Claire Merritt Ruth
Claire Merritt Hodgson Ruth, born Clara Mae Merritt (September 11, 1897[1] – October 25, 1976), was a native of Athens, Georgia, United States, who is most famous for having been the second wife of Babe Ruth.
Biography
Claire's first husband, Frank Hodgson, died in 1922, leaving her with a daughter, Julia.[2] She met Ruth in 1923. Ruth was still married to Helen Woodford, his first wife, at this time. Woodford died in a house fire in January 1929, and Ruth and Hodgson married that April 17, staying together until Ruth's death in 1948. In later years, she indicated her responsibility, in part, for the poor relationship between her husband and teammate Lou Gehrig. According to Claire, Gehrig's mother indicated that the Ruths' adopted daughter, Dorothy, was not as well dressed as Claire's natural daughter, Julia; when Ruth was informed of this, he angrily demanded that Gehrig never speak to him off the ballfield again. Ruth and Gehrig would not make up until the day of Gehrig's famous "I'm the luckiest man in the world" speech in 1939. 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.[3]
Claire lived to see two of Ruth's most famous records broken: his single season record of 60 home runs, superseded by Roger Maris in 1961; and his career record of 714 home runs, which was broken by Hank Aaron in 1974. In her twilight years, she sometimes attended games that Aaron was playing in, and was supportive of Aaron's effort. The gracious widow Ruth was quoted as saying: "The Babe loved baseball so very much; I know he was pulling for Hank Aaron to break his record."[4]
Mrs. Ruth was portrayed by Claire Trevor in the 1948 film The Babe Ruth Story, by Lisa Zane in the 1991 TV-movie Babe Ruth, by Kelly McGillis in the 1992 film The Babe, and by Renee Taylor in 61*.
Claire Ruth is buried next to her husband at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York. The inscription on the headstone lists her birth year as 1900, instead of 1897.
References
- ↑ "Family Search", Familysearch.org, 1900 US Census, Retrieved on 2012-02-08
- ↑ "Claire Ruth, Widow of Baseball Great" The New York Times. October 26, 1976. hosted at deadballera.com. Accessed August 13, 2012.
- ↑ Adomites, Paul and Saul Wisnia. "Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig". howstuffworks.com. Retrieved on August 13, 2012.
- ↑ Lowitt, Bruce (December 25, 1999). "Oh, Henry! Aaron swings past Ruth". St. Petersburg Times. Accessed August 13, 2012.
External links
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