St. Louis Browns RHP Alvis Newman Shirley was born on April 25, 1918 in Birthright, Texas. Known to the baseball world as "Tex" Shirley, he would play three of his five major league seasons with the St. Louis Browns. He played with the Browns during the war years (1944-46), when pitchers were at a premium and most teams were looking to discover anyone who could throw a baseball. Shirley would become a valuable asset to the Browns' staff for he was used as a starter and out of the bull pen. He was almost a perfect example of the players that made up the 1944 American League Championship team.
There have been two stories behind the "Tex" nickname that Shirley preferred to be called. The obvious explanation was that he was from Texas, therefore "Tex" is logical. The second explanation comes from the fact he wore a cowboy hat everywhere he went to hide his premature baldness. Both stories support each other, and Tex Shirley would enjoy a nine season career in baseball.
Shirley played his first professional season with the Clovis Pioneers of the West Texas- New Mexico League in 1940. He would go on to play with minor league clubs like the Wilmington Blue Rocks (1941), Jersey City Giants (1943), and Springfield Rifles (1943). Shirley would spend parts of two seasons with the Philadelphia Athletics (1941-42), but his rowdy temperament and excessive drinking did not impress manager Connie Mack, and was released on August 17, 1942.
Tex Shirley was exactly what the Browns were looking for when they signed him as a free agent on January 29, 1943. The Browns roster was decimated by players serving in World War II. Shirley was classified as "4F" seven different time for the hernia he had suffered. The military didn't want him, and Browns needed him. Over the next three seasons, Shirley would appear in a combined 82 games as a starter (53 times) and out of the bull pen (15 games finihsed). He recorded 19 complete games and three shut outs. He did not have the best control (262 walks, 157 strikeouts), but he would eat up innings for the Browns (403 innings).
Shirley and Browns pitcher, Sig Jakucki, would become the colorful characters of the Browns team. They were drinkers and brawlers that threw hard on the mound, but played harder on their off days.
When the Browns won the 1944 American League pennant, Shirley would appear in games two and four of the World Series. In game two, he was a pinch runner for Frank Mancuso, who singled as the pinch hitter for Nels Potter. He would appear in the eighth inning of game four, as he kept the Cardinals scoreless for two innings.
As World War II came to a close, Shirley would have his worst season with a record of 6-12 and an ERA of 4.96. He would be optioned to the Toledo Mud Hens (1947), and later play for the Buffalo Bison (1947-48) and Paris Rockets (1948). He would retire from organized baseball following the 1948 season, but there are reports of Shirley playing in semipro leagues around the country.
Shirley would eventually settle down in DeSoto, Texas, where he raised a family and talked baseball to anyone who would listen. Tex Shirley may not have been the best Brownie of all time, but he may have been one of the most colorful (most stories could not not be included in this story)