

|
|
Mickey Grasso
Date and Place of Birth: May 10, 1919 Newark, New Jersey
Died: October 15, 1975 Miami, Florida
Baseball
Experience:
Major League
Position: Catcher
Rank: Technical Sergeant
Military Unit: 168th Infantry Regiment, 34th Infantry
Division US Army
Area Served: Mediterranean Theater of Operations
Mickey Grasso was a fiery-tempered catcher who spent nearly two years in a German prisoner-of-war camp after being captured in North Africa.
Former outfielder Goose Goslin, signed Grasso as a second baseman
but converted him to a catcher during his rookie year. It was to be
the only season for the youngster before he entered military service
with the Army at Fort Dix, New Jersey on January 20, 1942.
Grasso served with the 34th Infantry Division as a
technical sergeant and was in North Africa in early 1943, where he
was taken prisoner by German forces on February 17. Surrounded by
Rommel’s Afrika Korps troops at a location known only as Hill 609 in
Tunisia, Grasso was among 6,000 Allied prisoners taken by the
retreating Germans who were being pursued by Britain’s General
Montgomery.
“A young lieutenant,” The Sporting News reported on March 11,
1953, “turned to Sergeant Grasso and asked, ‘Mickey, shall we
fight?’
“Mickey
glanced apprehensively at the guns ready to blast the squad out of
existence, estimated the overwhelming odds, swallowed and replied,
Man, don’t be crazy.”
A three-day hike followed to an airfield where the prisoners were
flown to Italy. They were then loaded into box cars for a five-day
rail journey to their home for the next two years – prisoner-of-war
camp Stalag IIIB in Furstenberg, 60 miles southeast of Berlin,
Germany.
On a daily
ration of thin soup and a slice of bread, Grasso dropped from 205
pounds to 145. But baseball was never far from his mind. Also in the
camp was former Appalachian League outfielder, Harold Martin, who
had been serving with a tank division when captured four days after
Grasso.
Grasso, Martin and another prisoner, Keith Thomas, devised a
baseball game using playing cards which kept them entertained during
the long periods of boredom during the winter months of 1943-1944.
They were so enthralled with the game that Martin wrote The
Sporting News from the prison camp in December 1943, asking if
anything similar existed.
But it was not just
card games of baseball that Grasso played. During the summer of
1943, competitive fast-pitch softball leagues were formed and Grasso
was a star player with the Zoot Suiters. In the summer of 1944,
there were major and minor leagues, with the majors divided into
National and American divisions. Games were well attended, the level
of play was high and culminated in a World Series in August.
“We had a
French fellow in the group and a Jewish boy who spoke German. We
marched through about ten villages in columns of twos. We were
stopped a couple of times by German officers, but the Jewish boy
saluted smartly, explained we were a working detail, headed down the
road and we got away with it. We marched from the Oder to the Elbe,
discovered a rowboat with one oar by a home on the edge of the
river, found a sheet and painted a big black cross on it.
“The
Russians and Germans were firing at each other a few hundred yards
down the river, but we piled into the boat anyway and took off for
the other side.
“We
drifted downstream toward the fighting, but finally made it to the
other side.”
“It seemed like about nine million GIs came out of the bushes to
meet us. We were looking down the barrels of a lot of 35th
Infantry Division rifles, but we told ‘em who we were and, thank
God, they believed us. Then they told us we were crazy to escape –
that the war was all but over.
“Anyway,
they got us back to some chow. They shoved a ton of good food at us,
but about all we could do was nibble on a chicken leg. Our stomachs
had shrunk so much we couldn’t handle any more than that.”
The former prisoners were then flown to Le Havre in France and
returned to the United States on the Queen Elizabeth.
Grasso
remained in the Army for a further five months and returned to the
Giants’ organization in 1946. After being away from the professional
game for four years, Grasso played with the Jersey City Giants in
the International League in 1946. Despite being sidelined some of
the time with a strep throat, he had a good season and made his
major league debut with the New York Giants on September 18. Grasso
appeared in seven games before the season ended, collecting three
hits in 22 at-bats.
He was
back with Jersey City in 1947 and was purchased by the Detroit
Tigers in April 1948. The Tigers assigned Grasso to the Seattle
Rainiers of the Pacific Coast League where he continued to play
through 1949. In November 1949, he was drafted by the Washington
Senators and returned to the major leagues in 1950, playing 75 games
and hitting .287.
Grasso hit .206 in 52 games with Washington in 1951 and played a
career-high 115 games in 1952, batting .216. In 1953 he played a
further 61 games and was traded to the Cleveland Indians in January
1954. Two months later, the 33-year-old catcher broke his ankle
sliding into second during an exhibition game. The injury sidelined
him for most of the season but he did make four regular-season
appearances for the Indians and his only World Series appearance
came in Game One against the Giants as a late-inning defensive
replacement for Jim Hegan.
In
November 1954, Grasso was drafted by the Giants – the team he had
began his professional career with 13 years earlier. He played eight
games with the Giants before being released in May and was signed as
a free agent by the Indianapolis Indians of the American
Association. Grasso later played for Miami in the International
League and ended his career with that team in 1958.
Grasso remained involved in baseball in some capacity for the rest
of his life. In June 1975, he operated a summer camp offering a
unique combination of activities and events for both handicapped and
non-handicapped children. “Challenging, frustrating and rewarding,”
was the way Grasso described the camp to the Troy Times Record
on June 21, 1975.
“In our
integrated setting, handicapped children are able to witness and
observe activities of non-handicapped children. Thus, a child has
someone to model after,” explained Grasso. “Our camp also allows
non-handicapped children to be exposed to children less fortunate
than themselves. This potentially increases children’s awareness
that while some people are different, they need not shy away from
them.”
Four
months later, on October 15, 1975, Mickey Grasso passed away in
Miami, Florida. He was just 55 years old.
Some of the above
information was obtained from Tim Wolter's book "POW Baseball in World War II."
Created August 28, 2007. Updated September 21,
2007.
Copyright © 2007 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball
in Wartime). All Rights Reserved. 

![]() |
||
|
|
||
|
Ebbets Field Flannels The finest manufacturer of vintage historically-inspired athletic clothing. A huge range of baseball caps, t-shirts, jackets and authentic jerseys |
||