June 2, 1935 – All good things must come to an end, in fact even the great careers of athletes. It occurred on this day that future Baseball Hall of Fame legend Babe Ruth announced his retirement as a player at 40 years of age. Ruth, most famously of the New York Yankees, started his career as a pitcher for the Boston Red Sox from 1914 through 1919.
He was then famously traded to the Yankees and batted himself into immortality of the pinstriped team as he played in New York for 15 years. Few people realize that he in fact spent his final partial season as a player back in Boston in the NL as a member of the Boston Braves in 1935 before issuing this retirement notice.
He finished his career as the MLB’s leading Home Run hitter with 714, and that record lasted for almost 50 years until a future Braves player named Hank Aaron broke it.
To find more great daily sports history make sure to check out the Sports Jersey Dispatch and Pigskin Dispatch.
More From Sports History Network

1976 Pittsburgh Steelers: Best 10-Game Winning Streak In NFL History?
The 1976 season got off to an excellent start for the defending Super Bowl

Sports History On This Day: March 28
March 28, 1939 – The New York Renaissance Big Five basketball team won the very

He’s Not The Mascot! The Legend of Billy Cross
No one…absolutely no one thought he was a professional football player. In fact, the

Sports History On This Day: March 27
March 27, 1939: The inaugural NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship was played. The single-elimination game

Sports History On This Day: March 26
March 26, 1937 – Legendary New York Yankees slugger Joe DiMaggio, in just his second

Sports History On This Day: March 25
March 25, 1958 – Boxing legend Sugar Ray Robinson, claimed victory in a 15 round split-decision

Sports History On This Day: March 24
March 24, 1936 – A Stanley Cup playoff game takes a record 9 periods to

Sports History On This Day: March 23
March 23, 1938 – Commissioner, Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis declared that seventy-four of the players in the