St. Louis native, Frank Huelsman was born on June, 5, 1874. The left fielder would build a 19-year professional baseball career, spending three seasons in the Majors, 15 years the minors, and two seasons with independent teams. Huelsman's brief MLB career brought him to both St. Louis Browns teams. He would play two games for the National League St. Louis Browns (two games, three hits on seven at bats), and 20 games with the American League Browns in 1904.
Frank Huelsman began his career at the age of 23, when he signed with the St. Louis Browns in 1897. After taking a year off, he would go on to play for Quincy of the Western League (1899), Peoria Distillers (1900, Danville Champions (1900), Shreveport Giants (1901-03), Spokane Indians (1903), and the Portland Browns (1903). He would hit over .340 with each of these steps in the minors.
Huelsman would be the first player in Major League history to play for four teams in one season. In 1904 he played for the White Sox (twice), Tigers, Browns, and the Senators. The Browns would acquire Huelsman on June 16, 1904, when they purchased his contract from the White Sox.
He would only spend a month in St. Louis before moving on. In that month, he would record 15 hits, including two doubles, and a triple. In 68 at bats he hit .221, and drove in just one run. On July 14, 1904, he was traded with 3B Hunter Hill to Washington for UTIL Charles Moran.
The rest of his MLB career was fairly quiet, but that was not the case in his second stint in the minors. From 1906 - 16, he would become one of the strongest hitters in both the Union League, and Tri-State League. He would lead the leagues in 22 batting categories in 10 years. He would hold six home run titles , five batting titles, three RBI titles, and lead the league in doubles and triples three times each. He would record two Triple Crowns titles, and miss a third by only .002. He achieved this by primarily playing for the Salt Lake City Skyscapers (1913-14) and Great Fall Electrics (1911-12). He would also see time with the Omaha Rourkes and Albuquerque Dukes in 1915.
After he retired from baseball, he return to St. Louis where he settled down in Affton.