St. Louis Browns slugging left fielder, Jeff Heath, was born on April 1, 1915 in Fort William, Ontario, Canada. Throughout most of his career, Heath would establish many "firsts" in baseball that would help propel him into the record books. He would be the only MLB to come from Fort William, and the first graduate from Garfield High School in Seattle Washington to reach the big leagues. He would be the most successful player from the University of Washington, leading all Husky alums in Major League games played, runs, hits, double, triples, home runs, stolen bases, walks, and OPS+. Jeff Heath was the first player in Major League Baseball history to hit a home run in every National League and American League ball park. With all of this success, he was often abrasive and confrontational to both his teammates and opponents.
Jeff Heath began his baseball career with a semipro team in Yakima, Washington, before touring Japan with the Les Mann's amateur baseball team in 1935. Heath signed with the Cleveland Indians upon returning from Japan in 1936, and was assigned to the Zanesville Greys. After just 124 games batting, Heath was batting .383 with 28 home runs and 187 RBIs. He would make his MLB debut with Cleveland on September 13, 1936. He would spend the next ten seasons (1936-45) with the Indians, earning two all-star appearances (1941, 43) and leading the league in triple twice (1938, 41).
After the 1945 season, Heath had worn out his time with Cleveland and was dealt to the Washington Nationals for outfielder George Case. Although he was one of the best hitters on the team, the Nationals would trade Jeff Heath to the Browns on June 15, 1946, for outfielder Joe Grace and right-handed pitcher Al LaMacchia.
Heath was exactly what the Browns needed in their lineup. In 86 games with St. Louis, he would tally 87 hits, 20 doubles, four triples, 12 home runs, 57 RBIs, and a .275 batting average. Jeff Heath's 1947 season with the Browns was even better. He would lead the team in runs scored (81), home runs (27), RBIs (85), walks (88), and strikeouts (87). In comparison to the rest of the American League, Heath would finish in the top 10 in slugging percentage, total bases, home runs, RBIs, walks, OPS+, extra base hits, putouts from LF, assists, fielding percentage, and led the league in double plays from the outfield.
With all this success, Jeff Heath had his issues as a member of the Browns. His confrontations with John Berardino and Willard Brown, as well as issues with team procedures, tarnished his time in St. Louis. His contract was purchased by the Boston Braves, where he played his last two seasons in the Major Leagues (1948-49).
Jeff Heath would finish his career with the Seattle Rainiers in 1950, and later become a fixture in the "Emerald City" as a member of the Rainiers broadcast team. He would remain a supporter of baseball in Seattle, but was outspoken against the construction of the Seattle Kingdome.
Jeff Heath was a powerful hitter, but his rough personality may have placed a shadow over his impressive career.