St. Louis Browns right-handed pitcher Roxie Lawson was born on April 13, 1906 in Donnellson, Iowa. He as born Alfred Voyle Lawson, and is the only player from Donnellson to make it to the Major Leagues. In his 14-year professional baseball career, he would play eight seasons in the minor leagues (five teams) and nine seasons in the Majors (three teams).
"Roxie" a name he was always known by, earned a baseball scholarship to Iowa Wesleyan College (IWC) after graduating from high school. He would be the first player Iowa Wesleyan to reach the Major Leagues. However his time at IWC was limited to just the 1925 season. In 1925 he accepted $10 for playing for the semipro team Eagle-Legion team, and his college administrators and cancelled his college eligibility. From 1926-28, Lawson played with several semipro teams throughout the Iowa region.
The success he experienced in these league gained the attention of the Cleveland Indians scout, Cy Slapnicka, who signed Lawson to a contract and sent him to the Terre Haute Tots. After a 22-11 record with the Tots, the Indians brought him up to the Major Leagues for the 1930-31 season. He would appear in just 24 games before being released by Cleveland after the 1931 season. Lawson would sign on with the Toledo Mud Hens where he shined in 894 innings over 153 games, reaching a 53-47 record (1932-33, 34-35).
Proving he could be a strong starting pitcher, Lawson returned to the Major Leagues with the Detroit Tigers from 1933-39. He would start 60 of 118 games he appeared in for the Indians, including a key pitcher on the 1935 World Series championship team. After pitching in just two games with the Tigers in 1939, Roxie Lawson was a part of the biggest trades in Major League Baseball history.
The Tigers and Browns would exchange ten players on May 13, 1939. The Browns received Lawson, 3B Mark Christman, RHP George Gill, RHP Bob Harris, RHP Vern Kennedy and OF Chet Laabs from the Tigers for 1B Beau Bell, INF Red Kress, RHP Bobo Newsom, and RHP Jim Walkup. Over the next two season (1939-40), Roxie Lawson was a solid pitcher in the Browns bullpen. He would see action in 66 games for the Browns, where he hurled 222.2 strong innings. Lawson started 16 games while finishing 30 games, and earning just four saves. In the time in which Lawson was a member of the Browns staff, St. Louis suffered from one of the darkest eras in franchise history. Lawson's stats reflected little run support and a weak starting staff. He allowed 137 walks compared to 61 strikeouts, and an elevated ERA of 5.25.
Prior to the 1941 season, the Browns sent Lawsons contract to the Brooklyn and he would spend the last years of his career in the Dodgers minor leagues. Like many of the players of his era, Lawson would spend the war years serving in the American military. He joined the US Navy where he was a gunner protecting Traverse City Naval Base, and later worked as a recruiter through 1946. After returning from the military, Roxie Lawson was a minor league manager (1947-48), before becoming an umpire in the Illinois-Indiana-Iowa League (1949-51).
Lawson would retire from baseball in 1952, where he became an automobile salesman until 1959. He returned to Iowa where he began to focus on his local community efforts. He owned a local restaurant, the Brass Rail, repaired clocks, and build elaborate bird houses for his favor locations in Keosauqua, Iowa. In his older years, his family and friends called him "Big Daddy" and he lived a long and rewarding life.