St. Louis Browns catcher, Walt Alexander, was born on March 5, 1891 in Atlanta, Georgia. In a 19-year professional baseball career, he would play for 15 organizations while acting as a player-manager for six of those teams. While he may not have been the solid catcher that teams are built around, he would record a 338-294 record as a manager in the minor leagues.
Walt Alexander began his baseball career as a 19-year old prospect for the Ellsworth Blues of the Central Kansas League in 1910. He would later play for the Manhattan Maroons (1911) and the Ogden Canners (1912) before the Browns added him to their roster.
St. Louis would purchase Alexander's contract for $1,200 on June 3, 1912. He would join a team that would have eight catchers throughout the 1912 season, looking for the next star to emerge. Alexander would make his debut on June 21 as a defensive replacement for Jim Stephens in the 6th inning. He would appear in 37 games by the end of the season, only behind Jim Stephens (75 games) and Paul Krichell (59 games).
Alexander could have seen more action if his offensive production was stronger. In his first season with the Browns he would record 17 hits while striking out 29 times with a .175 batting average. His 1913 season was not much better. His average actually dropped to a rough .136, with 36 strikeouts and just 15 hits. This may have led to the Browns sending his contract to the Kansas City Blues on September 22, 1913.
He would spend the 1914 season with Kansas City, and then to the Browns roster to start the 1915 season. He would see just one plate appearance, against Chicago's Red Faber (April 15, 1915) which resulted in an out. The Browns would send Alexander back to Kansas City, where his contract would later be purchased by the New York Yankees. He would send three seasons with New York (44 hits in 81 games) before returning to the minors for the final 12 seasons of his career. He would play for the Toledo Mud Hens (1918) and Beaumont Oilers (1919-22).
Walt Alexander shifted his focus to leading on the field for his final seven seasons was as a player-manager for some of the more colorful nickname teams in the country. He would lead the San Angelo Bronchos (1922), Marlin Bathers (1923-24), Greenville Hunters (1925), Austin Senators (1926), Palestine Pals (1928), and San Angelo Sheep Herders.
There is little known of Walt Alexander after his baseball years. He would eventually settle down and live a long life in Fort Worth, Texas. Although he seemed to have lived in annonymity, it is easily assumed that he had plenty of stories to share of his baseball playing years.