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Buddy Hassett
Date and Place of Birth: September 5, 1911 New York, New York
Died:
August 23, 1997 Westwood, New Jersey
Baseball Experience: Major League
Position: First Base
Rank: Lieutenant (jg)
Military Unit: US Navy
Area Served: Pacific Theater of Operations
Buddy Hassett, former first baseman for the Brooklyn Dodgers, Boston Braves and New York Yankees, and now a lieutenant in the Navy, has been appointed recreation officer of an aircraft carrier now nearing completion, the Navy announced today.
Associated Press May 20, 1944
Hassett graduated from college in 1933 and played minor league
baseball with the New York Yankees. He was at Wheeling in 1933,
Norfolk in 1934 and Columbia in 1935. At the same time he continued
to play basketball with Union City (ABL) in 1933-1934 and Jersey
(ABL) in 1934-1935.
Hassett was traded to Brooklyn in February 1936, and played every
game of the season at first base for the Dodgers that season,
batting .310. He remained the Dodgers’ regular first baseman through
1938. He was traded to the Boston Braves in the off-season and spent
the next three years holding down the first base job.
In December 1941, Hassett was traded to the Yankees to replace first
baseman Johhny Sturm who had gone into the service. He hit .284 in
132 games during the regular season and played against the Cardinals
in the World Series. In game three of the series, Cardinals’
pitcher, Ernie White, broke Hassett’s wrist with a pitch.
Hassett
entered military service with the Navy in 1943. He was stationed at
the Preflight School at Chapel Hill, North Carolina where he turned
out in the spring for the Chapel Hill Cloudbusters baseball team,
featuring Ted Williams, Johnny Pesky, Harry Craft and Johnny Sain.
On
July 28, 1943, in a charity game for the Red
Cross at Yankee Stadium‚
Babe Ruth lead a team of combined Yankees and
Indians called the Yank-Lands against the Cloudbusters.
Johnny Sain walked the Babe in his one plate
appearance‚ as the Cloudbusters came out victorious‚ 11-5. Hassett
was 2-for-4 with a double and two runs scored.
In May
1944, Lieutenant (jg) Hassett was assigned to the Naval Training
Station at Newport, Rhode Island, waiting to serve as recreation
officer on a newly built aircraft carrier. He played baseball with
the Sunset All-Stars in the Sunset League while at Newport, and
attended the youth baseball school in July 1944, where he told the
75 young ballplayers that “the best way to be a good hitter is to
keep at it and not be discouraged.”
Later that year, Hassett went to sea and served on the aircraft
carrier USS Bennington (CV-20) from August 1944,
participating in the Iwo Jima and Okinawa invasions. He was the
ship's athletic director.
Hassett was discharged from the Navy at New York on November 16,
1945.
Hassett was 34 years old when he reported to the Yankees spring
training camp. He was released by the Yankees on April 30, 1946 and
considered retiring from the game. But on May 6, he rejoined the
organization and played with the Newark Bears. In 1949, Hassett took
over as manager of the Bears.
Buddy Hassett was inducted into the Manhattan College Athletic Hall
of Fame in 1981. He passed away at the age of 85 on August 23, 1997
at Westwood, New Jersey.


Buddy Hassett
(left) with Johnny Sturm, who had the Yankees' first
base job before entering military service.

Buddy
Hassett with Babe Ruth before the charity game at Yankee
Stadium on July 28, 1943.
Thanks to Brian Hassett, Buddy's nephew, for help with this biography and for permission to use the photos from his collection.
Created January 18, 2007. Updated April 13, 2007.
Copyright © 2007 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball in Wartime). All Rights Reserved.
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