NAME
|
INDUCTED |
Stan Bialkowski,
Camden
Thge ace of Camden High's staff in '46 and '47, he pitched in the Phillies farm system
and later was an all-star in the Browns' system before entering the Korean War. He later
excelled in the area semi-pro baseball
circuit over a dozen outstanding seasons.
|
2009 |
Ed
Biehler, Camden
After an all-star basketball career and the high scorer on the 1941 championship team,
he passed up college
offers to enter WW II. He returned to star several years as a leading
scorer in area independent leagues. He is inducted into the basketball Hall of Fame.
|
2009 |
John Brown, Camden
Played only one year of football at Camden High but so impressed that he earned a
scholarship to Syracuse,
\vhere he played well enough to land with the Cleveland Browns for a long National
Football League career
on championship teams.
|
2009 |
Don
Cragin, Camden
A versatile running back he served as captain in 1918, '19 and '20 while becoming Camden
High's first
football superstar. He later rewrote the record book during a brilliant career at
Franklin and Marshall
College.
|
2009 |
william "kid"
Gleason, Camden
He played professional baseball with the Camden Merritt of the Eastern League in
1885 and signed
with the Phillies in 1888. In 1890 "Kid" was ranked among the best pitchers in
baseball. He was traded to the St.
Louis Browns in 1892 and then to Baltimore in 1894 where he had a .342 batting
average, helping the Orioles
win a pennant.
|
2009 |
George Good, Camden
He starred in basketball and baseball in high school before continuing his baseball
career at Ursinus College.
After graduation, he signed with the New York Yankees in 1936. His professional career
ended
when he suffered a broken leg. He turned to umpiring in 1946, covering the Negro
National League and area colleges
for more than 46 years.
|
2009 |
Fred
Heimach, Camden
Connie Mack signed him as a nineteen year old in 1920. He made the starting rotation
in 1922
with the Athletics. He moved on to Boston in 1926, then to the Yankees in 1928 and
helped them win a World
Championship as a reliever. He was traded to the Dodgers in 1930 and finished his
career there in 1933. He
frequently visited his Cramer Hill home, stopping in at his father's pool hall
accompanied by Babe Ruth and
other teammates.
|
2009 |
Ken Landis, Camden
He excelled in sports for Camden High and Springfield College. He returned to South
Jersey to coach at
Camden in 1940 and after World War II produced championship teams at Collingswood and
Lower
Camden County Regional until 1964. He was one of the first and best wrestling officials
in South Jersey.
|
2009 |
Al
Litwa, Camden
He was an outstanding baseball player at Camden High from the start and developed into a
brilliant triple
threat tailback on the great single wing football teams coached by Billy Palese. He was
All-South Jersey in
football and All-State in baseball in 1941 and 1942. After the war he starred at
Villanova and was a
successful coach at St. Joe's in Camden.
|
2009 |
Walt Novak, Camden
An all-around athlete, he was an outstanding end on three great Camden High teams. He
earned All South
Jersey honors in 1936 then had a Hall of Fame career at Villanova University. He was a
receiver and a
defensive back with the Eagles. He returned to South Jersey and produced championship
teams as a coach
at Camden.
|
2009 |
Bill Palese, Camden
One of the early great triple threat running backs, Bill excelled at Camden, then at
William and Mary College
before returning to coach on the hill. He produced several championship football teams
at Camden and
served as the school athletic director.
|
2009 |
Joe
Papiano, Camden
A successful football and baseball coach at Camden High School, Papiano was asked to
begin the sports
program when Camden County College was formed and he became the school's first athletic
director. He
developed the Cougars into a national contender and the school's gymnasium is named in
his honor.
|
2009 |
Stan Pawlak Sr., Woodrow
Wilson
The Hot Stovers' South Jersey Baseball Coach of the Year Award is named after Stan,
who coached Woodrow Wilson to nine City Series Championships, four South Jersey Crowns
and the State
Championship in 1954. He excelled in football and baseball as a member
of Wilson's first graduating class in 1933.
|
2009 |
George
Savitsky, Camden
An All-South Jersey tackle on champion Camden High teams, he later became a
four-year All-American at the nationally ranked University of Pennsylvania football
team. He eventually played on the line for the Philadelphia Eagles in the National
Football League.
|
2009 |
Norm Selby, Woodrow Wilson
Extremely fast, he was an All-South Jersey end and a hall of fame baseball player who
also excelled in track and basketball. The Second World War ended his bid to play with
the New York Giants but he excelled in top semi-pro ball for two decades.
|
2009 |
Wallace Sheehan, Camden
Catholic
"Bud" was a star on the famous 1929 Camden Catholic basketball team that played for the
national catholic high school championship in Chicago. He later starred at St. Vincent's
College and played semi-pro baseball and basketball for years in Camden
County.
|
2009 |
Matt
Siedlecki, Camden
A massive, rock solid tackle -who dominated on both sides of the ball, Matt anchored the
Camden High line for four seasons and was named to the All-South Jersey first team three
times, in 1940, '41 and '42, the only lineman so honored.
|
2009 |
Al
Vogt, Camden
An All-South Jersey tackle at Camden High just before the Great War, he helped his
school win several championships. He also excelled in basketball and baseball and after
playing at Penn, coached fine teams at Woodrow Wilson High School.
|
2009 |
grover "worm"
Wearshing, Camden
He was a three-sport star at Camden High (football, basketball and track) and then
at Temple University, where he was inducted into the Temple Hall of Fame in 1971. He
later coached many great football and baseball teams at Camden, Woodrow Wilson and
Moorestown.
|
2009 |
|
|