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Those Who Died That Others Might Be Free
Dom Malchiodi
Date and Place of Birth: November 11, 1920 Chester,
Connecticut
Date and Place of Death: May 31, 1945 Oostburg, Holland
Baseball Experience: Minor League
Position: Catcher
Rank: Second Lieutenant
Military Unit: 495th Bomb Squadron, 344th Bomb Group USAAF
Area Served: European Theater of Operations
Dom P. Malchiodi, who was born in Chester, Connecticut, but grew up
in the Bronx, New York. He signed with the New York Yankees’
organization in 1941, and played a handful of games for Wes
Ferrell’s Leaksville-Draper-Spray Triplets of the Class D Bi-State
League that year. The Triplets won the league title with a 64–46
record but were beaten in the playoffs, four games to one, by
Danville-Schoolfield. He spent the 1942 season playing in Canada,
first with the Trois-Rivières Renards of the Class C
Canadian-American League and then the Quebec Athletics of the same
league. The young catcher played 27 games in 1942 and batted .272.
Malchiodi’s brief career in professional baseball ended at that
point as military service beckoned and he trained as a bombardier
with the Army Air Force. He served in
Europe with the 495th Bomb Squadron of the 344th Bomb Group, Ninth
Air Force, a Martin B-26 Marauder outfit that supported Allied
forces during the Battle of the Bulge, and continued to strike
supply points, communications centers, bridges and marshalling yards
from its base at Cormeilles-en-Vexin in France. The 344th Bomb Group
flew its last operational mission on April 26, 1945, and with the
surrender of Germany on May 7, the group was at Florennes-Juzaine in
Belgium.
For Malchiodi, baseball was on his mind, and he wrote home during
the spring telling his mother how they had got a bulldozer and were
going to plow out a diamond and form some teams to play ball while
waiting to go back stateside. Nevertheless, military duties
continued and the group conducted regular training flights,
including simulated attacks on target rafts at the Blankenburghe
Gunnery Range in the North Sea off the coast of Holland.
On May 31, 1945, Second Lieutenant Malchiodi was the bombardier with
a new crew that was led by pilot First Lieutenant Harrell Foxx. Foxx
led a formation of six B-26Gs in a strafing run at the gunnery range
and after making his pass, he announced over the radio transmitter
that part of his plane’s tail had been shot away by his own turret
gunner. Foxx headed straight for land as the rest of his echelon
followed in loose formation from where they could see that all but
four feet of the right horizontal stabilizer was missing, there were
holes in the base of the vertical stabilizer and the left horizontal
stabilizer was almost shot in two. Foxx intended to land at the
first available airfield and as the plane reached the coast of
Holland, he started a slight turn. At this point the left stabilizer
broke off and the plane nosed into a steep dive, hit the ground and
exploded on impact. All seven crew members were killed.
Malchiodi was originally buried at the Netherlands American Military
Cemetery, but his body was later returned to the United States and
now rests at St. Joseph’s Cemetery in Chester, Connecticut.

Malchiodi (in catcher's gear front row) with Trois-Rivieres in 1942

2/Lt. Malchiodi (third from left) with his B-26 crew

|
Year |
Team |
League |
Class |
G |
AB |
R |
H |
2B |
3B |
HR |
RBI |
AVG |
|
1941 |
Leaksville-Draper-Spray |
Bi-State |
D |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
1942 |
Trois-Rivieres/Quebec |
Canadian-American |
C |
27 |
81 |
8 |
22 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
11 |
.272 |
Added January 9, 2011. Updated April 13, 2011.
Copyright © 2011 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball in Wartime). All Rights Reserved.
