Birthday Tribute to Babe Ruth

Birthday Tribute to Babe Ruth



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Birthday Tribute to Babe Ruth

Happy Birthday Babe! Here’s a few words about the Babe and his wife, Claire Hodgson.

Claire Hodgson,was a dark-haired beauty who had come to New York from her home in Georgia. At 14, she had married a Southern aristocrat almost 20 years older than she. The ill-fated marriage produced a baby girl, Julia, but soon fell apart. A restless Claire escaped to the big city seeking a career as a fashion model.

Claire and Babe’s romance was an open secret for five or six years, but marriage appeared out of the question for Ruth. For one thing, he already was married, to Helen Woodford, a coffee-shop waitress he had met in Boston during his playing days with the Red Sox. For another, though Babe and Helen long had been living apart, Ruth, a Catholic, refused to consider divorce.

Circumstances changed suddenly in 1929. Helen, who had been living near Boston, was killed when fire destroyed the house she shared with a man who neighbors assumed was her husband. The Ruths’ adopted daughter, Dorothy, away at boarding school, was spared.

The death of the first Mrs. Ruth removed a major obstacle for Babe, and he married Claire about three months later. A year after that, the blended family formally merged into one when Babe adopted Julia and Claire adopted Dorothy. The new family actually was considerably larger. For most of Babe and Claire’s marriage, the couple also shared their New York apartment with Claire’s mother and two of her brothers.

Ruth had been a major cavorter during his first marriage, driving his wife to nervous exhaustion with his drunken binges and infidelity. But that changed when Claire entered the picture.Gone were the days when Ruth tipped $100 for a ham sandwich. Claire took over the household finances, limiting him to the $50 checks she wrote when he needed pocket-money for haircuts and cigars. Ruth’s drinking and eating marathons also slowed. ” He loved food, no question about it,” says his daughter, Julia Stevens, who recalls her father’s affection for roast beef, steaks and shrimp.

Some of Ruth’s friends resented Claire’s tight-fisted control over the Babe. But Stevens said her father never did. ” In a lot of ways, she was rather strong-willed,” she says of Claire. ” But she had to be to keep Daddy in tow. And she did it in a way that Daddy didn’t mind. If she would say, ‘I don’t think we should do such and such,’ he wouldn’t argue. He’d say, ‘All right.’ I think he felt she was a better manager of the house, social life and things like that than he was.”

If Claire took over the Babe’s social life, she also played a role in his famous feud with teammate Lou Gehrig.The Yankees sluggers were opposites: Gehrig, a frugal mama’s boy who rarely missed his 10 o’clock bedtime, and Ruth, the carouser who never met a curfew he expected to keep. But they were close pals through the 1920s, batting back-to-back in the Yankees lineup and teaming up on off-season barnstorming tours. Away from the ballpark, Gehrig’s mother took a liking to the Babe’s daughter, Dorothy, often inviting her to spend afternoons with her and Lou at the Gehrig home.One of Dorothy’s overnight visits led to a fight that turned the families against each other for years.

The little girl arrived at the Gehrigs’ home with worn, old play clothes. Stevens recalls that Dorothy had packed the things herself while her mother was out of town. But for Ma Gehrig, it was just another example of Claire Ruth’s favored treatment of Julia and her neglect of her adopted daughter.

Stevens recalls: ” Mrs. Gehrig said, ‘Mrs. Ruth’s daughter [Julia], she goes to the ballgames in silks and satins, and poor little Dorothy has nothing but rags to wear.’ ” When Mother heard about that, she said, ‘Tell Lou’s mother to keep her mouth shut.’ And that was that. Lou wouldn’t stand for anyone speaking about his mother.”

It took Gehrig’s fatal illness in the late 1930s to reconcile the families. Later, Claire admitted that she had overreacted, apologetically accepting full responsibility for the rift between the two players—which, however, had numerous other causes besides the one indicated by Claire.
-Gary Livacari
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Photo Credit: Featured photo from the George Brace Baseball Photo Collection; others from public domain; colorizations by Don Stokes

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.

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