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Harry
Walker
Date and Place of Birth: October 22, 1916 Pascagoula, Mississippi
Died:
August 8, 1999 Birmingham, Alabama
Baseball Experience: Major League
Position: Outfield
Rank: Unknown
Military Unit:
65th
Reconnaissance Troop (Mechanized),
65th Infantry Division
US Army
Area Served: European Theater of Operations
Walker earned his nickname from his habit during at-bats of
continually adjusting his cap between pitches. He first appeared for
the Cardinals in 1940, playing seven games and batting a lowly .185.
He was back with St Louis the following year for another seven
games, but played 74 games in 1942 and batted a superb .314. In
1943, Walker was the regular left fielder appearing in 148 games,
producing a .294 batting average and appearing in the World Series.
“The next morning after the Series,” Walker told author Richard
Goldstein, “Al Brazle and I were inducted in the Army at Jefferson
Barracks. Originally we thought we were going down to Memphis to an
air base, but it seems that Pete Reiser’s troop commander at Fort
Riley, Kansas, had a big pull at Jefferson Barracks. So we went to
Fort Riley."
Walker was a private at the Cavalry Replacement Training Center
(CRTC) at Fort Riley. In February 1944, he was taken seriously ill
with spinal meningitis. “I almost died with it,” he recalled
On July 27, 1944, the Centaurs played a War Bond game against the
Toledo Mud Hens to raise $500,000 in bond sales for the purchase of
a B-29 Superfortress bomber. The Centaurs won the game 11-10 as the
Mud Hens committed six errors.
In August 1944, the Centaurs competed in the National Semi-Pro
championship tournament but were knocked out in the early rounds.
The Sherman Field Flyers based at Fort Leavenworth were the eventual
winners behind the pitching of Herman Besse.
In September 1944, Walker, along with major leaguers Brazle,
George
Archie, Ken Heintzelman and George Scharein,
was assigned to the
65th
Reconnaissance Troop (Mechanized),
65th Infantry Division
at Camp Shelby, Mississippi.
Together they were sent overseas to Europe with the
65th
Infantry
Division. “We stayed pretty much together all through, went about
five hundred miles in combat,” said Walker.
Walker was wounded in combat and earned a Bronze Star
for "meritorious service in connection with military operations"
and
a
Purple
Heart
for wounds received on March 22, 1945. At
one time Walker's unit was ordered to hold a bridge and stop German
troops trying to get across. Manning a machine gun on a Jeep, Walker
was faced with an enemy that refused to stop. "So that's when I had
to start shooting," he told author Frederick Turner, "and I just cut
through the whole mess, and they were scattered everywhere, firing
back and forth at you, and you're just out there on point like a
sitting duck."
On another occasion he was on patrol when he ran into three German
guards. "They came within ten feet of us," he recalled. "The only
thing that saved us was they thought we were Germans retreating from
fighting.
"Those three guards walked up to us, and one of them asked me, in
German, where the Americans were. I asked them, in English, to
surrender. Instead, he threw his rifle up in my face.
"I had a .45 caliber revolver, one that I'd bought myself ... I shot
all three Germans. Five shots, and all five hit them.
"But it was close. That rifle was only about four feet from me when
I started shooting. What saved me was that he was trying to get his
safety bolt off. He couldn't get it off before I was able to get
him."
Days later the war
in Europe was over and Walker's next assignment was to organize
baseball games for the troops. He located earthmoving equipment in
Czechoslovakia and built a ballfield in Linz, Austria.
The 65th Infantry
Division clinched the II Corps championship title, but were defeated
in the Third Army play-offs. But for Walker, the baseball season was
not over. He joined the 71st Infantry Division team. The 71st Red
Circlers team featured Bob Ramazzotti, Ancil Moore,
Johnny Wyrostek,
Garland Lawing,
Ewell Blackwell,
Al Brazle, Russ Kern, Milt Ticco,
Herb
Bremer, Bill Ayers and
Jimmy Gladd. Walker, playing centerfield,
helped the team win the American League division of the Third Army
baseball league. A five-game Third Army Championship Series followed
in August 1945 against the National League division winners - the
76th Onaways. With two shutouts by Blackwell - including a no-hitter
in the second game - the Red Circlers advanced to the Army Ground
Force Championship Series. Walker's team easily put aside the 29th
Infantry Division in three games to move on to the ETO World Series
against the OISE All-Stars from France. In front of crowds of 25,000
at Soldier's Field in Nurnberg, Germany, the Red Circlers won the
first game, 10-6, before losing two straight to
Sam Nahem's
All-Stars. In the fourth game Walker hit a two-run home run in the
first inning to help the Red Circlers to a 5-0 win behind the
five-hit pitching of Bill Ayers. The celebrations, however, were
short-lived as the OISE All-Stars came back the next day with a 2-1
win to clinch the ETO World Series title.
In October 1945,
Walker with teammates Blackwell, Lawing, Heintzelman,
Maurice Van Robays and
Benny Zientara joined the OISE All-Stars to play the
Mediterranean champions in Leghorn, Italy.
After two years of military service, Walker returned to the
Cardinals in 1946, played 112 games and batted just .237. But by
1947 he was back to his pre-war form, if not better, and led the
National League with a .363 batting average.
Walker remained in the major leagues as a player until 1951. He
became a manager, taking over the Cardinals from
Eddie Stanky
for most of 1955 and pinch hitting nine times. He managed Pittsburgh
from 1965 through mid-1967 and Houston from 1968 through late 1972.
After working as a scout and highly
successful hitting instructor, Walker returned home to Leeds,
Alabama in 1979 and became the first head coach of the University of
Alabama at Birmingham baseball program. He held that position until
his retirement in 1986.
Harry Walked passed away in Birmingham, Alabama on August 8, 1999.
He was 82 years old.
Thanks to the late
Harry Walker, W P Sims of the 71st Infantry Division Association and
Robert Patton of the 65th Infantry Division Association.
Created January
3, 2007. Updated January 28, 2008.
Copyright © 2008 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball
in Wartime). All Rights Reserved.


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