St. Louis Browns RHP Tom Phillips was born on April 1, 1889 in Phillipsburg, Pennsylvania. Phillipsburg is a small mining community located in the central mountains of Pennsylvania. It is the same hometown of former St. Louis Cardinals first baseman, Matt Adams. There is no connection between the towns name and the family of Tom Phillips. It is written that he was often celebrated by his family because he was the first to make it "out of the mines" of the small community.
There is little recorded of the early life of Tom Phillips. He was a 26-year old "rookie" when he appeared for the Wilkes-Barre Barons in 1915. His 12-12 record in 31 games drew he attention of the Browns, who invited him to finish out the season with St. Louis. With no transaction history on record, Tom Phillips made his MLB debut on September 13, 1915, against the Philadelphia Athletics. He lead the Browns to an 8-2 complete game victory, giving up two runs (one earned run) on seven hits, two walks, and three strike outs. He would appear in four more games that September, but his best outing was his first game. He would start three more games, allowing more than six hits in each competition while failing to strike out more than a single batter. His final statistics with the Browns include twelve walks, five strike outs, nine earned runs, an ERA of 2.96, while reaching a 1-3 record. These numbers did not result in an invitation to the Browns in 1916.
However after taking a year away from the game, Tom Phillips would return to baseball with the Little Rock Travelers in 1917, and later the New Orleans Pelicans (1918), and Milwaukee Brewers (1919).
He would see some brief moments in the Major Leagues, as he appeared in 32 games for the Cleveland Indians in 1919 (3-2, 3.11 ERA), and 18 games with the Washington Senators from 1921-22 (4-7, 4.56 ERA). He would spend most of his remaining career was in the minor leagues, returning to the Pelicans (1920-21), and then for the Minneapolis Millers (1922-23).
Known as "Big Tom" (standing 6'2"), he returned to his home town after retiring from baseball. There is little recorded of his life after baseball, except he passed at the age of 40 due to diabetes complications. He was considered to be hero within his family, and many would later be named "Tom" in honor of the Browns player.