St. Louis Browns right fielder, Tommy Thompson, was born on May 19, 1910, in Elkhart, Illinois. Born Rupert Lockhard Thompson, he would grow up in a small town along the Illinois Traction Rail System connection St. Louis to Peoria, Illinois.
In the history of the St. Louis Browns, it would be hard to find a player with more miles traveled and more uniforms collected than Tommy Thompson. His career of 26 years in professional baseball included 22 minor league seasons, and six seasons in the Major Leagues. He played for 16 minor league organizations that played in every time zone across the country. He would record 2,269 hits in 8,919 plate appearances (.286 career batting average), in a total of 2,452 career games.
Thompson began his career at the age of 18, when he signed with the Bloomington Bloomers in 1928. Over the next six years he would see actions with the Bloomers (1928-29), Hagerston Hubs (1930-31), Chattanooga Lookouts (1932), Youngstown Buckeyes (1932), and Albany Senators (1933). He would make his MLB debut with the Boston Braves on September 3, 1933, and would spend most of the next four seasons with the Braves. After spending a year with the San Diego Padres of the Pacific Coast League (1937), he returned to the Major Leagues with the Chicago White Sox in 1938.
The Browns would acquire Thompson on April 27, 1939, after he played just one game for the ChiSox. Thompson would become the Browns' primary right fielder for a six week stretch in May and June of 1939. He would appear in the starting line up in 20 of the 31 games. He recorded 26 hits, including five doubles, a home run, eight RBIs, while only striking out seven times on his way to a .302 average. Thompson's offense also included two four-hit games, two three-hit games, and two two-hit games. As impressive as these numbers look, the Browns were just 5-26 in games he played. Thompson's contract would be picked up by the New York Yankees, who optioned him to the Newark Bears and Kansas City Blues to finish the 1939 season.
Tommy Thompson would not make it back to the Major Leagues, spending the next 14 years in the minors. He would play for Hollywood Stars (1940), Portland Beavers (1941-43), Buffalo Bisons (1944), and San Diego Padres (1944-46). He continued as a player-manager for the Modesto Reds (1946), Salt lake City Bees (1947-49), Winatchee Chiefs (1950-51), Magic Valley Cowboys (1952), and the Pampa Oilers (1953).
It is safe to say that Tommy Thompson was a baseball lifer who loved the game and the relations it brought. He would eventually settle down in Auburn, California, to raise a family and tell stories of his incredible career.