Skip to Content


Home > Museums > United States > Maryland > Babe Ruth Museum

< Previous | Next >

Babe Ruth Museum (Visit this link)


George Herman “Babe” Ruth was born February 6, 1895 at 216 Emory Street, a
Baltimore row house that is now just a long fly ball from Oriole Park at Camden
Yards. The property was leased by Babe’s grandfather, Pius Schamberger, who made
his living as an upholsterer.



By the late 1960s the property and adjoining three row-house structures had
fallen into disrepair and were scheduled for demolition. Hirsh Goldberg, press
secretary for Baltimore’s Mayor Theodore McKeldin, launched a successful
campaign to save and restore the Birthplace, which opened to the public as a
national shrine in 1974. The not-for-profit Babe Ruth Birthplace Foundation,
Inc. was formed to govern the operation. Exhibits depicting the Historic House
and the life and times of Babe Ruth were installed with the help of Babe’s
widow, Claire; his two daughters, Dorothy and Julia; and his sister, Mamie, who
was also born at 216 Emory Street.



In 1983 the operation expanded to become the official museum of the Baltimore
Orioles, the team that signed Ruth to his first professional contract. At that
time, the Foundation began formally operating as the Babe Ruth Museum. In 1985
the Mayor of Baltimore, William Donald Schaefer, designated the Museum as the
official archives of the Baltimore Colts, who had departed the previous year for
Indianapolis.



Museum attendance soared to over 60,000 annually with the opening of Oriole Park
at Camden Yards in 1992, and Museum officials knew that the tiny Birthplace
facility could not sufficiently house the large numbers of visitors or the
increased number of displays it needed to interpret its multiple sports themes.




Over the course of its 30-year history, the Babe Ruth Museum’s mission has
evolved to Upon the opening of Sports Legends at Camden Yards on May 14, 2005,
those artifacts moved into a new and larger home at Camden Station. Meanwhile,
the Birthplace has reverted to its original mission to feature exhibits on the
life and times of George Herman “Babe” Ruth.

http://www.baberuthmuseum.com





Home > Museums > United States > Maryland > Babe Ruth Museum