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Those Who Died That Others Might Be Free
Date and Place of Birth: 1912 Govanhill, Glasgow, Scotland
Died: August 1, 1944 Caen, France
Baseball Experience:
Semi-Pro
Position:
Shortstop
Rank:
Corporal
Military Unit:
Calgary
Highlanders, Canadian Army
Area Served: European Theater of Operations
William
Hosie was born in Govanhill, Glasgow in
Medicine
Hat, known as the Gas City because of its large natural
gas fields,
is in south-eastern Alberta and about 175 miles south-east of
Calgary. The Medicine Hat
Kiltie Band became well-known throughout
While his father
worked as a janitor at
By 1934, Bill Hosie was the shortstop with the
Medicine Hat Royals, who played at
Also that month the Daily Herald reported that Hosie “was the big hitter of the afternoon” in a game against the Lethbridge Galt Miners sending “sizzling drives in every direction, and in the fourth inning turned in a beautiful homer.”
Hosie joined the Three Hills team later that
season but returned to
Throughout the summer of 1940, the Highlanders
trained in Shilo -
a remote
training base in
The Highlanders assisted with the coastal defence of southern England and trained in preparation for combat in Europe. During this time, Hosie captained the Highlanders baseball team which competed in the 2nd Canadian Division league. On July 13, 1941, the Highlanders played the South Saskatchewan Regiment baseball team at Bexhill-on-Sea; reportedly the first time a baseball game had been played in the seaside town. In a close fought contest on the town's cricket field which enjoyed a big turn out from the local population, it was Bill Hosie who got things off to a flying start with a deep drive to left field for a home run. "Both teams were playing a swell brand of baseball, "reported The Glen - the Highlanders' regimental magazine, "and double plays were a dime a dozen with hot shoe-string catches thrown in for good measure." The game was won in the last inning by the South Saskatchewan team with a final score of 5-4.
On August 19, 1942, Hosie took part in the
ill-fated Dieppe Raid. As part of a 22-man mortar platoon – the only
members of the Calgary Highlanders assigned to the raid – Corporal
Hosie was aboard
landing
craft tank (LCT) 6 as it approached the German-held beach. Pieces of
shrapnel began clanging against the craft and pretty soon the
engine-room burst into flames. Although the crew managed to put out
the fire, when they were 70 yards from the beach the wheelhouse took
a direct hit that killed the helmsman. LCT 6 limped to the beach and
finally touched down on the shale; the gates creaked open, the ramp
fell and before them was
The Dieppe
Raid was an unmitigated disaster. A
total of 3,623 of the 6,086 men who made it ashore were either
killed, wounded, or captured and no major objectives were achieved.
Hosie
remained in
On July 6,
1944, one month after the Normandy landings,
the Calgary Highlanders landed in France.
In Operation Spring, they were part of the Battle
of Verrières Ridge, along with the Black
Watch, in which the regiment took heavy casualties.
Corporal Hosie, aged
32, was killed in action in
Bill Hosie, husband,
father, ballplayer and battlefield veteran, is buried at the
Over the past ten years or so,
I have scoured countless newspapers from the 1930s looking for
references to ballplayers who were killed while serving with the
armed forces during World War II.
In addition
to the 141 former professional players that I’ve uncovered I have
found reference to hundreds of semi-pro, college and high school
players who paid the ultimate sacrifice for their country. Some of
these I have included on the Baseball in Wartime website although,
in all honesty, there are far too many for me to attempt to compile
biographies for.
Nevertheless, there are some who catch my eye for a variety of
reasons and one such ballplayer was Bill Hosie. Never heard of him?
Well, if you grew up in
Hosie’s
family left Scotland when he was very young, but to find a link with
baseball and
So, this has been somewhat of a self-indulgent
journey, uncovering details about the life of a young Canadian who
gave his life for King and country. I salute you, Bill.
Added March 30, 2011. Updated April 10, 2011
Copyright © 2011 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball in Wartime). All Rights Reserved.
