Cisar began playing baseball in Chicago and eventually started going to tryouts around the country. In 1935, he was signed by the Brooklyn Dodgers' Leaksville-Draper-Spray Triplets minor-league team.[2] After spending all of 1936 and most of 1937 in the minors, Cisar was elevated to the Dodgers in September 1937.
After several more years in the minors, Cisar quit baseball for good after the 1940 season and eventually served in World War II. After the war, he settled in Cicero, Illinois, and worked as a machinist in Chicago.[3]
At the time of his death, Cisar was the second oldest living MLB player. He is not to be confused with the American character actor of the same name who died in 1979.
When he was breaking into baseball, Cisar lied about his birth date in order to make himself appear younger than he really was. As a result, many baseball references give him a 1912 birth date, even though he really was born in 1910, his daughter has said.[6]