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Those Who Died That Others Might Be Free

Date and Place of Birth:
June 30, 1926 Bahama, North Carolina
Date and Place of Death: January 31, 1946 Northington General
Hospital, Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Baseball Experience: Minor League
Position: Outfield-First Base
Rank: Sergeant
Military Unit: US Army
Area Served: European Theater of Operations
"[Dellinger] was described by many as having a brilliant baseball future."
Unidentified press clipping circa February 1946
Eugene L. "Gene" Dellinger was born on June 30,
1926 in the small town of Bahama, North Carolina, about 14 miles
north of Durham. Dellinger loved baseball and played the game every
opportunity he had while growing up.
"Eugene and I grew up in Bahama, and we lived within 150 yards of
each other," recalls his boyhood friend Alton P. Mangum. "We played
together from the time we could walk. We were both in the Boy
Scouts, and we hiked and camped with our Scout troop, and we were as
close as brothers.
"When Eugene was about 10 years old, his daddy helped him in
changing his swing from the right side to the left. He had a very
natural swing left handed, and he reminded me of Ted Williams in the
way he snapped his wrist when he swung at a ball.
"We both played baseball at every opportunity as we grew up. If we
weren’t playing in a game, we were throwing the ball to each other.
His dad had broad shoulders, and Eugene took after him."
Dellinger played shortstop with the Mangum Township High School team
in Bahama; Mangum played first base,
and the two of them regularly attended ballgames at Durham Athletic
Park, home of the Durham Bulls who were a Brooklyn Dodgers farm club
at the time.
"When the Bulls held a tryout day, Eugene attended," says Mangum.
"After displaying his baseball skills, they talked to him and signed
him after he graduated from high school."
Joining the club in 1943, and playing for former St. Louis Cardinals
infielder Bruno Betzel and alongside future Brooklynites Gene
Hermanski, Rex Barney and Gene Mauch, Dellinger appeared in 10 games
as an outfielder and batted .293 before being assigned to the Olean
Oilers of the Class D PONY League. At Olean, Dellinger played for
former Pirates second baseman Jake Pitler and had Ralph Branca and
future American League infielder Billy DeMars as teammates. In 80
games (46 in the outfield, 14 at first base and 13 at shortstop),
the 17-year-old batted .257 with 35 RBIs and led the team with 300
at-bats, 77 hits and 14 doubles.
In 1944, he advanced to the Montreal Royals of the Class AA
International League - one level below the majors - and appeared in
an exhibition game against the Brooklyn Dodgers on July 11.
"After the game," recalls Mangum, "Leo Durocher went to Eugene and
talked with him, and Eugene told him it looked like he was going to
be drafted in the Army. Leo told him if he went into the Army to
call him after the war and that he wanted him with the Dodgers."
Playing again for Bruno Betzel, Dellinger batted .185 in 28 games
for the Royals and was assigned to the Newport News Dodgers of the
Class B Piedmont League where he was reunited with another former
manager, Jake Pitler. Playing first base, third base and the
outfield, Dellinger batted .304 in 85 games and drove in 56, while
his teammate, future Hall of Famer Duke Snider drove in 50 runs and
batted .294.
In November 1944, Dellinger was drafted by the Buffalo Bisons of the
American Association but he would never get to play a game for them
because he entered military service with the Army the same month.
Dellinger, who attained the rank of sergeant, spent much of his
military service playing baseball; first in the United States and
later in France. It was while traveling with his Army team near
Brussels in
Belgium that tragedy struck. "The ball team was riding in the back
of an Army truck when it struck a train," remembers Mangum. "He was
burned badly and was transferred to the Veterans hospital in
Tuscaloosa, Alabama."
Several soldiers were killed in the accident.
Dellinger was flown back to the United States and survived a few
weeks at the Northington
General Hospital before succumbing to his injuries on
January 31, 1946. He was 21 years old.
Eugene Dellinger's body was returned to Bahama, North Carolina. He
now rests at the Mount Bethel United Methodist Church Cemetery in
Bahama.
Alton Mangum will never forget his childhood friend: "Eugene was a
great athlete – playing baseball, basketball and football. He was
extremely well liked, and his death was certainly a shock to our
small community."
|
Year |
Team |
League |
Class |
G |
AB |
R |
H |
2B |
3B |
HR |
RBI |
AVG |
|
1943 |
|
PONY |
D |
80 |
300 |
29 |
77 |
14 |
1 |
1 |
35 |
.257 |
|
1943 |
|
|
B |
10 |
41 |
6 |
12 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
5 |
.293 |
|
1944 |
|
International |
AA |
28 |
65 |
9 |
12 |
4 |
1 |
0 |
9 |
.185 |
|
1944 |
|
|
B |
85 |
316 |
63 |
96 |
27 |
2 |
6 |
56 |
.304 |

Thanks to Alton P. Mangum and Toni Garrett, Secretary at Mt. Bethel UMC for their assistance with this biography.
Added February 23, 2011. Updated March 11, 2011.
Copyright © 2011 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball in Wartime). All Rights Reserved.
