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RARE Cecil Travis World War 2 Signed Heavily Inscribed Game Used Championship Baseball. Comes with full letter JSA COA.
The Camp Wheeler Spokes, led by the hitting of Cecil Travis, defeated the Enidairs from Enid, Oklahoma, 8-3, last night in the national semi-pro baseball tournament. Travis hit a home run in the seventh with two men on.
Brainerd Daily Dispatch August 23, 1943
Cecil H Traviswas born on a farm inRiverdale,Georgiaon August 8, 1913. His professional baseball career began in 1931 at the age of just 17, when he hit .469 withChattanoogaof the Southern Association. He batted .356 with the same team the following year and was called up by the Washington Senators in May 1933, getting five hits in his first game.
Despite his age Travis quickly established himself as one of the outstanding players of the American League. Had he not been playing for the perennial second-division Senators he would have been hailed a superstar. Playing shortstop and third base Travis had compiled a lifetime batting average of .322 by 1940, and his 1941 season his ninth in the major leagues was by far his best. Playing in all 152 games for the Senators, Travis batted an outstanding .359 (second only to Ted Williams incredible .406). He led the league with 218 hits and finished second with 19 triples. He also had a career-high 101 RBIs.
But as quickly as Travis reached the top of his game his career was put on hold. He entered military service on January 9, 1942 and would be away from the game for four seasons. He thought he might be in for a year or so, but you didnt think you were going to be there so long, he later said.
Travis was assigned toCamp Wheeler,Georgiaas a private in the special services branch.When he reported to camp his greeting from Colonel Charles P Sutherland was: “Well, son, you’ve finally caught up with a world championship outfit.”
Travisplayed and managed the Camp Wheeler Spokes baseball team and led the team in hitting with a .472 average after ten games in 1942. The Spokes went on to win theGeorgiaStatesemi-pro tournament in 1943 and finished the year with seven straight wins to capture the National Semi-Pro Baseball Championships atWichita,Kansas.
In May 1944, Sergeant Travis was assigned to the 76thInfantry Divisions combat training facility atCamp McCoy,Wisconsin, where he played baseball with the 76thInfantry Division team. Teammates includes major leaguersBama RowellandBill Evans. The 76thInfantry Division captured theWisconsinStatesemi-pro championship in 1944.
The 76thInfantry Division was sent to Europe in late 1944 and entered combat on January 19, 1945, during the final stage of theBattleof the Bulge. Travis suffered a bad case of frostbite during that time, that necessitated an operation. “Heck, you was in that snow,” he recalled some years later, “and you was out in that weather, and you was lucky you got to stay in an old barn at night. The thing about it, you’d sit there in those boots, and you might not get ’em off for days at a time. And cold! You’d just shake at night. Your feet would start swelling, and that’s how you’d find out there was something really wrong – you’d pull your boots off, and your feet is swelling.”
The 76thInfantry Division advanced more than 400 miles against hostile resistance in 110 days of combat. It captured more than 33,000 prisoners and teamed up with the 6th Armored Division to form the spearhead of the Third Armys plunge acrossGermanytowardCzechoslovakia.The division was within 50 miles of the Czech border when the war inEuropeended.
Travis received a Bronze Star and four battle stars during his time inEurope. He brieflt played baseball with the Division team but took an option to serve in the Pacific in return for leave to visit his wife and newborn baby inGeorgia. While at home,Japansurrendered and Travis applied for his discharge. Working out with the Atlanta Crackers at Ponce de Leon Park while stationed atCamp McPherson,Georgia, Travis had accumulated 97 discharge points and was honorably discharged on September 6, 1945.
He immediately returned to the Senators. “It was amazing the way Cece swung in his drill at Griffith Stadium yesterday, reported John B Keller in theWashington Evening Staron September 8, 1945. His easy left-hand stance at the plate was no different from that he assumed when he was one of the sensations of the American League in offense.”
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