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Ewell Blackwell
Date and Place of Birth: October 23, 1922 Fresno, California
Died: October 29, 1996 Hendersonville, North Carolina
Baseball
Experience:
Major League
Position: Pitcher
Rank: Sergeant
Military Unit: 5th Infantry Regiment, 71st Infantry Division US Army
Area Served: European Theater of Operations
In April 1943 he was a corporal at Howze, Texas, and working in the
mess. “I never boiled an egg in my life,” he told The Sporting
News on April 30, 1947. “But I became the chief cook and bottle
washer. And you can ask the boys if they didn’t get good meals.”
In 1944, Blackwell was pitching for the Third Student Training
Regiment Rifles in the Infantry School League at Fort Benning,
Georgia. With 18 wins on the season, Blackwell helped the Rifles
make a run for first place in the second-half of the season.
On January 25, 1945, Sergeant Blackwell was sent overseas with the
71st Infantry Division and landed at LeHavre, France.
Blackwell played for the 71st Infantry Division Red Circlers
baseball team after the cease of hostilities in Europe.
The
71st Red Circlers team featured Bob Ramazzotti, Ancil Moore, Johnny
Wyrostek, Garland Lawing, Ewell Blackwell, Russ Kern, Milt Ticco,
Herb Bremer and Bill Ayres. Blackwell helped the team win the
American League division of the Third Army baseball league. A
five-game Third Army Championship Series followed in August 1945
against the National League division winners - the 76th Onaways.
With two shutouts by Blackwell - including a no-hitter in the second
game on August 11 - the Red Circlers advanced to the Army Ground
Force Championship Series. The Red Circlers team easily put aside
the 29th Infantry Division in three games to move on to the ETO
World Series against the OISE All-Stars from France.
In
front of crowds of 50,000 at Soldier's Field in Nurnberg, Germany,
the Red Circlers won the first game on September 2, 9-2, with
Blackwell allowing only five hits. The Red Circlers were beaten by
Negro League star Leon Day in the second game, and Blackwell
suffered his first defeat of the year in game three on September 6.
Despite allowing only three hits and striking out eight, Blackwell
was defeated, 2-1, by Sam Nahem of the Pirates. In the decisive
fifth game Blackwell was again beaten 2-1 on a combined effort by
Sam Nahem and Bobby Keane.
In
October 1945, Blackwell, along with teammates Walker, Lawing,
Heintzelman, Maurice Van Robays and Benny Zientara joined the OISE
All-Stars to play the Mediterranean champions in Leghorn, Italy.
In October, a baseball instructional clinic, sponsored by the 71st
Infantry Division newspaper, The Red Circle News, was held at
Augsburg in Germany for boys from 8 to 15 years of age. More than
350 kids turned out for the week long clinic with Blackwell, along
with Harry Walker, Maurice Van Robays and Ken Heintzelman helping
out as instructors.
Blackwell
was discharged on March 19, 1946. He was 9-13 and an all-star when
he returned in 1946 and won 16 games in a row for the Reds in 1947.
That year he also came within two outs of throwing back-to-back
no-hitters. In ten seasons he was an all-star on six occasions. On
April 12, 1955, Blackwell, pitching in relief, helped the Kansas
City Athletics clinch their first game at home with a 6-2 win over
the Tigers.
Blackwell
retired, aged 32, following injuries that included a kidney
operation, an appendectomy, and an arm injury.
He was
inducted into the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame in 1960.
Ewell Blackwell was 74 when he passed away on October 29, 1996 in
Hendersonville, North Carolina.
Created June 4, 2007. Copyright © 2007 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball
in Wartime). All Rights Reserved.
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