Explore the Bambino’s Baltimore beginnings

Published 12:00 am Sunday, March 2, 2014

BALTIMORE — If Babe Ruth were to walk into what was his father’s bar, Ruth’s Cafe on Eutaw Street, he’d never recognize it. Based on his legendary habits, he’d likely enjoy his visit — Ruth’s Cafe is now a gentlemen’s club called The Goddess — but he wouldn’t recognize it.

In the 98 years since Ruth bought the building for his father, George Sr., walls have been knocked down, the tin ceiling removed and a dancer’s pole installed.

The following is a history-hunting dream for ardent baseball fans making the pilgrimage to Baltimore, home of baseball’s undisputed king.

In this 100th anniversary month of Ruth’s entry into professional baseball, The Goddess is one of several Baltimore-area locations connected to Ruth that can still be found. Some go largely unnoticed, like the church where he was married; others are more obvious, such as the Babe Ruth Birthplace and Museum.

“We are one of the most profound buildings in the baseball world, outside of ballparks and the Hall of Fame,” said Michael Gibbons, executive director of the birthplace. “This building is very important to baseball. The birthplace is a mecca for baseball fans.”

The museum (baberuthmuseum.org) has big plans for this year; it’s working on funding an exhibit and film on the commemoration of 1914 and is considering tours of some Ruth sites.

George Herman Ruth Jr. was born on Feb. 6, 1895, in the home of his maternal grandfather. A few days later, he and his mother, Kate, returned to the family home, where he would spend the first four years of his life. The Ruths then moved to a row house, where he lived for three years before being sent off to St. Mary’s Industrial School for Boys, an orphanage-boarding school-reformatory. His contact with his family after that was infrequent.

On Feb. 14, 1914, Jack Dunn, owner of the minor league Baltimore Orioles, came to St. Mary’s and signed Ruth to his first professional contract. He started that season with the Orioles, then in July was sold to the American League’s Boston Red Sox. He played in five games for Boston before being sent to the team’s minor league club in Providence, R.I. By 1915, he was back in Boston, on his way to greatness.

So what is left of Ruth’s early days? Plenty. You just need to know where to look.

• Babe Ruth Birthplace and Museum: The row house at 216 Emory St. is where Ruth was born in a second-floor bedroom. The house belonged to his mother’s father, Pius Schamberger, an upholsterer. After decades of neglect, it was renovated into a shrine to Ruth from 1969-72 and opened in 1974.

The room where Ruth came into the world has been furnished with period pieces: a large bed, a washstand, a dresser, a sewing machine, a fireplace. The furniture was selected by Babe’s sister, Mamie Ruth Moberly, who helped re-create the room.

• Babe’s first house: There’s a long, white two-story building at the intersection of Font Hill and Frederick avenues, now boarded up and forgotten. Its last life was as a church. But in 1895, it recently has been determined, this was where the Ruth family lived with George Sr.’s brother, John.

• The second home: This one’s exact location has also only recently been confirmed. George Sr. had a tavern at 339 South Woodyear St., a blocklong street that’s in pretty dismal shape. The family lived above the tavern from 1897-1901. While living here, Babe was deemed incorrigible and shipped off to reform school. He was 7.

• St. Mary’s: Ruth’s home from 1902-1914, this is where he learned tailoring and where he became a ballplayer.

“We like to think of it as baseball’s hallowed ground because that’s where baseball’s greatest player learned to play the game,” Gibbons said.

Much of the facility (3225 Wilkens Ave.) burned down in 1919 — Ruth helped raise funds for reconstruction — and St. Mary’s closed in 1950. From the early ’60s, it was Cardinal Gibbons High School, later the Cardinal Gibbons School, but it closed in 2010. Part of the campus will be redeveloped, but the Fine Arts Building, where Ruth was educated, and the baseball field are safe.

• St. Paul’s Catholic Church: Ruth and Helen Woodford met in Boston during the 1914 season, and he brought her back to Baltimore to get married. For reasons not entirely clear — perhaps there was a shorter waiting period — they traveled the 9 miles to Ellicott City, Md., to tie the knot.

“They would have had to take the streetcar out,” said Gloria Baer, an office assistant at St. Paul’s Catholic Church (3755 Saint Paul St.), where the ceremony was held. “That was the only way to get here.”

The church has been remodeled twice since the October 1914 wedding, but the stained-glass windows, altar and several of the statues are original. In the vestibule is a showcase with a copy of Babe and Helen’s marriage certificate.

• The Goddess: Babe bought his father this tavern with his 1915 World Series check, or so the story goes.

Current owner George Kritikos is giving The Goddess (38 S. Eutaw St.) a major interior makeover to go with a completed exterior renovation. Kritikos has numerous Ruth photos on display, including a copy of a famous shot showing the two spiffy-looking Georges (father and son) behind the bar.

• Oriole Park at Camden Yards: One Ruth site that’s just a memory lies about 20 paces into short center field at the ballpark, on the shortstop side of the field. This was the location of another of George Ruth Sr.’s taverns. Newlywed Babe lived there after the 1914 season. When the ballpark was being built in the early 1990s, architectural preservationists were called in. They knew where the building had been. They consulted with Babe’s sister, who told them where the privies were located in relation to the house, and were able to recover some relics.

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