St. Louis Browns first baseman Jim Duggan was born on June 1, 1885, in Whiteland, Indiana. Along with former Cardinals first baseman, George Crowe, he would be one of the only MLB players from the small town located just south of Indianapolis. A career minor leaguer, Duggan would spend just a single game with the Browns in 1911.
Nicknamed "Mer", Jim Duggan would spend 987 games over 16 seasons in the minors. He is the only major league player to attend Franklin College, before being signed as an amateur free agent by the Atlanta Crackers in 1906. He would spend six years between the Nashville Volunteers (1906-08), New haven Blues (1908), and the Holyoke Papermakers (1909-11).
Duggan started the 1911 season with the Papermakers before his single game appearance with the Browns. In 1911, the Browns could not find a productive first baseman so they would bring in players for brief in-season tryouts. During the season, they would have a total of eight different first baseman.
Duggan would make his MLB debut on July 29, 1911. He would have five plate appearances against the Detroit Tigers. He would go 0-for-4 with a walk, RBI, and a run scored. It is not clear if he returned to the Papermakers after this game, or if he stayed with the Browns for the remainder of the 1911 season.
Duggan would spend the next 12 seasons in the Three-I League (Illinois-Indiana-Iowa League), including time with the Rock Island Islanders (1916), Terre Haute Tots (1921-23), and the Evansville Evas (1923). He would spend time as the player-manager with the Decatuer Commodores (1913-15) and the Alton Blues (1917).
The only break he took from baseball during this period came in 1918, when he enlisted in the service during World War I. He would not see any combat, for the war ended as he was on a ship to Europe.
There is little written on Jim Duggan after he retired from baseball. He would eventually settle down in Indianapolis, Indiana. There is no connection between this Jim Duggan and the "Jimmy Dugan" from the movie "A League of their Own"