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Date and Place of Birth:
April 23, 1921 Buffalo, New York
Died:
November 24, 2003 Broken Arrow, Oklahoma
Area Served:
European Theater of Operations
Warren Spahn, the winningest left-handed pitcher in major league
history, received a battlefield commission in 1945.
The Boston Braves signed the young left-hander for $80 a month in
1940, and after a slow start he posted a 19-6 record with Evansville
in 1941, followed by a 17-12 record at Hartford in 1942. His
performance was good enough to earn him a late-season promotion to
the Braves, and Spahn made four unspectacular appearances for Boston
before the season ended.
Spahn entered military service on December 3, 1942. He served with
the Army at Camp Chaffee, Arkansas, and pitched for the 1850th
Service Unit baseball team. The team’s line-up included future major
league pitcher Zeb Eaton, and minor leaguers Ed Sears, Avery
Thompson and Elwyn Leatherman. On August 5, 1943, Spahn pitched a
15-0 no-hitter against the KFPW Broadcasters, striking out 17. Only
two men reached base – both on errors.
He was sent to Europe in December 1944 with the
1159th Engineer Combat Group's
276th Engineer Combat Battalion.
"Let me tell you," Spahn said, "that was a tough bunch of guys. We
had people that were let out of prison to go into the service. So
those were the people I went overseas with, and they were tough and
rough and I had to fit that mold."
Spahn soon found himself in the Battle of the Bulge. "We were
surrounded in the Hertgen Forrest and had to fight our way out of
there. Our feet were frozen when we went to sleep and they were
frozen when we woke up. We didn't have a bath
or change of clothes for weeks."
After Germany’s surrender in May 1945, First Lieutenant Spahn
pitched for the 115th Engineers Group at their base at
the University of Heidelberg. In a four-game stretch, he allowed
only one run and nine hits while striking out 73 batters.
With the war over, Spahn returned to Boston in 1946 and posted an
8-5 record and solid 2.94 ERA in 24 appearances “Before the war I
didn’t have anything that slightly resembled self-confidence,” Spahn
told the Associated Press in August 1946. “Then I was tight as a
drum and worrying about every pitch. But nowadays I just throw them
up without the slightest mental pressure.”
In 1947 he had the first of thirteen 20-win seasons.
On
September 16, 1960, Spahn pitched the first no-hitter of his career
against the Phillies, and the 4-0 win was his 20th of the season.
The following year he no-hit the Giants 1-0 on April 28, five days
after his 40th birthday. Spahn pitched his last game in the majors
for the San Francisco Giants in 1965, aged 44.
Looking back on his military experience some years later, Spahn
said, “After what I went through overseas, I never thought of
anything I was told to do in baseball as hard work. You get over
feeling like that when you spend days on end sleeping in frozen tank
tracks in enemy threatened territory. The Army taught me something
about challenges and about what’s important and what isn’t.
Everything I tackle in baseball and in life I take as a challenge
rather than work.”
Interestingly,
Spahn returned to military uniform two decades after the war, albeit
under extremely different circumstances. In 1963, he appeared in an
episode of the television series, "Combat," dressed as a German
soldier!
In 1966, Spahn was presented with the Fraternal Order of Eagles'
“Major Richard Bong Award” for his WWII service. He was inducted in
the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1973.
On November 24, 2003, Warren Spahn passed away peacefully at his
home in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. He was 82.
Created January
13, 2007. Updated June 16, 2007.
Copyright © 2007 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball
in Wartime). All Rights Reserved.

Warren
Spahn
Baseball Experience: Major League
Position: Pitcher
Rank: First Lieutenant
Military Unit: 276th Engineer Combat Battalion,
1159th Engineer Combat Group US Army 

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