St. Louis Browns catcher Josh Billings was born on November 30, 1891 in Grantsville, Kansas. His unheralded and lengthy baseball career extended from a college standout, to 17 professional baseball organizations, to the Hall of Fame. He would be the only player in baseball history to come from Grantville, Kansas, and the first major league player to play at Oklahoma State University (1911-12).
Josh Billings began his 24-year baseball playing career with the Topeka Jayhawks in 1912. He would go on to appear with the Manhattan Elks (1912) and the Quincy Gems (1913) before making his MLB debut on September 9, 1912 with the Cleveland Naps. Over the next five seasons Billings would stay in the Cleveland organization (1913-18). He would see action in 110 games with the Naps/Indians, while playing 115 with the Cleveland Bearcats (1914-15) and 49 games with the Louisville Colonels (1916).
He would see his role increase when he was traded to the Browns on February 11, 1919, for catcher Les Nunamaker. From 1919-23, Josh Billings would be the primary backup catcher to the Browns legendary backstop Hank Severeid. His best season came in 1920 when he enjoyed career highs in games played (66), runs scored (19), hits (43), doubles (5), triples (2), RBIs (11), and hit by pitches (7). His .277 batting averaged matched Severeid's in the same season. His best game game on May 4th when he recorded four singles against the Chicago White Sox. Billings was just as strong behind the plate, as he threw out 51.5% of base runners in 1919 (second in the American League).
After five seasons with the Browns in a backup role, Billings would extend his career another ten years in the minor leagues. He would go on to play for the Kansas City Blues (1924), Los Angeles Angels (1924), Dallas Steers (1925-29), Monroe Twins (1931), and the Vicksburg Hill Billies(1931). In this time Josh Billings began his coaching and managerial career as a player-manager for the Alexandria Reds (1930), Baton Rouge Senators/Solons (1932-34), Lake Charles Skippers (1935), Columbus Senators (1936), and Clifton Gems (1940-41).
This experience would lead him to baseball history as Billings would become the first manager of the Kenosha Comets of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League. Although he only managed the team for one season, he helped establish the team and the league.
There is little written of Josh Billings' life after the 1940s. It is safe to say that he continued to coach in some fashion, as he settled down Santa Monica, California. He lived a long life and was honored in 2020 as he was enshrined in the Kansas Baseball Hall of Fame.