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The Big Fella

Page 60

by Jane Leavy


  INVESTMENTS PURCHASED BY YEAR

  PDF Year (Period Covered) Investments

  1928 (April 26, 1927–November 20, 1928) $85,660.00

  1930 (November 20, 1928–April 25, 1930) $24,791 .91

  1931 (April 26, 1930–April 25, 1931) $101,196.30

  1932 (April 26 1931–April 25, 1932) $49,012.50

  The bank invested 70 percent of Ruth’s money in fixed-income U.S. and municipal bonds and 30 percent in dividend-paying blue-chip stocks, which yielded a net income of $4,099.41 in 1927–28. He also earned $240 from his bonds ($3,349.25 today), generating a total income that first year of $4,659.13. By November 1928, his investments were worth $85,660.00.

  His dividends increased steadily, save for a slight decrease on November 2, 1928, about which Walsh complained. After that, they rebounded, reaching a peak of $2,470.87 on May 1, 1934. Every year from 1931 to 1941, he received quarterly payments of about $2,000 ($30,000 to $34,000 today) from his investments.

  Although the percentage on his return dwindled each year during the Great Depression, the trust continued to grow after October 1929, producing increased income each year until 1941.

  ALL INCOME COLLECTED FROM INVESTMENTS

  PDF Year (Period Covered) AlI Income Collected Percent Change

  1928 (April 26, 1927–November 20,1928) $4,659.13 N/A

  1930 (November 20, 1928–April 25, 1930) $6,176.48 32.6%

  1931 (April 26, 1930–April 25, 1931) $7,667.09 24.1%

  1932 (April 26, 1931–April 25, 1932) $9,051.09 18.1%

  Ruth continued to build the trust throughout the first three quarters of 1929, sometimes adding to the account twice a month. After depositing $3,000 on October 24, the first day of the crash, he added nothing more until July 1930. But while ordinary Americans were standing in breadlines in 1930 and 1931, Ruth added $100,000 to his trust. The final $1,000 deposit was made on September 2, 1931, bringing the total value of the account to $200,000, or about $3.3 million today. By that time, Ruth had received $88,932.87 in dividends from the trust.

  He earned money on every sale made on his behalf between July 16, 1930, and April 20, 1931, a net increase of $693.58 (about $10,300 today). Also, his stocks were heavily dependent on dividends, and dividends fell only 11 percent during the Great Depression. By April 25, 1932, the value of the inventory in his account had reached $200,980.02, generating $10,102.55 in income, an increase of $2,435.46 over the previous year.

  TOTAL CONTRIBUTED TO TRUST SINCE INCEPTION, WITH ESTIMATED ANNUAL INCOME

  PDF Year (Period Covered) Value Estimated Annual Income

  1928 (April 26, 1927–November 20, 1928) $80,240.00 $4,255.80

  1930 (November 20, 1928–April 25, 1930) $100,240.00 $5,244.00

  1931 (April 26, 1930–April 25, 1931) $155,928.02 $7,965.00

  1932 (April 26, 1931–April 25, 1932) $200,928.00 $10,102.55

  The income statements from 1941 to 1944 show how and when Ruth began to feel the impact of the Great Depression, slight as it might have been for him. His 100 shares in Standard Brands were paying a dividend of only $10. But his shares in the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway and Consumers Power Company delivered seven times as much. The Bank of Manhattan sold off his holdings in the American Can Company and RJ Reynolds Tobacco, which decreased 33 percent and 43 percent, respectively, in 1943, and also sold 75 percent of his shares in Standard Brands in 1944.

  Those losses were offset to some extent by investments in Standard Oil and Texas Gulf Sulphur Company, which continued to pay the same dividends as before, and the First National Bank Boston, which increased its dividend. But his quarterly dividend checks decreased to $1,700. When Walsh wrote to the Bank of Manhattan to protest the loss of income, a vice president felt compelled to remind him of “the prevailing economic conditions.” The quarterly dividend checks remained at that level at least through 1944, at which point Walsh stopped receiving information from the bank at Ruth’s direction.

  Ruth campaigned relentlessly on behalf of U.S. War Bonds. In May 1941, the bank sold off some of his U.S. Treasury Bonds to finance the purchase of over $17,000 (approximately $300,000) of U.S. Savings Bonds, Series G, or war bonds. In January 1942, the sale of Pennsylvania Power and Light Company securities financed the purchase of another $11,000 in war bonds.

  Over the course of the next several years, the trust, which was funded through dividend and interest payments, remained constant. The balance never fell below $200,000, enough to provide Ruth with his quarterly checks.

  STATEMENT OF SECURITIES HELD: TOTAL VALUE

  Year Value Percent Change

  1941 $100,395.00 N/A

  1942 $102,445.00 2.0%

  1943 $101,783.75 –0.6%

  1944 $101,094.75 –0.7%

  “Not only did the Babe Ruth Trust not lose money during the stock market crash of 1929, but it continued to grow all the way up until 1942,” Zaft said. “Even at that point, the equity portion of the trust lost less than 1 percent between 1942–43 and 1943–44. This was due to careful management and a good balance of both individual U.S. Treasury Bonds along with stocks in quality, dividend-paying blue-chip companies. Christy Walsh’s commitment to having the Babe continue to contribute to the trust even during these troubling economic times (including a deposit on Black Monday) allowed for the purchase of additional securities at low points. Throughout the 1930s sales of stock were executed in a very timely fashion, yielding net gains on the portfolio each year. The trust provided Mr. Ruth with a consistent stream of income all the way up until mid-1941, when prevailing interest rates declined. Whoever was managing the trust deserves immense credit.”

  HISTORY OF BABE RUTH TRUST FUND, BANK OF MANHATTAN TRUST CO. NEW YORK

  AMOUNT: $200,000.00

  STARTED FEBRUARY 24, 1927

  Paid to Trust Fund Dividends Received from Trust Fund to February 1, 1940

  Feb. 14, 1927 33,000.00 No. Date Received Amount Covering Quarter Up To

  Apr. 26, 1927 7,000.00 0 Nov. 3, 1927 643.13 Nov. 1, 1927

  Aug. 8, 1927 10,000.00 2 Feb. 3, 1928 900.00 Feb. 1, 1928

  Dec. 7, 1927 20,000.00 3 May 2, 1928 900.00 May 1, 1928

  Nov. 13, 1928 10,000.00 4 Aug. 2, 1928 900.00 Aug. 1, 1928

  Apr. 29, 1929 2,500.00 5 Nov. 2, 1928 500.00 Nov. 1, 1928

  May 2, 1929 1,000.00 6 Apr. 27, 1929 1,000.00 Feb. 1, 1929

  May 16, 1929 3,500.00 7 May 2, 1929 1,000.00 May 1, 1929

  Jun. 11, 1929 3,000.00 8 Aug. 7, 1929 1,000.00 Aug. 1, 1929

  Jul. 9, 1929 1,000.00 9 Nov. 4, 1929 1,000.00 Nov. 1, 1929

  Jul. 23, 1929 2,000.00 10 Feb. 10, 1930 1,045.00 Feb. 1, 1930

  Aug. 12, 1929 1,500.00 11 May 2, 1930 1,200.00 May 1, 1930

  Sept. 4, 1929 1,500.00 12 Aug. 2, 1930 1,400.00 Aug. 1, 1930

  Sept. 9, 1929 1,000.00 13 Direct to B.R. 1,650.00 Nov. 1, 1930

  Oct. 24, 1929 3,000.00 14 Direct to B.R. 1,900.00 Feb. 1, 1931

  Jul. 2, 1930 15,000.00 15 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 May 1, 1931

  Aug. 22, 1930 5,000.00 16 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Aug. 1, 1931

  Sept. 29, 1930 20,000.00 17 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Nov. 1, 1931

  Nov. 17, 1930 10,000.00 18 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Feb. 1, 1932

  Jan. 12, 1931 5,000.00 19 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 May 1, 1932

  May 6, 1931 5,000.00 20 Direct to B.R. 2,250.00 Aug. 1, 1932

  Jun. 3, 1931 15,000.00 21 Direct to B.R. 2,250.00 Nov. 1, 1932

  Jun. 10, 1931 5,000.00 22 Direct to B.R. 2,250.00 Feb. 1, 1933

  Jul. 16, 1931 10,000.00 23 Direct to B.R. 2,470.57 May 1, 1933

  Sept. 2, 1931 10,000.00 24 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Aug. 1, 1933

  25 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Nov. 1, 1933

  Total 26 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Feb. 1, 1934

  200,000.00 27 Direct to B.R. 2,673.67 May 1, 1934

  28 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Aug. 1, 1934

  29 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Nov. 1, 1934

  30 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Feb. 1, 1935


  31 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 May 1, 1935

  32 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Aug. 1, 1935

  33 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Nov. 1, 1935

  34 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Feb. 1, 1936

  35 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 May 1, 1936

  36 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Aug. 1, 1936

  37 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Nov. 1, 1936

  38 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Feb. 1, 1937

  39 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 May 1, 1937

  40 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Aug. 1, 1937

  41 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Nov. 1, 1937

  42 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Feb. 1, 1938

  43 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 May 1, 1938

  44 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Aug. 1, 1938

  45 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Nov. 1, 1938

  46 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Feb. 1, 1939

  47 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 May 1, 1939

  48 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Aug. 1, 1939

  49 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Nov. 1, 1939

  50 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Feb. 1, 1940

  51 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 May 1, 1940

  52 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Aug. 1, 1940

  53 Direct to B.R. 2,000.00 Nov. 1, 1940

  Total 94,932.87

  Bank documents, reports, and correspondence from the Christy Walsh Collection Catalog, volumes 2–3, courtesy of Heritage Auctions/HA.

  Total earnings table courtesy of Michael Haupert, professor of economics at the University of Wisconsin–La Crosse.

  Financial analysis courtesy of Matthew Zaft, a financial adviser with Morgan Stanley in Washington, D.C. He was assisted by Joseph Naness, a student at Johns Hopkins University.

  Index

  The pagination of this digital edition does not match the print edition from which the Index was created. To locate a specific entry, please use your e-book reader’s search tools.

  Aaron, Hank, 180–82

  Adios to Ghosts (Walsh), 68, 70

  Adler, Mrs., 165

  advertising, 68–69, 108–9, 195, 196, 217, 219, 220, 228

  Anfinson, Eddie “Fat,” 352

  African Americans, 5, 38, 60, 87, 91, 169–86, 471, 494

  Afro-American, 86, 173

  Albin, Brother, 151

  Alger, Horatio, 173

  Alkonis, Brother Arcadius, 94, 144–45, 147–48, 151, 163

  All-America Football, 62, 184, 474

  Allen, Mel, 455

  Allied Pictures, 442

  All-Star Games, 460

  Altrock, Nick, 103, 127, 258

  Ameche, Don, 441

  American Architect, 251

  American Basketball League, 464

  American Boy, 111

  American Football Conference, 441

  American League, 2, 18, 28, 34, 71, 105, 133, 176, 203, 211, 259, 273, 279, 388, 423, 437, 444–45, 460, 477

  American League all-stars, 413

  American Legion, 327, 436

  Junior Baseball, 448–49, 456

  American Party, 120

  American Scientist, 312

  American Society of News Editors (ASNE), 76, 266

  Amsterdam News, 170, 173

  Analovitch, Donna (granddaughter), 236, 378–79, 428–29

  Anderson, George A., 257

  Anderson, Hunk, 103

  Angell, Roger, 18, 93, 113

  Annie Laurie (film), 193

  Anson, Cap, 220

  Arbuckle, Fatty, 209

  Ardizoia, Annunziata, 316

  Ardizoia, Carlo, 316, 325

  Ardizoia, Rinaldo “Rugger,” 315–22, 324–29

  Arizona Republic, 433

  Arlin, Harold, 298

  Army and Navy fund, 431

  Army-Navy football game, 109

  Ars Poetica (Horace), 266

  Asbury Park, 60, 119–24, 130, 139–40, 301

  Assembly Center league, 430

  Associated Negro Press, 173–75

  Associated Press, 33–34, 74, 83, 119, 121, 133, 190, 212, 215, 301, 405, 423–24, 471, 473, 491

  Astor, William Waldorf, 250–51

  Atlantic Monthly, 219

  Atlas, Charles, 79

  Automobile Association, 250

  Automobile Topics, 68

  Averill, Earl, 320

  Babe, The (Acosta), 182

  Babe and I, The (Claire Ruth), 272, 370

  Babe Comes Home (film), 28, 33–35, 55, 111, 436, 438

  Babe (Creamer), 180, 369

  “Babe Ruth,” as trademark, 235

  Babe Ruth All America Athletic Underwear, 222

  Babe Ruth as I Knew Him (Hoyt), 369–70

  Babe Ruth Baseball Scorer, 221

  Babe Ruth Birthplace and Museum, xvii–xx, xxiii, xxviii, 45, 55, 155, 369

  Babe Ruth Candy Company, 232

  Babe Ruth Day: (1935), 417; (1947), 328, 444–47, 452, 470

  Babe Ruth (documentary), 241

  Babe Ruth Foundation, 235, 444

  Babe Ruth in Over the Fence (instructional films), 229

  Babe Ruth League, Inc., 235

  Babe Ruth Longjohns, 223

  Babe Ruth (Murray), xix

  Babe Ruth’s Baseball Game, 221

  Babe Ruth Shoe Company, 210

  Babe Ruth’s Own Book of Baseball, 222

  “Babe Ruth’s Questions and Answers Booklet” (Bernays), 222

  Babe Ruth Story, The (film), 441–42, 451–53, 458, 466, 472

  Babe Ruth Story, The (Ruth and Considine), 45–46, 99, 161, 163, 451

  Babe Ruth Sweaters for Boys, 18

  Babe Ruth Symposium (Hofstra University, 1995), 177

  Babe Ruth: The Dark Side (Harris), 155

  Babe’s All-Stars, 62

  Baby Ruth candy bar, 215–16, 223–37

  “Back to the Farm” dinner, 214, 371

  Badcon, Marion, 113

  Baer, Arthur “Bugs,” 126–27, 446, 472

  Bahill, A. Terry, 312, 562

  Baker, Frank “Home Run,” 71

  Bakersfield Californian, 452

  Baltimore

  funds for St. Mary’s and, 97

  Great Fire of 1904, 10, 38

  Baltimore City Second Circuit Court, 10, 50

  Baltimore Evening Sun, 273

  Baltimore News-American, 457

  Baltimore Orioles, xix, xxiii, 2–3, 222, 311, 342

  Babe hired by, 153–54, 369, 458, 471

  Babe sold to Sox by, 154, 489

  Baltimore Sun, 1, 6–7, 38, 41, 44, 46, 50, 52, 54, 145, 150, 152–53, 159–62, 246, 369, 388

  Baltimore Terrapins, 154

  Bank of Manhattan trust fund, 131–32, 291–93, 344, 357, 384–87, 392–96, 444–45, 501, 506–11

  Barbed Wire Baseball (Moss and Shimizu), 431–32

  Barber, Red, 314

  Barnes, Jesse, 270

  barnstorming. See Ruth, George Herman, Jr.; and specific individuals, teams, and towns

  Barrow, Ed, 124, 135, 138, 159, 171, 255–56, 271–72, 275–76, 278, 284, 333, 386, 388, 409, 444, 454, 472, 490

  Barrymore, John, 388, 439

  Barton, Bruce, 192, 194

  Barton, Jim, 252, 254, 471

  Baseball (documentary film), 177

  Baseball Magazine, 493

  Baseball Prospectus, 494

  Baseballreference.com, 493

  Baseball’s Greatest Lineup (Walsh), 474

  baseball trading cards, 234, 367

  Baseball Writers’ Association of America, 214, 266

  Batting-Fielding Wins (BFW), 493

  Baumgartner, Stan, 115

  Bay Area, 295–96, 315–18

  Beadle’s Dime Base-ball Player, 75

  Beasley, Norman, 386

  Beckwith, John, 114

  Bedini, Jean, 13–15

  Beefelt, Nellie Sipes, 158

  Beefelt, Oliver, 158–59

  Bendix, William, 451–52, 472, 475

  Benedict, Brother, 162

  Bennett, Eddie, 254

  Bennett, Leroy, 433

  Benniger, Marlene Colema
n, 337

  Berg, Moe, 413–14

  Bernays, Edward, 192–96, 198, 222

  Berra, Yogi, 309, 422, 454, 457

  Beswick, Jean Woodford, 350

  Bichard, Aubrey, 340

  Bichard, Mrs., 347

  Big League Gloves, 222

  Bihler, Joe, 264, 344–45

  Billings, Donald, 473

  Billings, Robert, 473

  Billings, Wayne, 473

  Bingay, Malcolm, 286

  Birmingham, Harry, 5–7, 10–11, 146

  Bisher, Furman, 307

  Black Ink stats, 494

  Bodie, Ping, 321, 361

  Bonds, Barry, 310, 493

  Bookman, 289

  Boone, Christopher, 54

  Boras, Scott, 460–61

  Boston Braves, 328, 415–17, 489

  Babe retires from, 422

  Boston Evening Transcript, 150, 152, 162

  Boston Globe, 205, 243, 244, 394–95, 416, 490

  Boston Post, 205, 221, 341

  Boston Red Sox, 26, 78, 101, 171, 136, 181, 220, 243, 252, 281, 404–5

  Babe bought by, 116, 154, 489

  Babe sold by, 389–90, 489

  seasons (1914), 105; (1918), 159, 176, 302; (1919), 231, 490; (2004), 477

  World Series (1915), 156

  Boston Telegram, 205, 212

  Boutilier, Joseph, 149

  Boutilier, Martin Leo (Brother Matthias), 148–54, 160–63, 210, 273, 280, 434, 449

  Boutilier, Thomas, 149

  Bow, Clara, 101, 436

  Bowles, Sonny, 217

  Bownes, Helen, 162–63

  Box 52 Association, 340

  Boys Town, 197, 218, 449

  Bradley, Charles, 7

  Bradley Beach team, 120, 125

  Bradshaw, Forrest D., 246–47

  Brady, Tony, 42

  Braudy, Leo, 108

  Breen, May Singhi, 372

  Brice, Fanny, 134

  Brisbane, Arthur, 78–79

  Bronx Bombers (play), xxv

  Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 61, 89, 91, 99–100

  Brooklyn Dodgers, 81, 114, 424, 426–28

  Brooklyn Eagle, 79, 137, 386

  Brooklyn Robins, 436

  Brooklyn Royal Giants, 60, 86–87, 90, 139–40

  Brooklyn Standard-Union, 117

  Broun, Heywood, 80, 101, 252, 267, 279, 286

  Brown, Joe E., 382, 463

 

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