Zeke Bonura


Henry John "Zeke" Bonura was a first baseman in Major League Baseball. From 1934 through 1940, he played for the Chicago White Sox, Washington Senators, New York Giants and Chicago Cubs. Bonura batted and threw right-handed. He was born in New Orleans.
In a seven-season career, Bonura posted a.307 batting average with 119 home runs and 704 RBI in 917 games played. Defensively, he was a good first baseman, recording a career.992 fielding percentage.
One of Bonura's more noteworthy athletic accomplishments has nothing to do with the sport of baseball. In June 1925, at the age of sixteen, Bonura became the youngest male athlete ever to win an event at the National Track and Field Championships. He threw the javelin 65.18 meters to claim the title. Bonura's winning effort was a meet record by nearly twenty-feet; a prodigious mark that remained on the books until 1930.
During World War II, Bonura was posted to Oran, Algeria. He organized large-scale baseball operations, consisting of 150 teams in 6 leagues. Playoffs among the teams narrowed them to two finalists – the Casablanca Yankees, consisting of medics, and the Algiers Streetwalkers, consisting of MPs. The North African World Series was a best two-out-of-three-game championship played on October 3 and 4, 1943, at Eugene Stadium in Algiers, Algeria, between the two teams. The Casablanca Yankees won the series in two straight games. The winners were presented with baseballs autographed by General Eisenhower, and the winning team received a trophy made from an unexploded Italian bomb.
Bonura received the Legion of Merit award while serving in the US Army during World War II, for his work as athletic director for the Army in Algeria in 1943 in 1944.

Highlights

Bonura did not play baseball at Loyola New Orleans because the university did not field a team. Instead he lettered in basketball, football, and track and field.