St. Louis Browns INF Bert Graham was born on April 3, 1886, in Tildon, Illinois. He would enjoy an 11-season professional baseball career that included 3982 plate appearances over 1066 games. He would primarily see action as an outfielder (606 games), but would play both first and second base with the Browns.
The early career of Bert Graham is not documented, but he is likely to have played semipro baseball before his baseball career began at the age of 23. His first season was split between the Bartlesville Boosters and the Muskogee Navigators of the Western Association in 1909. He began the 1910 season batting .305 with the Jackson Tigers, before being called up to the Browns in September.
Graham would would make his MLB debut with the Browns as a leadoff hitter against the Chicago White Sox on September 9, 1910. In both games of the double header, he hit from the lead off position recording a double off Sox pitcher Doc White in game two. In the remaining six games with the Browns he moved to first base, as Frank Trusdale moved to second. His best game came on September 15, as he hit his only MLB triple while driving in two runs off Jack Quinn of the New York Highlanders. His final stats with the Browns included 27 plate appearances over eight games. He recorded three hits, all for extra bases (two doubles and a triple), scored a run, drove in five runs, and struck out three times. His .115 batting average did not earn him a return to the Browns in 1911.
Graham split time between the Montgomery Billikens (127 games) and the Columbus Discoverers (78 games) in 1911. He would spend the next eight seasons, playing with six different minor league clubs. He would play for the Danville Speakers (1912-13), Davenport Blue Sox (1914-16), Aberdeen Black Sox (1915), Quincy Gems (1917), Dallas Giants (1917), Waco Navigators(1917, 19), and the Tacoma Tigers (1920).
There is no record of Graham playing in 1918. Many players were called into service during World War I, and although there is no record of Graham serving in the military he may have been in the war industry.
There is no recorded history of Graham after he retired from baseball. He would eventually settle down in Cottonwood, Arizona, where he lived a long life in the desert.