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Those Who Died That Others Might Be Free

Frank Faudem
Date and Place
of Birth:
July 9, 1921 Detroit, Michigan
Date and Place of Death: January 1945 Leyte Gulf
Baseball Experience: Minor League
Position: Outfield
Rank: Private First Class
Military Unit: Company A, 305th Infantry Regiment,
77th Infantry Division US Army
Area Served: Pacific Theater of Operations
During an interview by the Central Student newspaper on April 25, 1940, Frank Faudem stated that his ambition was “to be a professional baseball player.” He went on to achieve star status as a professional player in the minor leagues, however, he was called to battle in World War II where his life was ended by a Japanese sniper, short of fulfilling his dream in baseball’s major leagues.
David Otis
Faudem, a
diminutive, stocky left-hander, was a hard-hitting pitcher and
outfielder. During the summer months while still a high school
student, he played ball in the leagues of the Detroit Amateur
Baseball Federation. Faudem batted .538 in 1937 at Class E, and was
runner up to Bob Collins (a former Central High pitcher) for the
most valuable player award. He hit .400 in 1938 at Class C with the
Registers, and produced a .348 batting average when he played with
Central in 1939; and .478 in winning All-City honors at Central in
1940. When asked by the Central Student newspaper on April
25, 1940, what his biggest thrill was, Faudem replied, “Last season
while playing against Mackenzie, I hit a homer in the fourth inning
with bases loaded. It was one of the longest four baggers ever hit
at Littlefield. The pitch was off a lefthander, and, before that, I
was always afraid of southpaws.”
Throughout his
high school athletic career Frank’s biggest fan was his father who
did not miss a single game his son played. In the summer of 1940,
Central High coach Johnny Madonna asked New York Yankees’ manager
Joe McCarthy to let Faudem and fellow Central teammate Sheldon
Harris work out with the Yankees while the Yankees were in Detroit.
McCarthy agreed and even allowed the two youngsters to suit up in
Yankees’ uniforms and hit a few in practice.
“To say merely
that Faudem and Harris were pleased with wearing Yankee uniforms,”
wrote an unidentified Detroit newspaper shortly after the event,
“and working out with the American League champions at Briggs
Stadium would be an understatement.”
Impressed with
what he saw during their workouts, McCarthy told the two to come out
again when the Yankees came back to Detroit in September.
But it wasn’t to
be a Yankees’ contract that Faudem would sign in October 1940. And
despite offers from the St Louis Browns and Cleveland Indians, he
chose to accept an offer from former major leaguer and Detroit
Tigers’ scout Aloysius “Wish” Egan to sign with his hometown Tigers.
Faudem was
assigned to the Muskegon Reds of the Class C Michigan State League
for 1941. The league folded early in the season and the young
outfielder found himself with the Fulton Tigers in the Class D Kitty
League. Despite being one of the shortest players in the league, he
hit .321 with 68 RBIs and 81 runs scored in 118 games. Faudem was a
favorite with the Fulton fans, displaying some dazzling defensive
work in centerfield. “Frank Faudem was the outstanding star in
Saturday night’s victory over Mayfield,” announced the Fulton
Sentinel on July 26, 1941, “with two catches which fans hardly
believed possible, and also came through with a two run single when
the tallies were badly needed.”
Faudem remained
with Fulton in 1942, but the summer months of that year were very
difficult for the youngster. His father was terminally ill back home
in Detroit. “He has played just as hard and just as brilliantly,”
noted the Fulton News, “but there has been lacking that sense
of joy that he radiated last year. Last year he was always playing
with his mates; always ready and eager for a jest; this year he has
been strangely reserved and a little distant in his manner. I did
not know the trouble for some time; then I learned of his father’s
hopeless illness and knew this was the cause.”
Frank’s father
passed away during the final days of the 1942 season before the
youngster was able to get back home.
On September 4,
1942, moved up the organized baseball ladder and was assigned to the
Winston-Salem Twins of the Class B Piedmont League. Alongside
teammates that included Vic Wertz, Ted Gray and Joe Moceri, Faudem
played 68 games and batted .260 with 18 RBIs.
On October 24,
1942, his contract was assigned to the Beaumont Exporters of the
Class A1 Texas League. But he was unable to report to the team as
military service beckoned on January 11, 1943.
Faudem was
inducted in the Army at Fort Custer, Michigan, and while stationed
at Fort Benning, Georgia, he married Lydia Kepes on December 23,
1943.
In
March 1944, Faudem left Camp Stoneham, California with the 305th
Infantry Regiment, 77th Infantry Division, bound for
Hawaii, where they trained in amphibious landings and jungle
warfare. While there, he played
baseball for the Army team near Honolulu against future baseball
hall of famers Joe DiMaggio, Johnny Mize and Pee Wee Reese, as well
as against Walt Masterson, Al Brancato, Jerry Priddy, George Dickey,
Hugh Casey, and Bob Harris, among others.
Since
September 1944, Faudem had been best of friends with Benno Levi, a
fellow Detroiter and a private in Company A. Both boys were of the
Jewish faith and enjoyed Jewish holidays together. Once they went in
to combat that had less opportunities to meet up, but Levi recalled
one occasion when Faudem eagerly told him the good news about the
birth of his daughter, Sherry Beth.
A few
days later Levi suffered a serious leg injury. He was recuperating
when he heard that Faudem had been killed. “I hobbled up to the
hill, where the dead were kept until they could be buried,” he told
the Detroit Jewish News on September 26, 2003. Levi wanted to
say goodbye to his friend. “But I didn’t want to uncover his face in
death,” he said. “I wanted to remember him the way he was.”
News of his death
was reported in the Detroit Free Press and The Sporting
News. “He was a hustling outfielder,” Wish Egan told the
Detroit Free Press on February 14, 1945, “and wanted to play
baseball as few boys did. You never saw a boy who wanted to get into
the majors as much as Frankie.”
Frank Faudem was
survived by his wife, Lydia, and their nine-week old daughter,
Sherry Beth, whom he had never seen.
Very special
thanks to David Otis for supplying much of the information and
photos contained in this biography. Thanks also to Davis O Barker
and the Amateur
Athletic Foundation of Los Angeles for help with this biography.
Added September 19, 2006. Updated June 2, 2007. Copyright © 2007 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball
in Wartime). All Rights Reserved.
Frank
Faudem (right) and Sheldon Harris during their workout
with the Yankees in 1940.
Frank Faudem (right) with
his father.
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