St. Louis Browns left-handed pitcher, Stan Ferens, was born on March 5, 1915, in Wendel, Pennsylvania. "Lefty" would spend most of his professional baseball career within the St. Louis Cardinals and Browns organizations. He would tally a 67-57 record across seven seasons with seven different teams.
Stan Ferens began his baseball career at the age of 22 with the Brooklyn Dodgers minor league affiliate, Greensburg Green Sox, in 1937. There is no record of Ferens playing college or semipro baseball before signing with the Green Sox. He would only appear in one game, which ended with a complete game victory. For an unknown reason, Ferens missed the 1938 season before returning to Greensburg, they were a affiliate of the Washington Nationals and were called the Senators.
Ferens would spend the next two seasons in the Cardinals organization, playing for the Albany Cardinals (1940), Houston Buffaloes (1941), and Columbus Redbirds (1941). After reaching a 19-5 record with Columbus, he was drafted by the St. Louis Browns in the 1941 Rule 5 draft.
Ferens would spend the entire 1942 season with the Browns, making his MLB debut on June 10, against the Boston Red Sox. He would appear in 69 innings over 19 games. Primarily used out of the bullpen, he would close out eight games but would not register a save. He would make three starts, and even pitch a complete game on July 17 in an 11-1 victory over the Chicago White Sox. He finished the 1942 season with 29 earned runs, 23 strikeouts, and 21 walks.
Stan Ferens would miss three seasons (1943-45) during World War II. Due to childhood accident where he lost a portion of his left thumb, Ferens was assigned a "4F" identification and was not allowed into active service. He would spend the three years within the production factories that supported the war effort.
Stan Ferens returned to the Browns in 1946, and saw action in 34 games. His role remained the same as he worked in 28 games out of the pen. His value increased as he struck out 28 batters across 88 innings, reaching an ERA of 4.50. He would make six starts, and one resulted in a complete game victory over the Washington Nationals on July 30. In two seasons with the Browns he would accumulate 51 strikeouts, walk 59 batters, 73 earned runs, and a 4.18 ERA.
Stan Ferens split the 1947 season between the Toledo Mud Hens and San Antonio Missions in the Browns' minor leagues. He would retire from baseball after the season.
There is little documented on the life of Stan Ferens after baseball. He would eventually settle down in the Hempfield Township of Pennsylvania.