St. Louis Browns outfielder Ray Coleman was born on June 4, 1922, in Dunsmuir, California. He would play for 15 different teams over his 14-year professional baseball career. He was one of the more reliable outfielders in the last seasons of the Browns in St. Louis. Over a five-year period Ray Coleman would appear in 355 games with St. Louis, even though he was involved in five different transactions in that time.
Ray Coleman was signed by the Browns as an amateur free agent prior to the 1940 season. He would move through the minor leagues, playing for the Paragould Browns (1940), Springfield Browns (1940, 42), and Mayfield Browns (1941). He would enlist in the US Navy in December of 1942, and not play another baseball game for the next three years.
He would return for service in 1946, and spend an amazing season with the San Antonio Missions where he recorded 148 hits in 136 games. Ray Coleman would make his MLB debut on April 22, 1947 against the Cleveland Indians. His rookie season included 89 hits in 110 games, with a .259 average, which was the best among Browns' outfielders. His sophomore season started slow with just a .172 average in just 17 games before being traded on June 5 to the Philadelphia Athletics for OF/1B George Binks and $20,000.
After time with the Athletics (1948) and Buffalo Bisons (1949), Ray Coleman was involved in a six-player deal that returned him to St. Louis in December of 1949. He retuned to the Browns outfield where he played in 208 games from 1950-51. He would bat over .270 in each season, and his 200 hits included 41 doubles, 11 triples, 13 home runs, and 110 RBIs. His 1951 season was so good, that the struggling Browns placed him on waivers on July 31, 1951. This was one of th more confusing moves of the Bill Veeck era, for the Browns didn't recieve any body while releasing one of their best young players.
He would bat .215 in 85 games with the White Sox in 1952, before being traded back to the Browns with Jay Porter for Darrell Johnson and Jim Rivera on July 28. It would be his third stint with St. Louis, but it would last only 20 games before being involved in his fifth transaction. The Browns would send Coleman, Bob Mahoney, and Stan Rojek to the Brooklyn Dodgers for future all-star, Billy Hunter on October 14, 1952.
Ray Coleman's career statistics with the Browns would in include 355 games, with 303 hits, 53 doubles, 15 home runs, 143 RIs, and a batting average of .265. He was an excellent right fielder, finishing in the top ten of the American League in assists (1948), and leading the league in double plays (1947, 52). Ray Coleman would finish up his career playing for seven minor league over four seasons. He would see action swith the St. Paul Saints (1953), Fort Worth Cats (1954), Havana Sugar Kings (1954), Mayfield Clothiers (1955), Omaha Cardinals (1956), Mobile Bears (1956), and the Birmingham Barons (1956).
Ray Coleman was a true" Brownie" in the last few seasons of the franchise in St. Louis. After retiring fom the game, he would work in the tobacco, construction, and medical fields. He was a close friends of St. Louis legends Stan Musial, Marty Marion, and Red Schoendienst, and would often be found telling baseball stories with the St. Louis Browns Historical Society.