George
The Bambino
popular, strong, fast, Great Sports Hero
Lover of Baseball, kids, food, and vices
Who believed in himself
Who wanted a raise, to be part of a family, to be healthy, a flamboyant lifestyle
Who used a bat, a baseball, a glove, a lot of money
Who gave hope, entertainment, an intrest in baseball, an intrest in his personal life
Who said "Kids and me get along just fine."
Ruth
NOT PART OF THE POEM
I had to do a bio-poem on Babe Ruth, and I hope this helps you with information on him.
I will not give you a defanet answer but to me i believe that it would be a baseball card signed by Babe Ruth. The reason i think this is because Babe Ruth is a pro. baseball player and is very famous. Iron Man is to but he is not as rare as Babe Ruth is .
Babe Ruth wanted to retire. All of his fans where upset so they asked him questions and stuff like that. So, Babe Ruth gave his speech to say goodbye to his fans and fellow Yankees players.
follow your dreams
Babe Ruth
active, David Ortizinactive, babe Ruth
He gave entertainment, hope, intrest in baseball, and intrest in his personal life
Base ball!
Waite HoytJoe Dugan ---- In the books that I have seen about Babe Ruth, that information is clouded if not simply not recorded for posterity. In the book Babe Ruth A Biography it is stated that there were 8 official pallbearers, all of whom were former teammates. The two that are 'remembered' are Joe Dugan and Waite Hoyt because of the statement supposedly uttered by Hoyt when Dugan said, at the funeral, "I'd give a hundred dollars for a beer", to which Hoyt supposedly replied "So would the Babe". As with almost everything with Babe Ruth, one must wonder whether this 'conversation' ever took place or whether it was part of the lore that always surrounded him. The book also states there were 57 honorary pallbearers that included politicians, former ballplayers, and Hollywood stars, one of which was William Bendix who played Ruth in the movie The Babe Ruth Story. Connie Mack & Whitey Whitt are also mentioned as pallbearers in Fred Lieb's Baseball as I Have Known It.
42 ounces Sorry but Black Betsy was the name of Shoeless Joe Jacksons bat. It was given that name since he rubbed it with oil to give it a black appearance. Babe Ruth's famous bat was called the War Club and it weighed 54 ounces.
A Babe Ruth single signed baseball in general is worth about $6,000.-$10,000. A "minty" baseball with a strong signature could sell in the $15,000 price range or more. To get $30,000. for the signed Babe Ruth baseball it would have to be an exceptonal signature. A memorabilia dealer would most likely give you about 50 percent the market value, more if the dealer could resell it in a timely manner. You would get full market value if you sell to a collector through an auction.
It is very rare to come across an autographed Babe Ruth baseball bat. There are not enough signed Babe Ruth bats to give you an accurate value. It wasn't a common item to have signed in Ruth's day. Baseballs were readily available, and Ruth signed plenty. Fountain pens were used to sign most autographs, and it might have been a bad choice to sign a bat. I did find a bat that was painted silver before Babe Ruth personally inscribed and dated his Fountain pen signature on it. The bat sold for $12,969. I would think that a higher quality baseball bat would sell for $20,000. and up.You might have a Babe Ruth endorsed signature model baseball bat. This signature that appears on the bat is stamped on at the factory, and is placed on the barrel. Depending on the condition, size, make, and model it could be worth between $300. -$500. Bats with decals, and pro model bat would be worth more.
Check out this company: Imperial Sports LLC. It looks like they deal in old baseball memorabilia and give out free appraisals.