St. Louis Browns Hall of Fame OF/SS Willard Brown was born on June 26, 1915 in Shreveport, Louisiana. The legendary figure of the Negro Baseball Leagues would have a 20-year career that included time in the Major Leagues, Mexican League, and the minor leagues. Nicknamed "Ese Hombre" (The Man), or just "Home Run", Brown would be one of the most celebrated players in the great history of the Negro Leagues.
Brown's love for baseball started at an early age, when he served as a bat boy for the Kansas City Monarchs during their Spring Training in Shreveport. He would join the Monarchs as a player in 1935, when he signed as a free agent at the age of 20. Over the next 11 seasons, Brown would build his Hall of Fame resume. He would lead the Negro American League in hits (eight times), doubles (six times), triples (six times), home runs (six times), RBIs (eight times), runs (three times), and slugging percentage (six times). He would record an OPS over .900 nine times. He was a four-time Negro League All-Star (1937, 42, 43, 48), and would hit .318 in two Negro League World Series.
In just 410 Negro Baseball games, Brown would record 568 hits, 124 doubles, 44 triples, 53 home runs, 385 RBIs, and reach a batting average of .358.
After the introduction of Jackie Robinson into the Major Leagues, many organizations were eager to follow the path of the Brooklyn Dodgers. The Cleveland Indians were the first American League team to integrate baseball when they signed Larry Doby. The St. Louis Browns were the first team to have two Negro legends on their roster, when they signed Willard Brown and 2B Hank Thompson on July 17, 1947.
Brown would make his MLB debut on July 19, joining Thompson in the Browns lineup. Brown would make baseball history as the first Black player to hit a home run in an MLB game. This occured on August 13, in the second game of a double header against the Detroit Tigers. Brown was pinch hitting for Joe Schultz, and ripped a ball into center field, for an inside-the-park home run.
After just one month with St. Louis, Willard Browns and Hank Thompson were both released by the Browns. This was not a good fit for either the players or the team. Brown stated several times that he never wanted to leave the prestige of the Kansas City Monarchs, to go to the lowly status of the St. Louis Browns. In just 21 games with the Browns, he tallied just 12 hits, three doubles, one home run, six RBIs, two stolen bases and a dismal .179 batting average.
Brown returned to the Monarchs, where the happy Brown batted .408 in 1948. The rest of Willard Brown's career would have added legendary status. From 1950-57, he would play for eight minor league teams and several teams in Mexico, Venezuela, and Puerto Rico. Although the statistics from these teams are incomplete, there is a story of how Brown hit for the "Triple Crown" in the Puerto Rican League in 1947. His final season came at the age of 42, when he played for the Minot Mallards of the Manitoba-Dakota League in 1957.
Willard Browns would miss the most of the 1944-45 seasons while serving his country in World War II. He was involved in the Normandy invasion on D-Day, served as a member of the Quartermasters Corp, and later transferred to the Special Services.
After retiring from baseball, Browns moved his family to Houston, Texas, where he worked in the steel industry for 30 years. Willard Browns was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown in 2006 as one of the first Negro Baseball legends to join the shrine.