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Hank Bauer
Date and Place of Birth: July 31, 1922 East St Louis, Illinois
Died: February 9, 2007 Shawnee Mission, Kansas
Baseball Experience:
Major League
Position: Outfield
Rank: Sergeant
Military Unit: USMC
Area Served: Pacific Theater of Operations
After graduating from
Central Catholic High School,
Bauer went to work
repairing furnaces in a beer-bottling plant when his older brother
Herman – who was playing in the White Sox farm system - was able to
get him a tryout that resulted in a contract with Oshkosh Giants of
the Wisconsin State League.
Alternating between infield and outfield, he batted .262.
In
January 1942, Bauer enlisted in the Marine Corps. He took basic
training at Mare Island, California, where he also played for the
camp baseball team.
But
the easy life came to an abrupt halt. "One morning," Bauer told TIME
magazine in 1964, "this sergeant came up to me and said, 'Why don't
you volunteer for the Raider battalion?' I said okay. But the first
thing they told me was, 'You've got to swim a mile with a full pack
on your back.' I said, 'Hell, I can't even swim,' and they turned me
down. I told the sergeant what happened. He said, 'You gutless
SOB, go back down there.' So I told them I knew how to swim. They took
me."
Bauer felt there was no future for him in baseball so he joined the
pipe fitters' union in East St. Louis, and got a job as a wrecker,
dismantling an old factory. But a roving baseball scout named Danny
Menendez found him and offered him a tryout with the Quincy Gems, a
Yankees’ farm club.
Bauer hit .323 at Quincy and promptly moved up to the Kansas City
Blues, where he hit .313 in 1947 and .305 in 1948. Bauer played 19
games with the Yankees in 1948, he played 100-plus games in Yankees’
pinstripes for the next 11 seasons, plus nine World Series
appearances.
During the 1960s, Bauer managed the Kansas City Athletics and
Baltimore Orioles. In 1966 he led the Orioles to the World Series
where they defeated the Dodgers in four games. Bauer then ran a
liquor store for many years.
Hank Bauer died of cancer in Shawnee Mission, Kansas on February 9,
2007.
Some of the information in this biography was obtained from TIME
magazine September 11, 1964.
Read the biography of his brother, Herman Bauer.
Created February 11, 2007. Updated
April 11, 2007.
Copyright © 2007 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball
in Wartime). All Rights Reserved. 
Bauer
came down with malaria almost as soon as he hit the South Pacific.
"My weight dropped from 190 pounds to 160 pounds," he said. "I was
eating atabrine tablets like candy." Temporarily recovered (over the
next four years, Bauer had 24 malarial attacks), he fought on New
Georgia, was hit in the back by shrapnel on Guam. Next came Emirau
off New Guinea, then Okinawa. Sixty-four men were in Platoon
Sergeant Bauer's landing group on Okinawa; six got out alive. Hank
himself was wounded again. "I saw this reflection of sunshine on
something coming down. It was an artillery shell, and it hit right
behind me." A piece of shrapnel tore a jagged hole in Bauer's left
thigh. His part of the war was over —after 32 months of combat,
eleven campaign ribbons, two Bronze Stars, two Purple Hearts. His
brother, Herman, was not so fortunate. He was killed in action in
France with the 3rd Armored Division.
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