A look back at the fifth day of January in sports history and elsewhere. We have popes, presidents and a Babe, among others ...
On Jan. 3, 1920, new Boston Red Sox owner sold Babe Ruth’s contract to the Yankees. It took 80+ years to fix the hex ...
Ruth is said to have told Derringer that this was what he ate for breakfast every day. Read more: The History Of Corn Flakes ...
Tasting Table on MSN12d
How Babe Ruth Enjoyed His Steak
If there was one meal that Babe Ruth loved best, it was a nice, juicy steak, but which cut of meat was his favorite? It's ...
The PSA Graded Babe Ruth Morehouse Baking #151 sold by ... was also obvious that this was significant Red Sox, Boston, and Ruth history too. When I was at his house that first time starting ...
There are 362 days left in the year. Today in history: On Jan. 3, 1920, Boston Red Sox owner Harry Frazee sold the contract ...
“This is a very distinctive example of Babe Ruth’s rookie card, universally regarded as one of the most significant cards in all of card collecting,” Robert Edward Auctions wrote on its websit ...
Babe Ruth was still pitching for the Red Sox, not crushing home runs for the Yankees, when Morehouse Bakery in Lawrence, Massachusetts, printed his baseball card in a 1916 promotion. NBC Universal ...
A rare Babe Ruth rookie card discovered in Danvers has sold at auction for $812,724, well above estimates. The 1916 card, which was included in 10-cent loaves of bread sold by the Morehouse Baking ...