Lou Brissie
Ballplayers Wounded in Combat
| Date and Place of Birth: | June 5, 1924 Anderson, SC | 
| Date and Place of Death: | November 25, 2013 Augusta, SC | 
| Baseball Experience: | Major League | 
| Position: | Pitcher | 
| Rank: | Corporal | 
| Military Unit: | G Company, 351st Infantry Regiment, 88th Infantry Division US Army | 
| Area Served: | Mediterranean Theater of Operations | 
		The fact that Lou Brissie ever stepped foot on a baseball diamond 
		again after World War II, let alone pitch in the major leagues, is a 
		testament to this man's sheer determination, courage, and will.
		
		Leland V. “Lou” Brissie was born on June 5, 1924 in Anderson, South 
		Carolina. He didn’t play baseball in high school but played, instead, in 
		the local textile league with the ware Shoals mill team. On the day he 
		graduated from Ware Shoals High School, Athletics’ manager, Connie Mack, 
		signed him to a professional contract and agreed to send the 6-foot 
		4-inch southpaw to Presbyterian College for three years.
		
		Brissie was scheduled to report to the Athletics for spring training in 
		1943, but enlisted with the Army in December 1942. “I lost a brother in 
		the war so I enlisted in the service,” Brissie explained.
		
		Brissie began basic training on March 25, 1943, and was stationed at 
		Camp Croft, South Carolina. In June 1944, he pitched for the Monaghan 
		semi-pro textile team of Greenville. Brissie struck out 22 of the Easley 
		mill team batters in the contest but lost, 1-0, on a home run. The week 
		before, pitching for Camp Croft against the Greenville Army Air Base Jay 
		Birds, he struck out 19.
		
		Later that year, Corporal Brissie was sent to Italy with the 88th 
		Infantry Division. He served as a squad leader with G Company of the 
		351st Infantry Regiment. On December 7, 1944, Brissie's squad was hit by 
		a fierce artillery attack in the Apennine Mountains in northern Italy. 
		"Our unit suffered over 90 percent casualties," Brissie said. "Within 
		minutes we lost three of our four officers as well as eight other men in 
		the barrage," he recalled. Brissie was badly hit. His left shinbone was 
		shattered in more than 30 pieces and his left ankle and right foot were 
		broken. He had to crawl for cover through the mud and then lay there 
		unconscious until he was found hours later. Brissie was rushed to a 
		field hospital where his leg should have been amputated, but somehow he 
		was able to persuade the doctors to ship him to an evacuation hospital 
		where the limb might be saved. He was finally sent to a military 
		hospital in Naples where Captain Wilbur Brubaker set about saving the 
		young soldier’s leg. “Captain Brubaker did a marvelous job,” Brissie 
		told sportswriter Joe O’Loughlin in 2005. “Once he operated on me, I 
		didn’t wonder if I could make it back to pitch but how I could do it. I 
		felt like the good Lord put Dr Brubaker in my life. I really felt that 
		God put me on the path that took me to all those hospitals over that 
		three-day period to get me to someone who could help me.”
		
		Brissie went through a total of 23 operations and 40 blood transfusions 
		on the road to recovery. “They had to reconstruct my leg with wire,” he 
		explains. “I wound up going to hospitals all over. I was the first guy 
		in the Mediterranean Theater who was put on penicillin therapy.”
		
		Lou BrissieDuring that time, Brissie received a letter from Connie Mack 
		who said that when Brissie was ready to play ball he would see to it 
		that he would get the chance. Brissie never wavered from his vision of 
		pitching in the majors. “I’ll play ball again,” he told Scoop Latimer, 
		sports editor of the Greenville News, “but it will be quite a while. I 
		want to play ball. If God lets me, I’ll play it, too. That’s my 
		ambition.”
		
		In 1945, still on crutches and with a Bronze Star and two Purple Hearts 
		to his name, Brissie went to Philadelphia to see Mack. But at that time 
		he was not ready to play. “Determination can do it,” Mack told 
		reporters. "I know he'll make good. I'll never forget how he looked last 
		summer, he had just undergone an operation and was about to undergo 
		another one. He was on crutches and I thought ‘poor boy, he'll never be 
		able to pitch again.'” 
		
		But crutches and all, Brissie could not stay away from baseball. 
		Although he suffered a re-infection of the leg in 1946, he received a 
		contract from Mack for 1947. He reported to the Savannah Indians of the 
		South Atlantic League and went on to win 23 games that year with an 
		incredible 1.19 ERA. "Brissie has had only one year of organized 
		baseball,” Mack told the press. “But he has tremendous speed and a lot 
		of stuff." 
		
		On September 28, with his leg in a specially designed brace, Brissie was 
		on the mound for the Philadelphia Athletics in his major league debut. 
		Facing the Yankees in their last game of the season, the lefthander went 
		seven innings and struck out four against Bill Wight in the 5-3 loss. 
		"It was a great day," Brissie later recalled. "I thought I'd died and 
		gone to heaven. I lost the game, but it was still a great experience."
		
		Brissie returned with the Athletics for the 1948 season, posting a 14-10 
		record, as Mack’s team finished a surprising fourth in the American 
		League. In 1949, he won 16 games for the Athletics and continued to 
		pitch in the majors until 1953. Despite recurring problems with his leg, 
		including
		
		“Lou was courageous beyond belief,” teammate Eddie Joost told 
		O’Loughlin. “I admire him so much for what he did.”
		
		Brissie later served as the national director of American Legion 
		Baseball for eight years. For his contribution to youth and baseball, he 
		was awarded the "Americanism Award" at the Baseball Hall of Fame in 
		Cooperstown. He was also elected to the South Atlantic League Hall of 
		Fame in 1994.
		
		Lou Brissie participated in the salute to baseball in World War II 
		entitled Duty, Honor, Country: When Baseball Went to War on November 9 – 
		11, 2007 at the National WWII Museum in New Orleans. Lou talked openly 
		about his wartime service and said the “best friends I’ve had in my life 
		were made right there, under those conditions.” Lou also claimed that 
		the conference was "the most extraordinary three days of my life.”
		
		Lou Brissie, ballplayer, wounded veteran and recipient of the Purple 
		Heart, passed away on November 25, 2013, in Augusta, South Carolina, 
		aged 89.
Date Added December 15, 2017
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