Happy Fathers Day!



 
Featured Panoramic Photo Above:
 Scene from the 1960 World Series

Baseball History Comes Alive Now Ranked As a Top Five Website by Feedspot Among All Baseball History Websites and Blogs!

(Check out Feedspot's list of the Top 35 Baseball History websites and blogs)




 

Guest Submissions from Our Readers Always Welcome! Click for details

Visit the Baseball History Comes Alive Home Page
Subscribe to Baseball History Comes Alive
Free Bonus for Subscribing:
Gary’s Handy Dandy World Series Reference Guide
Get new posts by email
  Baseball Fathers and Sons Photo Gallery

Happy Fathers Day!

“It was at St. Mary’s that I met and learned to love the greatest man I’ve ever known…He was the father I needed. He taught me to read and write, and the difference between right and wrong.” -Babe Ruth, speaking of his father figure and mentor, Brother Mathias

On this Father’s Day 2025, I’d like to wish all the fathers out there a very Happy Fathers Day!

What American institution has ever been better at bonding together grandfathers, fathers, and sons, generation after generation, than the great game of baseball? And so what better way to celebrate Fathers Day on Baseball History Comes Alive than with a photo tribute to some of baseball’s more notable fathers and sons. I’ve posted a number of them in the gallery above. 

Brother Mathias

But first, I’ll continue my annual Fathers Day tradition with a salute to Brother Mathias, who served as the father figure and mentor to an incorrigible young lad who arrived at the Baltimore orphanage known as St. Mary’s Industrial School on June 13, 1902 at the age of seven. The lad would remain an “inmate” of the school for seven and a half of the next 12 years. His name was George Herman Ruth, Jr. When he finally left the school for good in 1914, he was pitching in the major leagues within a few months.

On Fathers Day a couple years ago, I posted the classic photo of the Babe tending bar at his father’s saloon. One of the readers took me to task saying: “That photo is inappropriate for Father’s Day. The only real father figure in the Babe’s life was Brother Mathias.” Plus, the pic was taken during the 1915 Christmas season at old-man Ruth’s Baltimore gin mill, not really appropriate for a mid-summer holiday.

Babe Ruth helping out at his father’s saloon, 1915

I had to admit the guy raised a good point. So to set the record straight, every year since, I’ve used the occasion to do a nice tribute to Brother Mathias, Babe’s true father figure, including the great featured photo above of the Brother Mathias at the wheel of his new Cadillac. Also seen are Yankee teammate Fred Merkle and Babe’s first wife, Helen.  It’s been said that after he became a baseball star with the Yankees that the Bambino often gave Brother Mathias a new Cadillac, and I believe the photo above is a depiction of that.

George Ruth, top left, at St. Mary’s

 Here are a few words about Brother Mathias from Robert Creamer’s great book, Babe – The Legend Comes to Life:

“He was a huge man, nearly six feet six inches tall and probably over 250 pounds. He had a calm, expressionless face that could turn icy cold when he was displeased. The boys at St. Mary’s were scared of Brother Mathias, whom they referred to as the Boss, but he had qualities that endeared him to them. He was immensely strong, stronger than any of them, and that impressed them. He never ranted or shouted. He was always calm, always consistent, always fair – and they appreciated that. If they misbehaved or broke a rule, they were punished. ‘He gave everyone a fair break but, brother, if you ever crossed him, you sure were in trouble.’ “

“There is no testimony that Mathias administered corporal punishment. Usually, a boy was deprived of certain meager privileges allowed at the school, like freedom during the recreation periods or the right to play ball. When the punishment was over, the incident was over too as far as Brother Mathias was concerned; and the boys looked upon this as eminently just.”

“Brother Mathias could hit tremendous fungos, long towering fly balls, and he would hit them swinging the bat with one hand.  Ruth said: ‘I think I was born as a hitter the first day I ever saw him hit a baseball.’ In later years, Mathias would work for hours with George, hitting the boy grounder after grounder. ‘I could hit the first time I picked up a bat,’ Ruth also said, ‘but Brother Mathias made me a fielder.'”

Brother Mathias was quite a man…and I’m happy to recognize him once a year on Fathers Day for all he did for a young troublemaker at St. Mary’s who severely lacked discipline named George Herman Ruth; and also for all the hundreds of other boys he influenced over the years at St. Mary’s. For many, he was the only father figure they ever had. 

And with that, let me wish a very Happy Fathers Day to all the dads out there! Hope you enjoy your day with your families! And if you have time, be sure to play a little catch today with your sons or daughters!

Gary Livacari

Photo Credits: All from Google search

Information: Excerpts and quotes edited from Babe – The Legend Comes to Life, by Robert Creamer.

We’d love to hear what you think about this or any other related baseball history topic…please leave comments below.

 

Subscribe to Baseball History Comes Alive. FREE BONUS for subscribing: Gary’s Handy Dandy World Series Reference Guide.  https://wp.me/P7a04E-2he

Get new posts by email

Visit the Baseball History Comes Alive Home Page

 

2 thoughts on “Happy Fathers Day!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.