75 years since the death of Babe Ruth
August 16, 2023 is the 75th anniversary of Babe Ruth’s death.
George Henry Ruth, Jr. (1895-1948), affectionately known as the Bambino and the Sultan of Swat was a baseball legend, driving in 2,209 runs and compiling a .342 lifetime average.
To mark the anniversary, the AP looked into the archives for this remembrance of Ruth’s life and career.
“He could have lived to be 150 and have tottered into Yankee stadium or down a street in any city or hamlet in the country on age-tortured legs and there always would have been quick glances, the gleam of recognition and whispered words, relayed as a smoke signal: “Babe Ruth – Babe Ruth – Babe Ruth.”
The Bambino was that kind of a guy – unique, picturesque in his misshapen bulk and vast expanse of swarthy countenance, utterly unforgettable.
He was more than a man. He was a symbol. Baseball players might come and baseball players might go. But, regardless of their achievements, none ever could supplant Ruth in the public mind as the personification of everything that was great and spectacular in the game.
Truly a veritable Paul Bunyan character in performance and with a physique to match, Ruth had that indefinable something called color. Other players might be huge, others might hit even more home runs during a season. But the Bambino had that inborn instinct to make every deed and move exciting.”
Excerpt from “Word Picture of Babe Ruth” by Whitney Martin, AP Sports Columnist, January 6, 1947
“There’ll never be another quite like him, this mountainous, apparently unwieldy man whose every move, strangely enough, was a picture never forgotten.”
Excerpt from “Word Picture of Babe Ruth” by Whitney Martin, AP Sports Columnist, January 6, 1947
Text Excerpts
The Associated Press obituary for Babe Ruth, printed in Bristol, Va. Herald Courier, August 17, 1948.
The Associated Press article, "Mrs. Ruth Goes With Babe To Keep His Baseball Diet”, printed in The Buffalo Evening News, March 1, 1935.
Text and photo curation by Francesca Pitaro