| Hank Bauer |
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EARLY YEARS The youngest of nine children, Bauer's Austrian immigrant father was a bartender who had earlier lost his leg in an aluminum mill. With little money coming into the home, Bauer was forced to wear clothes made out of old feed sacks, helping shape his hard-nosed approach to life. Playing baseball and basketball at East St. Louis Central Catholic High School , Bauer's nose was permanently damaged after an errant elbow from an opponent. Upon graduation in 1941 , he was repairing furnaces in a beer-bottling plant when his brother Herman, a minor league player in the Chicago White Sox system, was able to get him a tryout that resulted in a contract with Oshkosh of the Class D Wisconsin State League . One month after the attack on Pearl Harbor , Bauer enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps . While in the South Pacific , Bauer contracted Malaria , but recovered enough to earn 11 campaign ribbons, two Bronze Stars and a pair of Purple Heart s in 32 months of combat. His second injury had come at Okinawa , when he commanded a platoon of 64 men. Only six survived the brutal siege, with shrapnel hitting Bauer in the thigh and sending him home. Returning to East St. Louis, he joined the local pipe fitter's union and stopped by a local bar where his brother Joe worked. Danny Menendez , a New York Yankees scout, signed him for a tryout with the team's farm club in Quincy, IL. The terms: $175 a month (a $25 increase if he made the team) and a $250 bonus. Batting .300 at both Quincy and with the team's top minor league unit, the Kansas City Blues , Bauer eventually made his debut with the Bronx Bombers in September 1948 . CAREER In a 14-season career, Bauer had a .277 Batting Average with 164 Home Run s and 703 RBI in 1544 Games . As a manager, he helped guide the Orioles to the 1966 World Championship . During the regular season he posted a 594-544 record, including two second-place finishes for the 1967 Orioles and 1969 Athletics. HIGHLIGHTS
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