Hugh Mulcahy, pitcher and sergeant

Hugh Mulcahy at Philadelphia’s Shibe Park

Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Hugh Mulcahy on March 8, 1941 becomes the first major leaguer to be drafted into the Army.

Mulcahy then leaves the Phillies for Camp Edwards in Cape Cod, where he expects to spend a year before returning to Philadelphia.

“I won’t be 28 until September,” Mulcahy tells The Associated Press in March 1941, “and they say that a pitcher’s prime comes between the ages of 28 and 31. So, by the time I come out of the Army I should be just about reaching my peak.”

Instead, Mulcahy spends the next four seasons and most of a fifth in the Army, finding himself in the Pacific for most of World War II while raising to the rank of master sergeant.

Prior to that, Mulcahy toils from 1935-40 with the woebegone Phillies, going 42-82 over those six seasons and earning the unfortunate nickname of “Losing Pitcher Mulcahy.”

He returns to the Phillies late in the 1945 season, he and loses seven of 10 decisions over the next season-plus before finishing his major league career in 1947 with two appearances for Pittsburgh.

“I never really felt bad about it,” Mulcahy later tells author William B. Mead of his wartime service. “It never shook me up. I never think back on what might have been. I’m very thankful that I came back.”

Previous
Previous

Quote of the day: Babe Ruth

Next
Next

Goodbye Earl, hello Joe … for a while anyway