St. Louis Browns UTIL Gerald Lipscomb was born on this day February 24, 1911 in Rutherfordton, North Carolina. He only played one season with the Browns, which was also his entire Major League career. He did enjoy a 13-year professional baseball career that took him to 11 different minor league clubs.
He had one of the more inappropriate nicknames in baseball history, "Nig". The name was not uncommon in baseball, nor was it always used in a derogatory manner. Just a bad name.
Lipscomb began his career with the Charlotte Hornets of the Piedmont League at the age of 22. There is no record of him playing in college or semipro baseball before 1933 with the Hornets. After two years with Charlotte (1933-34), and two years with the Atlanta Crackers (1935-36), Lipscomb tallied 555 hits along with a .289 batting average.
The Browns acquired him from the Atlanta Crackers of the Southern Association on September 29, 1936. His MLB debut came on April 23, 1937 vs the Cleveland Indians. He came in as a defensive replacement for 2B Rogers Hornsby, going 0-2 in his only two at bats. During the 1937 season he would appear in 36 Games, ripping out a batting average of .323. He would have only 110 plate appearances, but gather 31 hits, 11 runs, and eight RBIs.
Showing off his versatility, Lipscomb would have his pitching debut on August 14, 1937 in both sides of a double header vs Detroit. His total pitching statistics came to 9.2 innings pitched, giving up nine runs on 13 hits, with a 6.32 ERA. Lipscomb would also see action with the New Orleans Pelicans in 1937, where he played 72 games in the "Big Easy". On December 3, 1937, the Browns sent the contract of Gerald Lipscomb to the Boston Red Sox.
Even though he would not play for the Red Sox, Lipscomb would continue to play until 1947. He would spend time with ten teams after leaving the Browns, including the Greenwood Crackers (1939-40), Buffalo Bison (1945), and Greensboro Patriots (1946). He would also serve as a player/manager in his last two years, with the Williamsport Grays (1946) and Concord Weavers (1947). He would miss two seasons during the war years of 1942-43. There is no documentation that he fought in the war, but served in the war industry.
There is little written history of Lipscomb's life after his playing career was over. He returned to his home state of North Carlina, where he settled down and raised his family in Huntersville.