February 6, 2008

A Buried Past : It's a chance to honor a woman whom history has mostly forgotten. But it's also an opportunity to revisit a most curious slice of Ruth's most curious life.

read story | posted by justgary to Baseball at 2:40 PM CDT (4 comments total)

So which was it; that the Babe had such a terrible childhood that he blocked his mother from his mind, or that he just didn't care enough for anyone but himself to even remember her?

Either way, his old man wouldn't be winning any father or husband of the year awards.

Comment icon posted by irunfromclones at 3:32 PM CDT on February 6

Nice find, justgary. This is one aspect of Babe Ruth I had never considered. All along, I had thought he had been orphaned, but I never thought he had been thrown into what amounts to a reform school.

Comment icon posted by Howard_T at 3:52 PM CDT on February 6

Thanks Gary for the story. I too had never heard or thought of this aspect of the Babe's life. And thanks to Paul Harris for giving her (Babe's mom) the distinction she deserves, even in passing.

I'm fortunate enough to not experienced much death surrounding my family and I find it curious that a burial plot's location sounds a bit like a ticket stub to a sporting event. Lot#, section#, etc...

Sorry if that comment was cold or heartless, I meant no offense to anyone.

Comment icon posted by BoKnows at 5:34 PM CDT on February 6

Given that every single one of the facts listed about her life seems to be in heavy dispute (and most of it looks to be openly contradictory), I'd love to know how he found her grave in the first place, and how sure he is that that's actually the place.

I agree that it's not a dealbreaker as far as the spirit of the story goes, and the sentiment is certainly a right and good one, but the article didn't answer that question in my mind.

Comment icon posted by chicobangs at 10:40 AM CDT on February 7

« older Munich disaster for Manchester… Nolan Ryan leaves the Astros f… newer »

This thread has been archived and is closed to new comments.