“Babe Ruth Day” at Yankee Stadium, June 13, 1948 and the Twenty-Five Year Reunion of the 1923 Yankees!

“Babe Ruth Day” at Yankee Stadium, June 13, 1948 and the Twenty-Five Year Reunion of the 1923 Yankees!



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“Babe Ruth Day” Photo Gallery
Click on any image below to see photos in full size and to start Photo Gallery:

“Babe Ruth Day” at Yankee Stadium

and

The Twenty-Five Year Reunion of the 1923 World Series Champion Yankees!




I admit it…I’m a sucker for Old-Timers photos! And here’s a real good one:

Twenty-five year reunion of the 1923 Yankees in 1948.

It was taken 75 years ago yesterday, June 13, 1948, celebrating the 25th anniversary of the opening of Yankee Stadium, which, of course, later became known as “the House That Ruth Built.” In addition, it was also “Babe Ruth Day,” with a special reunion of the 1923 Yankees, the first Yankee team to win the World Series. An ailing Babe Ruth is in the center of the top row. As part of the day’s festivities, the players participated in a two-inning “Old-Timers” game. Wouldn’t that have been fun to watch! See how many of the Yankees you can pick out before looking at the player identifications below.

(In the featured photo, we see the iconic photo of the Babe taken by Nat Fein on June 13, 1948)

The First Game at Yankee Stadium

The Bronx Bombers opened Yankee Stadium on April 18, 1923, with a 4-1 victory over the Red Sox. Fittingly, Babe Ruth christened the new stadium with a home run. After a 7-2 victory over the Philadelphia Athletics on May 5 to regain first place, the Yankees never looked back, going 98-54 (.645) and finishing 16 games ahead of the Tigers. In the World Series, they beat their cross-town rivals, John McGraw’s New York Giants, four games to two, for the first of their 27 World Series championships.

Babe Ruth Day, June 13, 1948

The Bambino had quite a year in 1923. His .393 batting average set a Yankee record, although it wasn’t good enough for the batting title. He finished second to Harry Heilmann’s .403.  On the way to winning the American League MVP award, Babe led the league in all the following categories, some of which are “off-the-charts”: Home runs (41), RBIs (130), Runs (151), On-base percentage (.545), Slugging average (.764), Total Bases (399), Walks (170), OPS (1.309), and OPS+ (239[!]).  He even threw in 17 stolen bases.

Here are a few excerpts from newspaper accounts about the historic day, June 13, 1948:

“June 13, 1948, was a special day in Yankees’ history, as the club celebrated the 25th anniversary of Yankee Stadium. Among the highlights was a reunion of the 1923 Yankees team – the first team to play in Yankee Stadium, and the first Yankee team to win the World Series. Most importantly, the June 13, 1948 occasion featured “Babe Ruth Day” with a special ceremony during which the Yankees formally retired a dying Babe Ruth’s uniform #3 and sent it to Cooperstown. During the ceremony, an emotional crowd of 49,641 fans sang ‘Auld Lang Syne’ to the Babe.”

Nat Fein photograph of Babe Ruth

“The historic day marked the great Bambino’s final appearance in a Yankees uniform and at Yankee Stadium. He passed away just two months later on August 16th. Nat Fein’s famous Pulitizer Prize-winning photo, titled “The Babe Bows Out,” was taken on this day.”

An earlier “Babe Ruth Day” was held on April 27, 1947. That was the occasion in which a raspy-voiced Babe Ruth in civilian attire addressed the silenced crowd. Some scenes from that day are also included in the photo gallery.

Player Identifications: 

Top Row, L-R: Hinkey Haines, Waite Hoyt, George Pipgras, “Bullet” Joe Bush, Oscar Roettger, Babe Ruth, “Jumpin'”Joe Dugan, Bob Meusel, Wally Pipp, Elmer Smith. Front Row, L-R: “Sad” Sam Jones, Wally Schang, Carl Mays, Whitey Witt, Fred Hofman, Mike McNally

Hall of Famers in the photo: Waite Hoyt and Babe Ruth. Lou Gehrig was a rookie on the 1923 Yankees, appearing in 13 games. Besides Babe and Waite Hoyt, other Hall-of-Famers on the roster included Gehrig and Herb Pennock, plus manager Miller Huggins.

Gary Livacari 

Photo Credits: All from Google search, including the Neil Fein photo; and from Getty Images / Mark Rucker / The LIFE Picture Collection (see link below)

Information: Excerpts edited from Article on Babe Ruth Day

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I'm a baseball historian who also enjoys writing. My forte is identifying ballplayers in old photos, and my special interest is the Dead Ball Era.

12 Comments

  1. Michael Handley · June 14, 2023 Reply

    That reunion couldn’t have been timed any better as The Babe passed away a little over 2 months later on August 16th!

  2. michael keedy · June 14, 2023 Reply

    Nice job, Maestro! I especially appreciate loving remembrances, such as this, which are slightly understated rather than over-the-top. How the Babe managed to cram a long and other-worldly career into such a ridiculously short life I’ll never quite understand. May he continue to rest in peace.

    Happy Flag Day!

    Michael

  3. Thomas L Marshall · June 14, 2023 Reply

    One of the most poignant baseball photos ever taken. IMHO, “Babe Ruth Day” ranks second only to the July 4, 1939 “Lou Gehrig Farewell”; in the emotion and sadness it evokes. Whenever I look at this photo of “The Bambino’s” final appearance in Yankee Stadium, I am reminded of the the contrast between the reverence shown to him at his final MLB appearance, and the disgraceful exit from the game by a player who The Babe always said he patterned his potent swing after….. “Shoeless Joe” Jackson. Great article, Gary. “PLAY BALL”

  4. william schaefer · June 14, 2023 Reply

    Gary,
    That’s some photo snapped by Nat Fein, in ’48.

    I’ll always remember the audio clip when Babe addressed the crowd and said how bad his voice sounded, then added, “And it feels just as bad.”

    Thanks for another great remembrance!

    Best, Bill

  5. Andy Polizzi · June 14, 2023 Reply

    W.C. Heinz wrote that Ruth “walked out into the cauldron of sound he must have known better than any other man.”

    Sportswriters sure knew how to turn a phrase back then.

    Put yourself in Nat Fein’s photo and you can almost feel the old Stadium rocking.

  6. Robert Shupp · August 12, 2023 Reply

    I’m lucky enough to have met Nat Fein, and have that iconic image printed, signed and framed by the man himself.

    Nat Fein was a gentleman, and would tell great stories about his best-known images. I was in the photo business. Nat would come in and flirt with all of the young girls who worked there (In a nice way of course) then he’d bring you outside to his car where he’d open the trunk to take out and show you some of his photographs.

    In this case, he realized that all of the other photographers were shooting from the same side of the field, and that you couldn’t see the number 3 on the uniform which after that day would never be seen again. So, he out flanked them all to the other side and captured magic.

  7. Gary Livacari · August 13, 2023 Reply

    Thanks Robert, great insights.

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