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Phil Marchildon
Date and Place of Birth: October 13, 1913 Penetanguishene, Ontario, Canada
Died: January 10, 1997 Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Baseball Experience: Major League
Position: Pitcher
Rank: Flying Officer
Military Unit: 433 Squadron RCAF
Area Served: European Theater of Operations
The 5-foot-11, 190-pound right-hander a pro
contract with Toronto of the International League in 1939. He was
5-7 in his rookie year with a 4.50 ERA. In 1940, Marchildon was
10-13 with a 3.18 ERA, and earned a late-season promotion to the
Philadelphia Athletics. He joined the Athletics' starting rotation
in 1941 and was 10-15, winning 17 games the following year for a
team that finished 48 games out of first place. Marchildon entered military service with the
Royal Canadian Air Force following the 1942 season. Initially, he
took gunnery training at Souris in Manitoba. He was later stationed
at Trenton, Ontario, where he pitched for the Trenton Air Force
team. He was commissioned a pilot officer with No 2 Training
Command at Winnipeg on July 23, 1943, and graduated as an air gunner
with No 3 Bombing and Gunnery School at MacDonald, Manitoba.
Marchildon was stationed in Halifax, Nova Scotia – where he briefly
pitched for the Halifax Force team - before leaving for England in
August 1943.
Flying Officer Marchildon
was initially stationed at Bournemouth, before joining the 82nd
Operational Training Unit at Ossington. Ready for active duty he
joined 433 Squadron of the Royal Canadian Air Force at RAF Skipton-on-Swayle,
Yorkshire. Marchildon served as a tail-gunner in a Handley Page
Halifax bomber, flying night time missions that were treacherous and
uncomfortable to say the least. In conditions that were so cold his
guns would often freeze, he returned from one mission with 30
shrapnel holes made by anti-aircraft guns, including one that had
come perilously close to the fuel tanks in the wings.
"Some Americans went over with us one night,"
Marchildon recalled in The Sporting News on July 12, 1945, "and
after that they said 'Never again at night' [all American bomber
missions were flown during the day]. In the daytime you can't see
the stuff shooting up at you. But at night, wow! It's tracers and
rockets all around that scare you to death." Active duty offered little time for Marchildon
to play baseball, but his brother-in-law, Adam McKenzie, who played
for the DeHavilland Comets, persuaded him to make a handful of
appearances for the team. "I only played a few games over there and
was not in very good condition to do so," he later recalled.
During the night of August 16, 1944, Flying
Officer Marchildon flew his 26th mission laying mines in Kiel Bay -
he was four away from going home. As the bomber flew through the
darkness above the Baltic Sea on the way to its target, it was
attacked and set ablaze by a German night fighter. In the spiralling
chaos, the bomber's pilot immediately gave orders for the crew to
bail out - only the navigator and Marchildon survived. Stranded in the icy water, both crew members
were eventually picked up by a Danish fishing boat and handed over
to the German authorities. Marchildon spent the following year at
Stalag Luft III in Poland, where 350 prisoners were involved in a
softball league. "I was a heavy-hitting outfielder for the squad
that won the camp championship," he later said.
Later on as the Russians were advancing, the
prisoners were marched to Bremen. Then as the British and Americans
got close the prisoners moved again. As they marched on to a new
prison site, the prisoners were periled by their own Allies as
planes swooped down in strafing attacks.
May 2, 1945, was the happy day Marchildon was
finally liberated. "We were sleeping in a field when I woke up
suddenly and heard troops passing," he recalled. "I thought they
were Germans, but learned next day that the British had us
surrounded. Our guards stacked their guns in a building and locked
the door then surrendered to the British." By the time he was liberated, he was severely
malnourished and had lost 30 pounds. He was flown back to England to
recuperate then returned to Canada by boat. Marchildon was suffering recurring nightmares,
his nerves were in tatters and, not surprisingly, he had no interest
in returning to baseball. "When I came home, my nerves came all
loose," he remembered. "First night home I took my blankets out in
the yard and slept on the ground. Couldn't sleep in a bed." The persuasive Athletics' owner, Connie Mack,
eventually talked Marchildon into joining the team. On July 6, 1945,
he worked out with the team in Chicago. "A new nervousness of speech
and gesture suggests something of what he went through," wrote Red
Smith in The Sporting News on July 12, 1945." Marchildon found it difficult, however, to focus
on baseball. “I’d kind of drift away from concentration,” he said.
“I’d think about how lucky I was to get out of it all.” He
also found himself thinking about the other five crew members who
perished with the plane when it was shot down. Marchildon didn't
know of their fate until after the war ended.
Marchildon made three brief appearances for the
Athletics before the 1945 season ended. But by 1947, he had regained
his pre-war form, winning 19 games with a 3.22 ERA.
He continued to pitch
in the majors until 1950, and then pitched for a couple of years in
the Intercounty League in Ontario.
Marchildon then went to
work for A V Roe in Malton, Ontario. The CF-105 Avro Arrow jet
fighter which Marchildon worked on, was Canada's greatest
aeronautical achievement, and the subsequent cancellation of the
project in 1959 still remains a story of political intrigue and
controversy. Phil Marchildon was inducted in the Canadian
Baseball Hall of Fame in 1983. He passed away in January 1997, at
age 83.
Thanks to the late
Phil Marchildon for help with his biography. Created August 2, 2006. Updated April 21, 2007.
Copyright © 2007 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball
in Wartime). All Rights Reserved. 


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