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Those Who Died That Others Might Be Free


Milt Rosenstein
Date and Place
of Birth: June 20, 1920 Hunter, New
York
Date and Place of Death: November 28, 1944 Leyte, The
Philippines
Baseball Experience: Minor League
Position: Pitcher
Rank: Staff Sergeant
Military Unit: 126th Infantry Regiment, 32nd Infantry Division US Army
Area Served: Pacific Theater of Operations
Milton “Rosey” Rosenstein was born on June 20, 1920 in Hunter, New
York. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Isidore Rosenstein, Jewish immigrants
from Russia, he grew up in Ellenville, New York, a village
approximately 90 miles northwest of New York City in the Rondout
Valley, at the eastern base of the Catskill Mountains.
Rosenstein starred in baseball and basketball at Ellenville High
School, and went on to play amateur baseball during the summer of
1940 with Saugerties A.C. The team played its home games at Cantine
Memorial Field in Saugerties (about 40 miles northwest of Ellenville
on the Hudson River), and Rosenstein – a 6-foot, 187-pound
left-hander – was the ace of the staff along with burly right-hander
Eddie Wallace. At a time when town baseball was a big attraction,
Saugerties A.C. played in front of good-sized crowds against
opponents like the Hudson Whalers, General Electrics, Kingston
Recreations and the Pittsfield Pros. They also regularly played
traveling Negro teams such as the New York Black Yankees, Detroit
Clowns and Homestead Greys. On August 10, 1940, Rosenstein pitched
Saugerties A.C. to a 2-1 win over the inmates at Sing Sing Prison.
Allowing just four hits, the 20-year-old struck out 13.
In
1941, Rosenstein signed with the Miami Beach Flamingos of the Class
D Florida East Coast League. The Flamingos were managed by Max
Rosenfeld, who had briefly played as an outfielder with the Brooklyn
Dodgers in the early 1930s. Aged 38, Rosenfeld was also playing in
the outfield for the Flamingos and was in the outer pastures on many
occasions as Milt Rosenstein compiled a team leading 20-12 won-loss
record, a superb 2.63 ERA and a league-leading 238 strikeouts.
On June 11, after having struck out 15 Miami Wahoos batters the
night before, he hurled two hitless innings to close the game for
the Florida East Coast League All-Stars against the Fort Pierce
Bombers, albeit in a losing cause.
The Flamingos, helped by future major leaguer Gene Bearden’s 17 wins
(Bearden had been the ace of the Flamingos’ staff the previous year
with an 18-10 record), finished second in the league standings just
three games behind the West Palm Beach Indians. They beat the Fort
Pierce Bombers in four games in the first round of the playoffs, and
then clinched the league championship beating the Indians in six
games. Rosenstein hurled a 5-0 three-hitter in the second game on
September 11, made a ninth-inning relief appearance the following
day, and made his final appearance of the season in the fifth game
before a record crowd of 1,203 at Flamingo Park on September 14.
Rosenstein pitched six innings in that contest and was relieved by
Jack Embler who claimed the 6-5 win in 11 innings.
In just one season as a professional ballplayer, Milt Rosenstein was
a 20-game winner, a circuit strike out leader and a star performer
on a league championship team. On December 5, 1941, it was announced
that he had been purchased by the Atlanta Crackers, pennant winners
of the Class A1 Southern Association.
The young hurlers future looked extremely bright, but on March 17,
1942, his baseball career came to an abrupt halt with a call from
Uncle Sam. He entered military service with the U.S. Army at Camp
Blanding, near Jacksonville, Florida, and later that year was
stationed in California where he attained the rank of corporal.
In December 1942, Rosenstein returned home to Ellenville on furlough
to spend a few days with his parents. It may have been the last time
he was home as he was later assigned to the 126th Infantry Regiment
of the 32nd Infantry Division in the Pacific Theater.
In October 1944, 24-year-old Rosenstein – now a staff sergeant – was
heading for the island of Leyte, part of the Visayan Islands in the
central Philippines, where the Allied campaign was launched for the
recapture and liberation of the Philippines.
The 32nd Infantry Division landed at Leyte on November 14, and went
into action along the Pinamopoan-Ormoc highway. Two days later they
relieved the 24th Infantry Division at Breakneck Ridge and captured
the town of Limon in bitter hand-to-hand combat against the
Japanese.
On November 28, 1944, little more than three years after hurling the
Miami Beach Flamingos to victory, Rosenstein was seriously wounded
in action and died later that day. He was posthumously awarded the
Silver Star for gallantry.
Milt Rosenstein’s body was returned home to Ellenville, New York in
1949. Services were held at the Hebrew Aid Synagogue on February 3,
with Rabbi Jacob I. Nislick officiating. He was buried, with full
military honors, at the Hebrew Aid Cemetery in nearby Wawarsing, New
York.
Milt Rosenstein is one of 137 former professional baseball players
who lost their lives in military service during World War II.


Added January 5, 2011.
Copyright © 2011 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball in Wartime). All Rights Reserved.
