The Story of New York Yankees Babe Ruth and Johnny Sylvester
A SABR memory recount's Babe delivering on his promise to an ill youngster
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Did you know…
. . . While Ruth’s three-homer game in 1926 was the first time anyone ever hit three home runs in one World Series game, the feat has been accomplished four more times since: Babe again in 1928, Reggie Jackson in 1977, Albert Pujols in 2011, and Pablo Sandoval in 2012.
. . . Ruth also holds the single-game World Series record for walks, in the same Series he hit his first three-home run game, walking four times in the Game 7 loss as the Cardinals took the Series 4-3.
Leading Off
The Heart-Warming Story of Babe Ruth and Little Johnny Sylvester
By Gary Livacari
“I'll knock a homer for Wednesday's game. Babe Ruth” –Inscription on baseball scrawled by Babe Ruth during the 1926 World Series and given to little Johnny Sylvester, recovering from a near-fatal illness.
One of baseball’s most enduring legends occurred during the 1926 World Series. Of course, it had to involve none other than the great Bambino himself. We're all aware the Babe had his share of personal shortcomings (and don’t we all!); but when there was a kid in need, no one was more likely to come through in a big way than the Babe.
The Babe's Famous Promise
In 1926, little Yankee fan Johnny Sylvester was just 11 years old, recuperating from a horseback riding accident that resulted in a serious injury. He was hospitalized near his home in Essex Falls, New Jersey. The prognosis wasn’t good.
The Yankees got wind of Johnny’s condition, and so during a rain delay in Game Three of the World Series in St. Louis, a few ball players signed a baseball just for Johnny. Babe Ruth inscribed more than just his signature, though. He penned his famous promise:
“I'll knock a homer for you in Wednesday's game" Babe Ruth
The Bambino Delivers...
On Wednesday, October 6, 1926 – Game Four of the series, a 10-5 Yankee victory – the Babe delivered on his promise...and then some! Amazingly, he didn’t hit just one homer, he hit three. On the day after Game Seven, Oct. 11, Ruth personally visited Johnny Sylvester in the hospital in Essex Falls.
...And Johnny Miraculously Recovers!
And sure enough, something miraculous happened: Against all odds, Johnny's health gradually started to improve. According to Andrew Lilley, Johnny’s great-nephew, the visit from the Babe changed everything:
“Babe Ruth’s home runs and his visit helped Johnny find the will to survive.”
On Dec. 16, 1926, Ruth penned another letter to the boy inquiring about his recovery and inviting him to Yankee Stadium during the 1927 season “to help win another pennant.”
Johnny didn't just survive...he thrived. He went on to graduate from Yale University in 1937 and later became a successful business owner and much-beloved family man. He even served in the Navy during World War II, rising to the rank of lieutenant. All because the Babe saved his life...or so the story goes!
Life Turns Full Circle!
Fast forward to 1947. The situation had now completely reversed. Now it was Babe Ruth who was ailing and it was Johnny Sylvester's turn to repay the man who had come to his bedside when he was gravely ill. As Andrew Lilley described the scene:
“The story had come full circle at this point. Here was the kid all grown up going back to the Babe and showing the same generosity to his hero, just as the Babe showed him all those years ago.”
Reading about this reunion 75 years later, it's still hard not to shed a tear...
Ruth wasn’t the only sports celebrity to reach out to the ailing boy. “Big Bill” Tilden, one of the greatest tennis players of all time, sent him an autographed tennis racquet. Hall-of-Fame halfback Red Grange sent a letter and an autographed football. Baseball Hall-of-Famer Rogers Hornsby, in a rare show of compassion, was another famous athlete who sent little Johnny a letter. Of course, none of these other displays of concern did as much for little Johnny's recovery as the Babe's fulfilled promise and later visit.
Forty Years Later, Johnny Sylvester Is Found!
In 1986 — the 40th Anniversary of the Johnny Sylvester story — the Babe Ruth Museum tried to investigate the story for authenticity. The museum eventually tracked down the real Johnny Sylvester, finding him as a retired banker living in Connecticut. When asked for some proof that these events actually happened, Mr. Sylvester produced the baseball with Babe’s handwriting and signature. The ball said, “I’ll knock a homer for Wednesday’s game. Babe Ruth.” The ball is now on display in the Babe Ruth Museum in Baltimore along with the other artifacts in “The Little Johnny Sylvester Collection." It's been on loan to the Babe Ruth Museum for 36 years.
But Is the Story True?
Is this heartwarming story completely true, or has it been embellished? Was the whole thing a hoax? Maybe we're falling for a sappy publicity stunt dreamt up by Babe Ruth's ubiquitous agent and "image-maker," Christy Walsh. It certainly has that ring to it.
If so, it was highly successful. The publicity was priceless for Babe Ruth's image. Years later when asked about the incident, Ruth is purported to have blurted out, "Who the hell is Johnny Sylvester?"
True or not, it remains one of the most timeless anecdotes in all of baseball lore and is one of the wonderful stories contributing to the endearing legacy of the great Bambino, Babe Ruth. Sadly, Johnny Sylvester passed away on January 6, 1990, at age 74 while residing in Garden City, New York.
Gary Livacari is a long-time SABR member and the administrator/editor of the Baseball History Comes Alive website.
Extra Innings
Sylvester’s great-nephew produced a documentary on the incident (warning that this is an hour-long documentary):