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Babe Ruth, Sports and 1920s Identity Politics

November 14, 2022 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

Babe Ruth for Al SmithThe Roaring Twenties saw the collision of an emerging culture of celebrity with the established popularity of sports, creating one of the twentieth century’s most enduring personalities — baseball hero Babe Ruth.

In 1928, Ruth not only led the New York Yankees to their third World Series victory, he also threw himself into politics, campaigning enthusiastically for New York State governor and Democratic presidential nominee Al Smith. Smith’s liberal and progressive platform appealed to diverse, working-class Americans, often marginalized by the policies of other politicians.

Ruth’s enthusiasm for Smith reinforced this appeal, but also brought backlash from voters, especially nativist, who viewed Smith and his admirers as un-American. Joined by teammates and other stars from the sporting world, Ruth’s support for Smith was a new and exciting development in presidential politics and showed the growing importance of sports in American culture and the role of identity in politics.

The New York State Museum will host “Babe Ruth Gets Political: Sports and Identity Politics in the Roaring Twenties,” a program with Stephen Loughman and Dr. Robert Chiles set for Thursday, November 17th, at the Huxley Theater in Albany.

New York State Museum Curator of Sports, Stephen Loughman, will present a short history of the “House that Ruth Built” and discuss New York Yankees-related artifacts in the Museum’s collection, including a recently donated Babe Ruth signed baseball.

Dr. Robert Chiles is a senior lecturer at the University of Maryland and, in 2021, became a Research Associate in History with the New York State Museum. He is co-editor of New York History, a member of the editorial board of The Hudson River Valley Review, and the host of “Empire State Engagements.” Chiles has written numerous pieces on New York State history, including in his first book, The Revolution of ’28: Al Smith, American Progressivism, and the Coming of the New Deal (Cornell Univ. Press, 2018); as well as in articles for Environmental History, the Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, New York History, and op-eds for Newsday, the New York Daily News, and the Albany Times Union.

Stephen Loughman is the Curator of Sports at the New York State Museum. He has presented several times on New York State sports history and is working to build the Museum’s sports collections.

This program will begin at 7 pm and is free and open to the public. The Huxley Theater is located at 222 Madison Avenue, in Albany. For more information, click here.

Photo of Babe Ruth provided.

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Filed Under: Capital-Saratoga, Events, History, New York City Tagged With: Al Smith, Baseball, Nativism, New York State Museum, Political History, Sports History

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