell. Dorothy always hated that, but Claire intended for all to "know" that Dorothy wasn't the "real thing".

Another interesting arrangement was that Claire suggested to the Yankees' that she be allowed to go on the road with the team. The Yanks took her up on her offer. It worked to their mutual advantage.

So from 1929-34, whenever the Yanks left town, Claire went along, and the Ruths enjoyed staying in a separate room. However, the Yankees never failed to bill the Babe for this extra perk. This kept Babe out of mischief. Prior to this, he'd always sleep with a woman, come in to the team hotel around 5-6AM. Now, he'd have his wife to ride herd over his amorous dalliances. She got to run clearance between Babe & his female groupies, and the Yanks no longer needed to watch his curfew.

Another little tidbit, is the rift/feud between the Babe and Lou Gehrig.
Sometime in 1933, 14 yr. old Dorothy was visiting the Gehrig's home in New Rochelle, NY. Lou's Mom Gehrig, commented on how she usually looked like a ragamuffin, compared to how sharply-nattily Claire's daughter, Julia usually looked. Well, another Yankee wife over-hears the remark, and mentions it to another Yankee wife, and ka-boom. Word filters back to Claire, who feels shamed and PISSED. Next day, Babe brings up the remark to Lou.

Now Lou is passive and easy-going. There could be a long list of things he can roll with. Telling his mother to mind her own damn business is not on the list. Lou was a Mama's boy all his life. By choice. Now, let me be clear here. No one can ever be criticized for defending one's mother. God forbid. And there is a list a cosmic mile long, of things which are worse than being a Mama's boy.

But this is what caused the feud. Babe told Lou to never talk to him again, off the field. But Babe was Babe. Later, he tried to approach Lou and make up, but Lou brushed him off. Babe had been something of an idol/hero to Lou, and a good pal besides. So when Babe turned on him, it had hurt him deep.

This silly situation remained until July 4, 1939, on Lou Gehrig Appreciation Day at Yankee Stadium. When Lou uttered his famous heart-felt words, "Today, I feel like the luckiest man on the face of the Earth", Babe walked over and hugged him. Lou didn't shrug him off. So the rift ended that day. And Babe visited him after that too.

Another tidbit is the interplay between Babe and Leo Durocher. Leo was all glove, no bat. At the end of the 1926, '27 seasons, the Yanks brought Leo up to warm the bench at the close of each season. He got into no games, however, which is why it doesn't appear in the record books that he was on those teams.

Babe liked to kid the guys and when Leo came up, Babe dubbed him "The All-American Out". Man did that burn Leo's butt?! But since it came from Babe, what could he do but grin and bear it?

One day, a players very expensive wrist watch disappears from the Yankee clubhouse, and Babe accuses Leo of light-fingering it. Leo is furious & humiliated, but again, what can he do? Babe is Babe, and he's the "All-American Out." So, he denies it vehemently, but . . . what can he do?

Leo plays a slick glove for the Yanks at SS/2B, for '28-29, is released to the Reds, drifts to the Cards, and ends up in Brooklyn for 1938. Comes June 17, 1938, Babe is hired on by Larry MacPhail, Brooklyn GM, as a 3rd base coach. Babe was hired to appear in all exhibition games, and give a 10 minute hitting exhibition before each regular and exhibition game. Pay? $15,000./per season.

Babe mistakenly assumed he'd be made manager the next season. Came a moment during the season, Babe was thought to have missed a signal, which cost the Dodgers the game. Babe mistakenly assumed that Durocher had told reporters about it. Ruth next day, stormed into the clubhouse and told Durocher, that "whatever happened in the clubhouse, stayed in the clubhouse", and that feeding a missed signal to the press was dirty pool. Leo charged Babe, and bulled him into the lockers behind him. Other players, of course, came between them and intervened.

But next season, when manager Burleigh Grimes was let go, for finished 7th, Babe read that the new manager would be - Leo Durocher! After reading it in the morning editions, Babe sat in his kitchen and wept. He never called MacPhail, and MacPhail never called him. He was out of Baseball once again.

No contract arrived in the mail, and Babe assumed Durocher didn't want him. Durocher confirms that he didn't want him or need him. Durocher further claims that he never told the press about the missed sign, and also that he never told MacPhail to not rehire Babe. Durocher claims that the press just assumed a missed sign, but he never confirmed it to them.

All he wanted to do was be a part of the game he adored. In some way a part of the ML scene. That he was never given another opportunity saddens me deeply. He and Ty. Ty and he. Both WERE baseball, and had the smarts and desire to contribute. Such waste. Baseball has made such errors of judgment in its past. I've forgiven it, but still feel sad that those who loved it so profoundly were brushed off so shabbily.

Hope someone is reading this. I'm enjoying the retelling of it. Is anyone out there enjoying this? Let me know.

Most of this material came from the following:

The Babe and I, by Mrs. Babe Ruth, with Bill Slocum, 1959, Prentice-Hall, Inc.

My Luke and I, by Eleanor Gehrig and Joseph Durso, 1976

My Dad, The Babe, by Dorothy Ruth Pirone, with Chris Martens, 1988

Nice Guys Finish Last, by Leo Durocher, 1975
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Excerpts from Claire's book:

Babe's 2nd wife, Claire had some choice words for Ed Barrow in her 1959 autobiography, The Babe and I. Here are a few of her choice morsels.

"Barrow, as Babe's manager in Boston, and later as general manager of the Yankees, was his particular bete noir. Here was enmity from the start, with no quarter on either side over a quarter century. Huggins had to handle Babe at Babe's most riotous. Hug never succeeded. Ruppert was a constant foe at contract time and always backed Huggins, despite Houston's espousal of the Babe's rather weak case. Landis, as Commissioner of Baseball, was a cruel and ruthless judge. McCarthy exerted no discipline, just implacable loathing which was reciprocated.

I do not see them all as blackly as they appeared to Babe. I think both Huggins and Ruppert tried very hard to understand their lucrative problem child. (pp. 61)

"But Barrow did one thing for Babe Ruth. Barrow took Babe, who might well have become the greatest pitcher of all time, and made of him the greatest hitter of all time. And that took one thing Barrow had in abundance, courage. Taking Babe from the mound is not the obvious move it seems. It was obvious he was a remarkable hitter and even before Barrow came on the scene Carrigan and Barry occasionally took advantage of an opportunity to use Babe's bat more than once every four days by giving him an occasional job at first base or in the outfield. But neither man ever dared think of Babe as anything but a pitcher. Taking Babe off the mound was like telling Paderewski (Polish pianist Ignace Paderewski) that he should try the violin. (pp. 62-63)

If for nothing else, the Babe and his friends can always be grateful to Barrow for having the courage of his convictions. And, frankly, I can think of nothing else to be grateful to Ed for. (pp. 64)

But the Babe always felt that the basic problem he faced in dealing with Ruppert was Ed Barrow.

Ed, tough as a hickory nut, wise in the knowledge that baseball law made Ruth helpless in all salary fights, was always set against big salaries for Babe. Ed's friends said Barrow was without rancor in the matter. He was merely doing his job, which was to run the Yankees as economically as possible.

Babe felt Barrow's attitude was personal. They had fought in Boston and again in New York. They were bitter fights and the men hated each other. (pp. 142)

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:49 AM
Babe Ruth, posing with 4 yr. old Yankee Mascot, little Ray Kelly.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/The2520Babe2520and2520The2520Mas-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:49 AM
The Rajah and The Babe: Some nice shots.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Babe20Ruth20alongside20Rogers20Horn.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image10-4.jpg
-----------April 7, 1922, in the South----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1920.

October 6, 1926, World Series, Sportsman's Park----October 2, 1926, WS, Yankee Stadium
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image11-1.jpg

October 9, 1926, World Series, Yankee Stadium. With Kirk Miller,------------------------------------------------------------October 8, 1926, World Series; with J.A. Hillerich,
presenting the Babe Ruth All-American certificate to Rogers.------------------------------------------------------------------- representative of the bat company.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image15-1.jpg

October 2, 1926 before World Series. Hornsby's wife, Mary, in the background. Holding Christy Walsh, Jr.---------------October 9, 1926, World Series, Yankee Stadium. With Kirk Miller, presenting the Babe Ruth All-American certificate to Rogers.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image17.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:49 AM
The Babe and The Peach:

1920---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Babe Ruth/Ty Cobb: 1927
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image13-10.jpg

------------------Babe Ruth/Ty Cobb, 1923, Navin Field.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image28-3.jpg

1920
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image10-1-1.jpg
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1921-26

-------------------------------------1927.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Player%20Tributes/192720Babe2020Ty20Cob9.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:49 AM
The Babe and the Sizzler:

Babe Ruth/George Sisler----------------------------------------------------------------------------------George Sisler/Babe Ruth
May 14, 1924, Yankee Stadium---------------------------------------------------------------------------1922, Sportsman's Park
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image28.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:50 AM
AUCTIONED BABE RUTH BAT: December 2, 2004. What a beauty.

The baseball bat, signed by Babe Ruth, with which Babe Ruth hit the first home run at Yankee Stadium on April 18,1923 is seen being handled and placed in a display case, by a worker from Sotheby's Auction House in New York City made available Friday, December 3, 2004. The bat sold for $1,265.000 to an unidentified collector at a baseball memorabilia auction at Sotheby's, Thursday, December 2, 2004.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image4-3.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/DWF15-1013185.jpg
-------------------------------------------------
April 5, 2004: One of only three bats known to be in existence that contain notches carved around the center oval trademark brand to indicate home runs that Babe Ruth hit at the Louisville Slugger Museum.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/DWF15-663628.jpg

April 5, 2004: One of only six known game-used bats actually autographed by the legendary Babe Ruth, arguably the greatest baseball player of all time. The bat went on display at Louisville Slugger Museum on Saturday, April 3, in commemoration of the 120th anniversary of Louisville Slugger baseball bats.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/DWF15-663615.jpg

June 28, 2005: Artifacts from the legendary career of baseball star Babe Ruth on display inside the Babe Ruth Birthplace and Museum in Baltimore, Maryland on June 28, 2005. Among the dozens of displays are personal items from Ruth's life including jerseys, signed baseballs and documents. Ruth was born in the house, just a few blocks away from Camden Yards, where the Baltimore Orioles play their American League home games.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/42-16132037.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:50 AM
October 7, 1915 World Series: Red Sox Pitching Staff:
L-R: Rube Foster, Carl Mays, Ernie Shore, Babe Ruth, Dutch Leonard.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Fester2C20Carl20Mays2C20Shore2C2-1.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image30.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:50 AM
Eddie Collins, Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Tris Speaker; April 20 1928, Yankee Stadium.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Collins25252C252520Cobb25252C252520.jpg

Eddie Collins, Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Tris Speaker; April 20, 1928, Yankee Stadium.-----------------------Opening Day, 1928, Shibe Park.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image29.jpg

Lou Gehrig, Tris Speaker, Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth; Opening Day, 1928, Shibe Park. Yanks won 8-3.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image31-1.jpg

Lou Gehrig, Tris Speaker, Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth: Opening Day, 1928, Shibe Park.-------Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Eddie Collins: 1927 Opening Day, Yankee Stadium.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image27-1.jpg

1927 Opening Day, Yankee Stadium. L-R: Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Eddie Collins.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/19272520Cobb252C2520Ruth252C2520Col.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:56 AM
Red Sox, 1915-19.---------------------------------------------------------1920-21.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image32.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:56 AM
Lou Gehrig/Babe Ruth---Looks like around 1928.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Babe252520252526252520Lou252520--1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:57 AM
1924 World Series: Honus Wagner, Bill McKechnie, John McGraw, Walter Johnson, Babe Ruth, Nick Altrock, Christy Walsh.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/dkdkdkdlsl-1.jpg

1933 All-Star Game: Babe Ruth, Al Simmons, Earl Averill. AL's starting out-fielders.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image36.jpg

Babe Ruth, Red Sox.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/dkslsldiree-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:58 AM
The Babe in Authentic Technicolor.

We seldom see Babe in authentic color. They didn't develop color photography until 1935. So, we mostly see him in glorious b/w, or occasionally in sepia tone. But these shots from 1947 are not colorized but the real thing. Enjoy! Cheers!

April 27, 1947: Babe Ruth Day at Yankee S.: Bucky Harris (Yank Mgr.), Babe, batboy----------------April, 1947
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-6.jpg

April 27, 1947, Babe Ruth Day at Yankee Stadium
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/UKD475INP.jpg

April 27, 1947, Babe Ruth Day at Yankee Stadium
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/UKD475AINP.jpg

April 27, 1947 Babe Ruth Day at Yankee S.: Bucky Harris (Yank Mgr.), Babe, batboy.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/UKD475BINP.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:58 AM
After his wedding to 2nd wife Claire, 1929.-------------------------------------January 14, 1930. Babe adopts Claire's daughter, Julia.
She was a 32 year-old southern girl from Atlanta.------------------------------Claire adopts Babe's daughter, Dorothy.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-70.jpg

Babe's real biological daughter, Dorothy (Ruth) Sullivan,
with her husband, Dominick Pirone, 1948. She was 28.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image38.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:59 AM
Babe Ruth, Boston Red Sox.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/1916BabeWarmsUpRedSox.jpg
I like this Ruth photo. If they had made a Babe Ruth movie in the 1980s or 1990s Vincent D'Onofrio would have been the perfect actor to portray Ruth.

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:00 AM
Red Sox Pitcher---------------------------------------------------------------------------Red Sox Pitcher
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image42.jpg

March 2, 1927: Signing his 1927 contract, with Jake Ruppert. Ed Barrow, standing.
How unusual that Babe wrote with his right hand and pitched with his left.----------Signing his 1932 contract, for $75,000. with Jake Ruppert, with wife Claire. He was angry about the $5K paycut.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image44.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:13 AM
---------------1920-21

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:13 AM
Babe looking snazzy.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image49.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:13 AM
1926----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Red Sox' P
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image52.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:14 AM
Babe Ruth/Miller Huggins: February 22, 1921.--------------------------------------------------------------Boston Red Sox
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image27-3.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image20.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:14 AM
Babe Ruth/Lou Gehrig
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/lklklk-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:14 AM
1927
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/58156a-1-1.jpg

November 7, 1927: Los Angeles: Lou Gehrig, Christy Walsh, Babe Ruth.-----------------with Jake Ruppert, 1933.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image54.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:15 AM
-----The One and Only Babe, 1932 World Series ---BB-Reference (http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/r/ruthba01.shtml)
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image56.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:15 AM
June 23, 1925 - vs. Washington Senators. Babe Ruth sliding into third base.

BSmile posted this on the Babe Ruth thread, and I find myself shameless in stealing it here. It's that good.

Thanx Bill!
Yeah, there aren't many great action shots of the Babe (besides batting of course).

Thanking me? Oh, NO! I and everyone else ARE THANKING YOU!

How you find these priceless photos is beyond me. I've seen many of your photos before, but always in small size, and only average condition.

You seem to find the original photos, and in LARGE size. This Ruth shot is so absolutely gorgeous. We can see his expression in exquisite detail. Whenever I try to blow something up, it comes out lousy. Distorts all the original beauty. That is why so many of my stuff is so small. I refuse to compromise clarity for size.

But YOU! You never seem to compromise! How in hell can you get away with such size. It seems that the larger you blow it up, the most gorgeous and amazing it gets! I'm furious with envy!!! Just isn't fair.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Babe20into203rd20-206_23_192520v-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:16 AM
1920-21-------------------------------------------------c.1931, Babe signing copies of his "How To Play Baseball" book for several children in wheelchairs and beds.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image58.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:16 AM
1928 Banquet for Sports Champions:
Top: Babe Ruth (baseball), Gene Tunney (boxing), Johnny Weissmuller (swimming, played Tarzan in movies), Bill Cook (hockey)

Bottom: Bill Tilden (tennis), Bobby Jones (golf), Fred Spencer/Charlie Winters (6 Day bicycle race).
A shame Jack Dempsey for boxing was not included in this wonderful photo. Or Jose Capablanca for chess.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-5-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:16 AM
1934 Tour of Japan Team.

Top, L-R: Charlie Gehringer, Frankie Hayes, Moe Berg, Babe Ruth, Connie Mack, Lou Gehrig, Lefty O'Doul, Earl Whitehill, Earl Averill, Bob Schroder (A's business manager), unidentified (probably radio station manager)..

Bottom: Eric McNair, unidentified, Doc Edward E. Ebling (trainer), Jimmie Foxx, Lefty Gomez, Bing Miller, Joe Cascarella, unidentified.
*Doc Edward E. Ebling joined the Philadelphia A's in 1915. He died February 11, 1938 at the age of 63. He was their trainer/chief masseur.

Others listed but I can't find are: Frank (Rabbit) Warstler, John Quinn, Clint Brown.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image3-2-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:16 AM
Miller Huggins making up with Babe Ruth in 1925.----------------------------------------------Making up after one of his 1925 suspensions with Babe Ruth.

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:17 AM
The Babe
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/babe3.jpg
Good one there Bill, this one I really like. Not sure why.

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:17 AM
1947: Babe Ruth, signing to do the Babe Ruth Story.
Benson Ford is standing with the light-colored suit and striped tie. Sports writer Hy Turkin on the right with the bowtie.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Babesignscontract.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:17 AM
Babe Ruth/Frank Baker: April 13, 1921, Polo Grounds.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-5-2.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/untitled-2.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:17 AM
Babe Ruth and The Swing Heard Round the World--- Babe Ruth Thread (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=21998)---Babe Ruth Discussion (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=37535)---Rare Babe Ruth Photos (http://baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=73654)---Bill's Babe Ruth Photos (http://www.baseball-fever.com/showthread.php?t=80285)---BB Ref (http://www.baseball-reference.com/r/ruthba01.shtml)---Babe Ruth video (http://img508.imageshack.us/img508/8581/babeswing2ph7.gif)

--------------Red Sox, P/OF, 1918, Polo Grounds----------------------- April, 1923, Yankee Stadium------------------------------------------1926.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image26-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:18 AM
SultanOfWhat found this from the Babe Ruth thread. Too good to not raid (steal). I'm quite shameless in my photos thievery, aren't I? :):dance:blush:
Babe Ruth, 1921 during spring training at Hot Springs, Arkansas:

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:18 AM
Babe Ruth, Ernie Shore, Rube Foster, Del Gainer: 1915-17

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:20 AM
September 15, 1923: Jack Dempsey, Babe Ruth, Christy Walsh.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-3.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:20 AM
October 2, 1931, Sportsman's Park, visiting with Connie Mack at World Series.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image7-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:20 AM
October 4, 1924: George Sisler, Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb at the first game of the 1924 World Series at Griffith Stadium in Washington, D.C.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Player%20Tributes/12310u_0.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:21 AM
Babe Ruth, 1920.
(BSmile contributed this one to Rare Babe Ruths, and it was too great not to raid [steal]. He enhanced it and I selectively tinted it with sepia.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/192020Babe20Bench20Po.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:21 AM
April 27, 1947: Babe Ruth Day at Yankee Stadium. Farewell to Baseball Address Speech: 58,339 fans turned out at Yankee Stadium.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image29-2.jpg

Background: L-R: Master of Ceremonies Mel Allen, Francis Cardinal Spellman, Commissioner Happy Chandler, Emory C. Perry (long time Babe Ruth friend),
William Harridge (AL President), sports writer Hy Turkin (in the bowtie).
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/BabeRuthday-1.jpg

L-R: Unidentified, unidentified, Ford Frick (NL Pres.), William Harridge (AL President) is partially obscured by Babe, Babe Ruth, Master of Ceremonies Mel Allen, Francis Cardinal Spellman, Commissioner Happy Chandler, Emory C. Perry (long time Babe Ruth friend).
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image9-1.jpg

June 13, 1948: Babe Ruth bows out.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/June131948.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:21 AM
Red Sox' Pitcher, 1914-19
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image12.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:21 AM
BSmile posted this on Rare Babe Ruth, and there was absolutely no way I could resist tweaking it. Babe is autographing for kid fans with wife Claire next to him. Opening Day, April 20, 1937, Yankee Stadium.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Babe20signs20YS204_20_1937.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:22 AM
Date unknown: 1920-30?
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image6-2.jpg

1930 Spring Training: Babe Ruth, Yankees' owner Jake Ruppert, Manager Bob Shawkey, Lou Gehrig.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/62426a.jpg

Earle Combs, Babe Ruth, Bob Meusel: Yankee OF, 1924-29.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/CombsBabeMeusel-1.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/CombsBabeMeusel.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:23 AM
The swing that changed the game.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image46.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:23 AM
This is one of BSmiles' rare finds. And as usual, when my resistance is low, I just can't help helping myself. With a minor tweak.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/babe20lady.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:23 AM
Babe surrounded by his young, adoring fans.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image6.jpg

Babe, glaring at the enemy pitcher as he nears his battle station! Must have been a study in intimidation.
He looked like a hitter, he walked like a hitter, he HIT LIKE A HITTER!!!
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image7.jpg

In a contemplative mood.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/1930s20Babe20SpTr20po.jpg

April 27, 1947: Babe Ruth Day at Yankee Stadium. Farewell to Baseball Address Speech: 58,339 fans turned out at Yankee Stadium.
Nearing the end of the road. Cardinal Spellman and Happy Chandler in the background.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image8.jpg

The stance that said it all. Preparing to launch.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image17-1.jpg

1915, with his Red Sox team mates.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/1915RedSox.jpg

Christy Walsh/Babe, inspecting their barn-storming touring uniforms.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/babeandchristybarnstorming.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:24 AM
Mickey Cochrane, Babe Ruth, Charlie Gehringer.---At 1934 or 1935 World Series.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Babe20in20Detroit20.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:24 AM
Daughter Julia Ruth Stevens. 1930's

http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-4.jpg
Daughter Julia Ruth Stevens. March 6, 2006, at home in Sun City, Arizonia.

From the Family Album. Februay 6, 1934. Babe's 39th birthday. L-R: Dorothy, Claire, Julia (seated, playing), Babe.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image4-5.jpg
February 6, 1937: Babe's 42rd birthday. L-R: Dorothy, Julia, Carry Merritt (Claire's mother), Claire, Babe.

http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Image1-3.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/1930NovDorothyJuliaBabeReadsbk.jpg
November 4, 1930: Dorothy (10), Babe, Julia (14).

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:24 AM
September 15, 1923: Jack Dempsey/Babe Ruth/Christy Walsh
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/lfCA1YOJJI-1.jpg

Jack Dempsey/Babe Ruth: Hotel Ansonia, 1928.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image16-3.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:25 AM
---1920-21.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-5.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 06:48 PM
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/RuthBabe_photo43-1.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-9.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image4-1.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/The2520Babe2520picks2520a2520bat-1.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Arkansas20spr_20tr-1.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image12-1.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Babe20Ruth20in20ND20jersey20gehrig2.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/62366a.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/1915BabeL5B15D-1.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image4-6-1.jpg

Bill Burgess
03-18-2011, 07:01 PM
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Babe20looking20dapp.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-2.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image50.jpg

Bill Burgess
06-10-2011, 03:20 PM
Dorothy Ruth, when she was a little girl. No one knew until decades later that she was really Babe's own biological daughter. He hid it so well.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Player%20Tributes/2011-12-21_134819.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Player%20Tributes/2011-12-21_134729-2.jpg
1926: Dorothy Ruth is being held at the ballpark by Babe's first wife, Helen Woodford.
L-R: Helen Woodford's mother, Helen Woodford, Dorothy Ruth, Nick Altrock.

Bill Burgess
09-28-2011, 02:53 PM
---------1933
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-11.jpg

The following 3 shots might be when Babe was consulting with Columbia Pictures, in 1947, when they were making the Babe Ruth Story with William Bendix.
It looks like Bendix himself shaking hands with the Babe.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image4-7.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image3-3.jpg
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image7-2.jpg

Bill Burgess
10-11-2011, 06:01 PM
Arthur Aloysius McGovern---Artie McGovern

Born: January 21, 1892, New York City
Died: November 1, 1942, Phoenix, AZ, age 51,---d. Post-Graduate Hospital, after brief illness with kidney ailment.

Physical Conditioning Trainer;
Cortland Township (Westchester County), (1910 census)
NYC Taxi Cab owner, chaufeur, (WWI Civilian Draft Registration)
NYC, gym school, (January 12, 1920 census)
Rye (Westchester County), physical instructor, (April 3, 1930 census)

Father: Walter, born New York, November, 1860; Mother: Alice, born Ireland, November, 1862; Wife: Ruth, born Ohio, around 1893; Daughter: Ruth, born New York around 1920. Artie married Ruth around 1916.

Artie was a colorful personality who assisted some of the most famous athletes in the world as a conditioning trainer. He helped Babe Ruth following his subpar (for him) 1925 baseball season. He also helped train boxing heavy-weight title-holder Jack Dempsey, Babe Didrickson, Gene Tunney and Gene Sarazen.

Artie started out as a boxer with 100 fights. He broke a knuckle in his right hand during a fight. He had saved $6,000 and entered the taxi cab business, but it failed. A doctor friend, Dr. William Hills Sheldon, suggested he take up training others. He backed him, and Artie took the post of physical director at the New York Physicians Club, and later set up his own gym on West 66th Street in NYC. He became popular and opened up other gyms. In 1937 he had a staff of 100 people. His gross income was estimated at around $400,000 per year.

His clients were not only famous athletes like John Farrell (golf) and Vinnie Riochards (tennis), but Grover Whalen, Marshall Field, John Philip Sousa and Whitneyh Warren. He was married twice. His first marriage ended in divorce and his second wife, the former Miss Ethel Colton survived him, along with his daughter, Ruth.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/U210466ACME.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/2011-10-11_163958.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image4-8.jpg
L-R: Paul Whiteman (band leader), Artie McGovern,-------------------------------------------------------------------1933: Babe Didrickson, hanging upside down/Artie McGovern--------------------------------------------Sporting News' obituary, November 5, 1942, pp. 10.
John Philip Sousa (music composer), Christy Walsh (standing), Babe Ruth.

Bill Burgess
12-28-2011, 03:32 PM
May 1, 1940: Babe at the wedding of his daughter, Julia Flanders.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image2-12.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/2011-12-28_115342.jpg

August 8, 1959: Mrs. Gehrig sitting with Mrs. Ruth at Old-Timers' game.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image3-4.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/2011-12-28_115824.jpg

April 15, 1976: Mrs. Gehrig / Mrs. Ruth.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/2011-12-28_121053.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/2011-12-28_115725.jpg

Bill Burgess
12-28-2011, 03:37 PM
February 2, 1941, Hotel Commodore, NYC; New York City baseball writers' annual dinner;
L-R: Jimmy Walker (NYC Mayor), Babe Ruth, Ford Frick, George Ruppert, Taylor Spink.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image4-9.jpg

Bill Burgess
05-29-2012, 08:44 PM
Babe signing his first professional contract with Baltimore. (L-R) Jack Dunn and Ned Hanlon.
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Bills%20Rare%20Photo%20Finds/Bills%20Babe%20Ruth%20Photos/Image12-2.jpg

Bill Burgess
11-16-2012, 03:51 PM
http://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/Image1-3.jpghttp://i685.photobucket.com/albums/vv217/BillBurgess/1930NovDorothyJuliaBabeReadsbk.jpg
November 4, 1930: Dorothy (10), Babe, Julia (14).

Sultan_1895-1948
11-25-2012, 09:05 PM
Some very nice shots Bill ! :applaud:

Let me know if I can be of any assistance

Bill Burgess
11-25-2012, 09:53 PM
Some very nice shots Bill ! :applaud:

Let me know if I can be of any assistance
Thanks, Randy. It's my pleasure. Just so glad to see you around here. Hope the visit is as extended as possible.

Sultan_1895-1948
11-25-2012, 10:16 PM
Thanks, Randy. It's my pleasure. Just so glad to see you around here. Hope the visit is as extended as possible.

I'm doing my best Bill. The ignore button helps. :dance