Papers Related to Babe Ruth
Scope and Contents
This collection contains correspondence and newspaper clippings relating to Babe Ruth's career. The telegrams, correspondence and clippings relate to barnstorming in 1921 and 1922 with the associated fines and suspensions. There is correspondence relating to Ruth's involvement in forfeited games and ejections, off-field activities and Babe Ruth Day in 1947.
Dates
- 1921-1968
Conditions Governing Access
Materials are open without restrictions but viewing materials does require an appointment. Please contact the Giamatti Research Center, research@baseballhall.org, 607-547-0330.
Conditions Governing Use
The National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum provides use copies of materials to facilitate private study, scholarship, and research. The Museum welcomes you to use materials in our collections that are in the public domain and to make fair use of copyrighted materials as defined by copyright law and with proper citation.
Biographical / Historical
e Dugan, who once said: "To understand him you had to understand this: He wasn't human." Sports writer Tommy Holmes, winner of the 1979 BBWAA Career Excellence Award, was more succinct: "Some 20 years ago, I stopped talking about the Babe for the simple reason that I realized that those who had never seen him didn't believe me." Ruth has been called an American original, undoubtedly the game's first great slugger and the most celebrated athlete of his time. Soon after honing his skills at St. Mary's Industrial School for Boys in Baltimore, he came to the big leagues as a lefty hurler with the Red Sox, where he won 89 games in six years while setting the World Series record for consecutive scoreless innings. But the Red Sox recognized Ruth's ability at the plate and began transitioning him to the outfield. In 1918, the Red Sox won their fourth World Series title in seven seasons – Ruth was there for three of them – as Ruth led the American League with 11 home runs while also going 13-7 on the mound. Then in 1919, Ruth set a new single-season record with 29 home runs while recording 113 RBI. He went 9-5 on the mound in his last year with more than two appearances as a pitcher. In what is likely the most famous transaction in baseball history, Red Sox owner Harry Frazee sold Ruth to the Yankees for $100,000 following the 1919 season. The next season, Ruth hit 54 home runs with 158 runs scored and 135 RBI, setting the baseball world ablaze with his talent. He would top those numbers in 1921 with 59 home runs, 177 runs scored and 457 total bases. The last two numbers still stand as modern era (post 1900) records. The Sultan of Swat would lead a powerful and renowned New York squad to seven American League pennants and four World Series titles during his 15 years in New York. He led the AL in home runs 12 times, including his record-setting 60 in 1927 – a mark that stood for 34 years. Ruth retired in 1935 after a partial season with the Boston Braves, ending his 22-year big league career with 714 home runs. His lifetime statistics also include 2,873 hits, 506 doubles, 2,174 runs, 2,214 RBI, a .342 batting average, a .474 on-base percentage and a .690 slugging percentage. "It wasn't that he hit more home runs than anybody else," said 1976 Spink Award winner Red Smith, "he hit them better, higher, farther, with more theatrical timing and a more flamboyant flourish." Among Ruth's other remarkable offensive achievements include leading the league in slugging percentage 13 times, bases on balls 11 times, on-base percentage 10 times, runs scored eight times and runs batted in five times. One of the first five electees to the Baseball Hall of Fame, Ruth once said, "The fans would rather see me hit one homer to right than three doubles to left." Ruth passed away on Aug. 16, 1948.
Extent
0.83 Linear Feet (in 2 legal document boxes)
0.92 Cubic Feet
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
This is a collection of correspondence and newspaper clippings relating to the life and career of Babe Ruth.
Arrangement
The original order was maintained in organizing this collection by subject matter and chronologically.
Physical Location
Manuscript Archives, Aisle 8, Range d, Shelf 4
Appraisal
No materials were removed during accessioning or processing.
Processing Information
Materials were placed in acid-free folders and into document boxes.
- Title
- Guide to the papers related to Babe Ruth BA MSS 057
- Status
- Completed
- Author
- Claudette Scrafford, reviewed by Erik Strohl
- Date
- September 2008
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum Archives Repository