st. louis browns players
Beauty McGowan
1901 births | 1982 deaths | boston braves players | major league baseball outfielders | major league baseball players from connecticut | philadelphia athletics players | st. louis browns playersFrank Bernard "Beauty" McGowan (November 8, 1901 in Branford, Connecticut - May 6, 1982 in Hamden, Connecticut), was a Major League Baseball player who played outfielder from 1922-1937. He would play for the St. Louis Browns, Boston Braves, and Philadelphia Athletics.
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Art Bader
1957 deaths | 1986 births | major league baseball players from missouri | st. louis browns playersArthur Herman Bader (September 21, 1886 to April 15, 1957) was a Major League Baseball player. Warnock played for the St. Louis Browns in the 1904 season. In two games, he had no hits in three at-bats, playing the Outfielder. He batted and threw right handed. He was born and died in St. Louis, Missouri.
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Walter Moser
1881 births | 1946 deaths | boston red sox players | major league pitchers | major league players from north carolina | philadelphia athletics players | st. louis browns playersWalter Frederick Moser (February 27, 1881 - December 10, 1946) was a pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Philadelphia Athletics during the 1906 season and with the Boston Red Sox and St. Louis Browns in 1911. Listed at 5' 9", 170 lb., Moser batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Concord, North Carolina.
In a two-season career, Moser posted a 0-7 record with 4.58 ERA in 14 appearances, including nine starts, 30 strikeouts, 30 walk, 97 hits allowed, and 70⅔ innings of work.
Archie McKain
boston red sox players | detroit tigers players | major league pitchers | major league players from kansas | st. louis browns playersArchie Richard McKain (May 12, 1911 - May 21, 1985), nicknamed "Happy," was a left-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball who played six seasons with the Boston Red Sox (1937-1938), Detroit Tigers (1939-1941), and St. Louis Browns (1941-1942). Born in Delphos, Kansas, McKain went 8-8 as a Red Sox rookie in 1937. He was traded to the Tigers with Pinky Higgins in December 1938 for Elden Auker and two other players. McKain went 5-0 with a 2.82 ERA (Adjusted ERA+ of 168) for the 1940 Tigers, with 17 games finished. When the Browns traded him to Brooklyn in July 1943, he quit the game and returned to his native Kansas to farm. McKain died in 1985 at Salina, Kansas.
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Harry Gleason
1875 births | 1961 deaths | boston red sox players | major league infielders | major league outfielders | major league players from new jersey | st. louis browns playersHarry Gilbert Gleason (March 28, 1875 - October 21, 1961) was an utility infielder/outfielder in Major League Baseball who played from 1901 through 1905 for the Boston Americans (1901-03) and St. Louis Browns (1904-05). Listed at 5' 6", 160 lb., Gleason batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Camden, New Jersey. His older brother, Kid Gleason, also was a major league player.
A versatile player and basically a line-drive hitter, Gleason delivered a pinch-hit single and stole a base in his first major league at-bat with the Boston Americans. After that, he made 262 fielding appearances as a third baseman (202), shortstop (20) and second baseman (16), as well at center field (16) and left (8). His most productive season came with the 1905 St. Louis Browns, when he played a career-high 150 games including 144 as the team's regular third base, while hitting 17 extrabases with 45 runs and 57 RBI, also career-numbers.

