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Hank Aaron
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Hank Aaron

Born 1934 · Joined the Ancestors 2021
Fact
Held the all-time home run record for 33 years with 755
Fact
Received death threats while pursuing Babe Ruth's record
Fact
One of five players with 3,000 hits and 500 home runs

Henry Louis "Hank" Aaron held the Major League Baseball all-time home run record for 33 years — 755 home runs hit with a quiet consistency that was the antithesis of spectacle but the essence of greatness. When he broke Babe Ruth's record on April 8, 1974, he did so while receiving death threats so serious that he traveled with a bodyguard and the FBI investigated the hate mail that flooded his mailbox.

Born in Mobile, Alabama, in 1934, Aaron grew up in a section called Down the Bay, playing baseball with bottle caps and broomsticks because his family couldn't afford equipment. He joined the Negro League's Indianapolis Clowns at 18 before being signed by the Milwaukee Braves. He was named NL MVP in 1957 and led the Braves to a World Series championship that same year.

Aaron's pursuit of Ruth's record in 1973-74 exposed the persistence of American racism. He received 930,000 pieces of mail in a single year — much of it threatening, much of it containing racial slurs. He kept the worst letters, he said, so he would never forget. After retiring, Aaron became a successful business executive and dedicated himself to increasing opportunities for minorities in baseball. He joined the ancestors on January 22, 2021, at 86.

My motto was always to keep swinging. Whether I was in a slump or feeling badly or having trouble off the field, the only thing to do was keep swinging.
— Hank Aaron
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Key Milestones

A Life in Firsts

1934
Born February 5 in Mobile, Alabama
1952
Joins the Indianapolis Clowns of the Negro Leagues at 18
1957
Wins NL MVP and leads Braves to World Series championship
1974
Breaks Babe Ruth's all-time home run record with number 715
1982
Inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame
1999
MLB creates the Hank Aaron Award for top hitters

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