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Joe Gallagher
Date and Place of Birth: March 7, 1914 Buffalo, New York
Died: February 25, 1998 Houston, Texas
Baseball
Experience:
Major League
Position: Outfield
Rank: Unknown
Military Unit: US Army
Area Served: United States
"Big and fast, Gallagher has everything to make a major league star."
United Press June 14, 1939
After graduating from high school, Gallagher played baseball and
football at Manhattan College in Riverdale, New York in 1933-1934.
He began his professional career with the Norfolk Tars of the
Piedmont League in 1936 where he batted .348. With Binghamton of the
New York-Penn League in 1937, he hit .271, and produced a .343
average for the American Association’s Kansas City Blues in 1938.
Writing in the Lowell Sun on August 1, 1938, Frank Moran
referred to Gallagher as a “sensational youngster just about ready
to start wearing a Yankee uniform.”
His 1938
numbers were good enough for the Yankees to find a spot on their
star-studded roster at the start of the 1939 season. His first hit
in the major leagues came on April 20, in the Senators’ home opener
– an inside the park home run. Gallagher hit a hard line drive at
the third baseman. “Maybe he should have grabbed it,” he recalled in
an Associated Press article on March 23, 1940, “but he didn’t. It
steamed on out to left field, struck an abutment and skittered
through the left fielder’s legs. I came into second watching the
comedy and then slowed down to a trot. The home run was a cinch. The
ball just kept climbing that wall in left field.”
Gallagher played 71 games for the Browns in 1939 and batted a very
respectable .282 with 40 RBIs. He looked impressive in spring
training at San Antonio, Texas in 1940, but played just 23 games
with St Louis and was out for fifty days after being injured sliding
into second base. He was traded to the Dodgers for Roy Cullenbine on
May 27. Gallagher played 57 games for the Dodgers and batted .264.
On May 12,
1941, Joe Gallagher was inducted in the Army - one of only four
major league players who lost the entire 1941 season to military
service. He was to serve at Jefferson Barracks, Missouri, where he
played baseball for the Reception Center Missions. His teammates
included Johnny Sturm, George Archie and Emmett Mueller.
On May 24, 1942, Gallagher was selected by Bob Feller – along with
fellow servicemen Cecil Travis, Zeke Bonura, Emmett Mueller, Ken
Silvestri and John Grodzicki – to join Dizzy Dean’s all-stars in an
exhibition game at Wrigley Field against Satchel Paige and the
Kansas City Monarchs.
Gallagher
remained in military service until the end of 1945 – four and a half
years. He reported to the Dodgers’ spring training camp at Sanford,
Florida in 1946, but the 32 year-old outfielder was out of shape and
overweight. The Dodgers optioned him to Montreal. The following
year, Gallagher quit baseball and took a job as head baseball coach
at Stephen F Austin State College (now University) in Texas.
Joe
Gallagher passed away in Houston, Texas on February 25, 1998. He was
83 years old.
Thanks to Amy Surak,
Archivist at Manhattan College Archives.
Created February 21, 2007.
Copyright © 2007 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball
in Wartime). All Rights Reserved. 

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