Relying primarily on a trick pitch called the "Gander," Stratton posted 15-5 and
15-9 marks for the White Sox in 1937-38 before his major league career was tragically
ended at age 26. While he was hunting rabbits near Greenville, Texas in November
1938, his pistol accidentally discharged, sending a bullet into his right knee, severing
the femoral artery. The leg was amputated the next day. In 1939 White Sox management
sponsored a charity game in
Comiskey Park between the Cubs and the White Sox, the
proceeds of which (about $28,000) went to Stratton. In a touching, courageous display,
Stratton took the mound to demonstrate that he could still pitch, though he was unable
to transfer his weight effectively to the artificial leg. After coaching for the
White Sox, he was given a minor league contract; in 1946 he posted an 18-8 record
in the East Texas League. Stratton's story was made into a fictionalized Hollywood
movie starring
Jimmy Stewart and June Allyson which was a 1949 box office smash.
(RL)