Showing posts with label baseball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baseball. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Last Game of the Season


There's something bittersweet about the last baseball game of the season. On Monday night, I went to the Single-A Minor League Idaho Falls Chukars' playoff game, which they lost and were thus eliminated by the Orem Owlz. The air had the crisp, pre-frost tang of early fall, and the season's end served as a reminder that time passes, and that we must make each day count.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Preview of Denver and Wyoming Trip

The writer has returned to his computer.
Son Matt (20), son-in-law Cody Davis (25) and myself (old) traveled 1,300+ miles since Friday, and saw most of southern Wyoming and a piece of Colorado as well. We visited my son's home town and also Medicine Bow, the town where we lived for four years in the eighties.
I will give a full report tomorrow, broken down into several categories. Norris King's story is so amazing and unknown that I plan to write up it and submit it to several aviation history and World War Two magazines.
For now, I submit a couple of photos from the trip, with only minor commentary.

Matt Morris (left, in Sosa jersey) and Cody Davis (right, in white shirt) enjoy the Colorado Rockies/Chicago Cubs game on Sunday, August 12 at Coors Field, Denver, Colorado.

We saw a game on Saturday evening and another on Sunday. Sunday's game was a hot one, with temperatures over 100 degrees.
Second, the highlight of the trip for me was meeting with Norris King and his lovely wife Marilyn, who live in Arvada, Colorado. Norris's 15th Air Force B-17 was shot down in 1943 by Swiss anti-aircraft fire. The day his plane went down, 13 Americans were killed in Switzerland. On Norris's plane, only three of the crew of ten survived. Norris shared his experiences and we had a great visit. The photo today shows Norris with a piece of his plane, which he was given upon his return to Switzerland fifty years after the war. It is in a shadow-box in his den. Norris spent time as a Swiss internee before escaping from Switzerland later in the war, joining up with the French underground, and making his way back to Allied lines. Though he is 82, he looks younger than me. For Norris's story, see my book 'Untold Valor' pages 177-182.


Norris King and a piece of his B-17, a 99th BG B-17 named 'Sugarfoot' that was shot down by Swiss anti-aircraft, killing all but three members of the crew on October 1, 1943.

Marilyn King, Norris King, and Rob Morris at the King home, Arvada, Colorado, Sunday August 12, 2007.



More tomorrow, so stay tuned.

Thursday, August 9, 2007

Wyoming/Colorado Road Trip

Starting tomorrow, I will be off-line for a few days. My son Matt, my son-in-law Cody, and I are driving down to Denver tomorrow to catch a pair of Chicago Cubs/Colorado Rockies games.


An old photograph of Medicine Bow, Wyoming, circa 1917. This is pretty much how it looked when we lived there, as well, right down to the water tower.


This will be a sentimental trip for us. In 1985, I was hired for my first teaching job in the small town of Medicine Bow, Wyoming (population roughly 700). This was in an oil and uranium mining area of southeastern Wyoming. I absolutely loved my job there, and I fell in love with the rugged beauty of the high plains. Unfortunately, my wife Geri did not like being sixty miles from the nearest larger town. We were sixty miles from Laramie to the east, ninety miles from Casper to the north, and sixty miles from Rawlins to the west. We moved there when my oldest daughter was two weeks old. In 1987, my son Matt was born in Rawlins. We moved to Idaho Falls, Idaho in 1989 and have been here ever since. I'm preparing to enter my 23rd year as a teacher. Medicine Bow was my first four years, and I learned a lot there.

The Virginian Hotel, at one time the tallest building between St. Louis and California on the railroad. It is named for the title character in Owen Wister's famous novel, 'The Virginian'. We may stay here tomorrow night.


We'll drive to Medicine Bow tomorrow, possibly spend the night there, either at the Virginian Hotel or at a nearby BLM campground. The Virginian Hotel is named for the famous Owen Wister novel of the same name. Wister's novel is considered the first great western novel, and he based it in Medicine Bow. In the 1950's, there was a popular television series called 'The Virginian', also based in Medicine Bow.



The next day we'll drive on to Denver. We'll see a game Saturday night and again on Sunday. Also during our Denver stay, I will be visiting Norris King and his wife Marilyn in Arvada, a Denver suburb. Norris was a gunner on a B-17 that was shot down by Swiss anti-aircraft during World War Two, killing seven of the ten men on board. For those who have the Potomac version of my book, Untold Valor, Norris' story is told in detail on pages 177-182.



From the Swiss Internees' Website, here is the info on Norris's crew condensed from the MACR:



B - 17 # 42 - 30126 " Sugarfoot "



Pilot - Lt. Burton English



Attacked by LW Fighters , Badly damaged , on Fire.



Pilot , Copilot , Nav , BB and TG either Killed or Wounded.



As A/C was going down , it crossed Swiss Border and Swiss began Shooting.



A/C exploded



- 3 Crewmen bailed out and Interned. Sgt. Marion Pratt , Sgt. Norris King , Sgt. Joseph Carroll
The remains of Norris's plane 'Sugarfoot', in Switzerland. Norris has a piece of the plane at his home in Colorado, given to him years after the war by the man who shot the plane down.



We'll be returning to Idaho on Monday. I'll make sure to post a story about Norris King and also photos of the baseball game and of Medicine Bow.



Coors Field, Denver, Colorado. Home of the Colorado Rockies. We will be sitting for both games in the 'Rockpile', which are the cheapest seats in the stadium, directly to the center of the photo, behind the pine trees.

Coors Field, Denver. A new stadium with a disinctly vintage feel to it.



I miss Medicine Bow a great deal. If it had been up to me, I'd still be there. It will be a day full of memories tomorrow as we stay there.


Sunday, June 24, 2007

Website Remembers Baseball Players Killed in World War Two

My previous post recommended a website devoted to baseball in World War Two. One link on this site honors all who died in the war. The post lists every man who fell, from the major leagues down to the collegiate level. Just to give you an example of this fine tribute site, I am posting a memorial to one of the two major leaguers to die in the war. His name was Elmer Gedeon . His story follows:
Elmer Gedeon was born April 15, 1917 in Cleveland, Ohio. He died April 20, 1944 near St Pol, France. One of only two players with major league experience to be killed in World War II.


After a collegiate career at Michigan, Elmer played 67 games in the minor leagues and joined the Washington Senators at the end of the season. His first major league appearance was on September 18, 1939 as a late-inning replacement in Dutch Leonard's 19th win of the season against the Tigers. The following day, Gedeon was the starting centerfielder, collecting three hits in a 10-9 win against the Indians. He would appear in five games before the year was out – four in centerfield and one in rightfield – and collected three hits in 15 at-bats.

In 1940, Gedeon shuttled between the majors and the minors, spending most of his time at Charlotte, NC where he hit .271 in 131 games.

He received his summons for military service in January 1941, and instead of going to spring training, instead reported to Fort Thomas, Kentucky.

Around Memorial Day, 1941, Gedeon transferred to the Air Force. He earned his pilot's wings and a commission as a second lieutenant at Williams Field near Phoenix in May 1942, and trained with the 21st Bomb Group at MacDill Field in Tampa. His life almost ended before he went into combat. On August 9, 1942, Gedeon was the navigator in a North American B-25 Mitchell medium-sized bomber that crashed on take off and burst into flames at Raleigh, North Carolina. Gedeon, suffering three broken ribs, managed to free himself and crawl from the wreckage, then realized a crewmate – Corporal John R Barrat, who had suffered a broken neck and two broken legs – was still inside. Gedeon went back in the burning plane and pulled Barrat free. Two men were killed in the crash and the five other crew members all suffered serious injuries – Gedeon was hospitalized for 12 weeks suffering from broken ribs and burns to his back, hands, face and legs, some of which needed skin grafts.

In July 1943, Gedeon began training on Martin B-26 Marauders at Ardmore AAF base in Oklahoma. On April 20, 1944, just five days after celebrating his 27th birthday, Gedeon piloted one of 30 B-26 Marauders that left Boreham to bomb German construction works at Bois d’Esquerdes. It was the group’s thirteenth mission. Gedeon’s bomber was severely hit by flak over France on the way to the target. “We got caught in searchlights and took a direct hit under the cockpit,” says a fellow crewman. “I watched Gedeon lean forward against the controls as the plane went into a nose dive and the cockpit filled with flames.”
Captain Gedeon at Boreham Airfield in England, 1944

This airman was the only crew member able to escape by parachute as the bomber plunged to earth carrying Gedeon and five others to their death.

Gedeon was reported missing in action, and it was not until May 1945 that his father, Andrew A Gedeon, received word from his son's commanding officer that Elmer's grave had been located in a small British army cemetery in St Pol, France.

Elmer Gedeon's body was later returned to the United States and rests at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia. He was inducted in the University of Michigan Hall of Honor for track and baseball in 1983.

"He was a superior gentleman," recalls Taaffe, "with a delightful sense of humor." The 394th Bomb Group's historian, J Guy Ziegler later wrote that Gedeon "was one of the most popular officers in the group."

Take America Out to the Ball Game

Baseball, the All-American game, went to war as well. Every station had a baseball game, whether it was just a few guys with gloves and a bat playing next to an airfield or a bunch of 'kriegies' playing with YMCA-donated equipment in a German Stalag. So many major and minor league baseball players were in the armed services that the quality of play in the professional leagues plummeted during the War Years. Some of the greatest players served with distinction--something that would be rare indeed to see today after the end of the draft.

Below are some photographs of Americans at war, who still had time to play some ball.The team above played for the U.S. 3rd and 5th Fleet in the Pacific in World War Two in 1945.
The team below, the all-stars of the 303rd Bomb Group (H) were the Eighth Air Force Champs in 1943.
These Canadians (and possibly some Americans) in the Royal Canadian Air Force played together in 1942 in Europe.

Sixty-plus years later, we still get together to watch 'America's Game'.

We attended our first Idaho Falls Chukar game of the season tonight. Nothing quite as American or as mellow and relaxing as a good baseball game. The minor league players play for love of the game. The crowd drinks beer and eats hot dogs. The national anthem starts off every game. During the seventh inning stretch, everybody sings 'Take Me out to the Ball Game' for at least the thousandth time. When a ball is fouled into the parking lot, the public address announces, after the sound effect of breaking glass: "If that was your car, it's time to call Falls Auto Glass for a free estimate!" Dizzy-bat races. The wave. The mascot. It just doesn't get any better than this. Idaho Falls is a Single-A affiliate of the Kansas City Royals, one of the worst teams in baseball. We get the guys that are right out of high school or just drafted out of college. Every few years, one of them makes it to 'the show', but the rest just fade into obscurity like 99% of everybody who ever loved to play the game, myself included, and are destined to watch.

Whether played by homesick servicemen or young men with dreams of big league careers, baseball is one of the common bonds of Americans past and present.

An excellent website about baseball in wartime, with lots of information and photographs, is found at http://www.baseballinwartime.co.uk/teams.htm. It's worth a visit.

The following professional baseball players were killed in action in World War Two. I am listing them all because they are all heroes and should be remembered. If you click on each man's name, it will give you his biography. Please take the time to read a few, and send up a prayer for these guys. Their stories are touching and help us remember the price at which our freedom was preserved for us.

Major League
Key
Name
Experience
Service
Cause of Death
Location
Date


Elmer Gedeon
Major League
USAAF
Killed in Action
ETO
April 20, 1944
Harry O'Neill
Major League
USMC
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
March 6, 1945

Minor League

Name
Experience
Service
Cause of Death
Location
Date
Herman Bauer
Minor League
US Army
Died from Wounds
ETO
July 12, 1944
Fred Beal
Minor League
US Army
Died in hospital
USA
February 11, 1944
Leonard Berry
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
December 24, 1944
Keith Bissonette
Minor League
USAAF
Killed in Action
CBI
1944
Buddy Blewster
Minor League
USMC
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
1943
Lefty Brewer
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
June 6, 1944
Ed Brock
Minor League
US Navy
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
February 26, 1945
Murrill Brown
Minor League
US Navy
Plane Crash
USA
September 1944
Whitey Burch
Minor League
US Army
Military accident
USA
November 29, 1941
George Chandler
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
USA
September 28, 1942
Floyd Christiansen
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
USA
July 10, 1945
Ordway Cisgen
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
July 11, 1944
Les Clotiaux
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
USA
August 9, 1945
Edward Dalton
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
March 30, 1945
Bud Dawson
Minor League
USAAF
Killed in Action
UNKNOWN
1944
Howard DeMartini
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
December 24, 1944
Hal Dobson
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
USA
May 23, 1943
Norman Duncan
Minor League
US Navy
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
April 12, 1945
Louis Elko
Pro Contract
US Army
Military Accident
UNKNOWN
UKNOWN
Charles Etherton
Minor League
USMC
Suicide
USA
December 27, 1945
Herb Fash
Minor League
US Navy
Explosion
PACIFIC
February 21, 1945
Frank Faudem
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
January 1945
George Gamble
Minor League
USAAF
Killed in Action
CBI
December 4, 1944
Robert Gary
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
USA
February 4, 1944
Conrad Graff
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
July 8, 1944
Alan Grant
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
ETO
December 29, 1943
Jim Grilk
Minor League
USAAF
Auto accident
USA
July 16, 1942
Frank Haggerty
Pro Contract
USAAF
Plane Crash
USA
September 23, 1943
Bill Hansen
Minor League
US Army
Died from Wounds
ETO
1944
Billy Hebert
Minor League
US Navy
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
October 21, 1942
Nay Hernandez
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
March 22, 1945
Bob Hershey
Minor League
US Navy
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
September 1943
Ernie Holbrook
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
December 16, 1944
Bob Holmes
Minor League
USMC
Died from Wounds
PACIFIC
February 22, 1945
Gordon Houston
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
USA
February 10, 1942
Ernie Hrovatic
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
January 14, 1945
Harry Hughes
Minor League
USMC
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
1945
Harry Imhoff
Minor League
USMC
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
1945
Frank Janik
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
April 29, 1945
Art Keller
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
September 29, 1944
Stan Klores
Minor League
US Navy
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
December 3, 1944
Curly Kopp
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
USA
1944
Harry Ladner
Umpire
US Army
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
April 18, 1945
Walter Lake
Minor League
US Army
Died from Wounds
ETO
July 26, 1944
Whitey Loos
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
PACIFIC
January 16, 1944
Jack Lummus
Minor League
USMC
Died from Wounds
PACIFIC
March 9, 1945
Ted Maillet
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
April 7, 1945
Henry Martinez
Minor League
US Navy
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
January 5, 1945
Duke McKee
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
1945
Joe Moceri
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
June 30, 1944
Leon Mohr
Minor League
USMC
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
1945
John Moller
Minor League
USAAF
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
August 8, 1943
George Myers
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
1945
Walter Navie
Minor League
US Army
Suicide
USA
October 9, 1945
Ed Neusel
Minor League
US Navy
Died from Illness
USA
July 31, 1944
William Niemeyer
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
March 4, 1945
Hank Nowak
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
January 1, 1945
Joe Palatas
Minor League
USAAF
Died as POW
ETO
April 11, 1944
Jack Patterson
Minor League
USMC
Killed in Action
ETO
November 2, 1944
Metro Persoskie
Minor League
USAAF
Flying Accident
ETO
February 22, 1944
Charlie Pescod
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
December 2, 1944
Harold Phillips
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
USA
August 9, 1945
Joe Pinder
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
June 6, 1944
Bob Price
Minor League
US Navy
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
1944
Ernie Raimondi
Minor League
US Army
Died from Wounds
ETO
January 26, 1945
John Regan
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
CBI
May 25, 1944
Pete Rehkamp
Minor League
USAAF
Auto Accident
USA
September 9, 1942
Joseph Rodgers
Minor League
US Navy
Killed in Action
MTO
October 10, 1943
Michael Sambolich
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
November 4, 1944
Glenn Sanford
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
USA
November 6, 1943
Bill Sarver
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
April 6, 1945
Charles Schaube
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
April 16, 1945
Walt Schmisseur
Minor League
US Navy
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
February 20, 1945
Bob Schmukal
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
October 3, 1944
Eddie Schohl
Minor League
US Army
Died from Wounds
MTO
November 1, 1943
Frank Schulz
Minor League
USAAF
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
June 17, 1945
Marcel Serventi
Minor League
US Army
Auto Accident
USA
July 5, 1941
Harold Sherman
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
CBI
July 7, 1945
Jack Siens
Minor League
US Navy
Plane Crash
ETO
September 10, 1943
Art Sinclair
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
MTO
January 26, 1944
John Smith
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
November 4, 1944
Norman Smith
Minor League
US Navy
Missing in action
PACIFIC
August 9, 1942
Marshall Sneed
Minor League
USAAF
Killed in Action
MTO
February 22, 1943
Billy Southworth Jr
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
USA
February 15, 1945
Earl Springer
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
January 25, 1945
Gene Stack
Minor League
US Army
Natural causes
USA
June 26, 1942
Don Stewart
Minor League
Canadian Army
Killed in bombing raid
ETO
March 13, 1941
Sylvester Sturges
Minor League
USAAF
Killed in Action
ETO
June 7, 1944
Fred Swift
Minor League
USAAF
Plane crash
USA
April 23, 1944
Johnny Taylor
Minor League
USMC
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
July 26, 1944
Steve Tonsick
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
MTO
March 28, 1943
Jimmie Trimble
Pro Contract
USMC
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
March 1, 1945
Wirt Twitchell
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
July 1944
Lou Vann
Minor League
USMC
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
May 18, 1944
Art Vivian
Minor League
USMC
Killed in Action
ETO
August 1, 1944
Elmer Wachtler
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
January 5, 1945
Leo Walker
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
USA
November 2, 1941
Roman Wantuck
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
June 16, 1944
Jim Whitfield
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
September 22, 1944
Les Wirkkala
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
September 7, 1944
Stanford Wolfson
Minor League
USAAF
Killed in Action
ETO
November 5, 1944
Elmer Wright
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
ETO
June 6, 1944
Fred Yeske
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
MTO
December 21, 1944
Marion Young
Minor League
USMC
Killed in Action
PACIFIC
December 13, 1944
Peter Zarilla
Minor League
USAAF
Plane Crash
USA
August 9, 1945
John Zulberti
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
MTO
January 1944
George Zwilling
Minor League
US Army
Killed in Action
MTO
March 31, 1943