St Louis Browns RHP Bill Harper was born on June14, 1889, in Bertrand, Missouri. He is the only MLB player in the history of the game to be from this small rural community in southeast Missouri, approximately 150 miles from St. Louis. Although his professional baseball career was brief, the impact he had on his community was memorable and impressive.
The history of his colorful nickname is not readily available, but references to his "blue collar" upbringing could easily be made. Harper went to the University of Missouri, where he majored in agriculture and law while pitching the Tigers. There is no transaction documentation for Bill Harper, but it is known that he began his baseball career at the age of 22, when he appeared with the Browns.
He was signed by Browns scout and cousin, Blake Harper. Without any time in the minor leagues, Bill Harper the would jump right into a Browns uniform in 1911 where he played in a handful of games. Bill Harper made his MLB debut with the Browns on June 10, 1911, when he pitched four innings of relief in the Browns 14-5 loss to the Philadelphia Athletics. Harper would enter the game for Earl Hamilton, allowing seven hits, seven runs, and three walks, while striking out two batters.
Harper's second game would come ten days later, when he appeared in second game of double header against the Chicago White Sox. This time entered the game in relief of Roy Mitchell in the sixth inning, and would strikeout four batters while allowing two runs in the final four innings. His total numbers in these two game included nine runs on nine hits, four walks, six strikeouts, a wild pitch, a hit-batter, and an ERA of 6.75. It is not clear if he remained with the Browns for the rest of the 1911 season, but these are the only games Harper would appear.
Bill Harper would pitch for the Decatur of the Illinois-Indiana-Iowa League from 1912-14. He would tally a 22-31 record in 79 games for the Commodores. He would later pitch for the Cedar Rapids Rabbits (1914), and the Augusta Tourists (1915). His best season came while playing for Cedar Rapids when he went 13-5, striking out 118 in 173 innings with an ERA of 2.55.
After he stepped away from the game following the 1915 season, he had posted a career record of 36-41, record with an WHIP of 1.313.
After retiring from baseball after the 1915 season, Bill Harper would become a leader in the cotton and agricultural organizations in the Mid-South region. He settled down in Covington, Tennessee, where he helped establish the Arkansas Cotton Cooperation Association, and later the Mid-South Cotton Growers Association.
Harper would maintain his love for baseball where he helped organize and promote the local boy's baseball team. It was recorded that his former players served as his pallbearers. Bill Harper's baseball career may have only lasted five years, but it is clear the impact he made on his community is how he shall be honored and remembered.