Braves legend Hank Aaron dies

January 22, 2021
1 min read
Hank Aaron
Photo by s_bukley on Deposit Photos

Hank Aaron smashed baseballs — and he smashed racial barriers. The Atlanta Braves legend and American icon died Friday at the age of 86.

Aaron broke Babe Ruth’s all-time home run record in 1974 — a once-unimaginable baseball feat — and held the record for more than three decades.

“Those moments that I had back then taught me a lesson,” Aaron once told GPB. “No matter what you take for granted, you try to do the very best you could to be sure that you made things worthwhile.”

He told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution in 2006: “I would just want to be remembered as somebody who just tried to be fair with people.”

TOO MANY ADS? GO AD-FREE
Did You Know?: The ads you see on this site help pay for our website and our work. However, we know some of our readers would rather pay and not see ads. For those users we offer a paid newsletter that contains our articles with no ads.
What You Get: A daily email digest of our articles in full-text with no ads.

Boxing legend Muhammad Ali once said this of Aaron: “The only man I idolize more than myself.”

As news of Aaron’s death spread, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said, “This is a considerable loss for the entire city of Atlanta. While the world knew him as ‘Hammering Hank Aaron’ because of his incredible, record-setting baseball career, he was a cornerstone of our village, graciously and freely joining Mrs. Aaron in giving their presence and resources toward making our city a better place.”

Gov. Brian Kemp tweeted, “Heartbreaking news. Hank Aaron was an American icon and a Georgia legend.”

This story comes to The Georgia Sun through a reporting partnership with GPB a non-profit newsroom focused on reporting in Georgia.


Counties in The News
458
275
228
152
137
121
see more close table

Events Calendar