Williams began his professional baseball career in at the age of 23, playing for the Regina Red Sox of the Western Canada League. In, he played for the Edmonton Eskimos before moving to the Spokane Indians in. After posting a.340 batting average in 79 games for the Indians, he made his major league debut with the Cincinnati Reds on July 14, 1915. He hit for a.242 average in 71 games for the Reds during the peak of the dead-ball era when only 6 players in the league hit above the.300 mark. He played in only 10 games for the Reds in 1916, spending most of the season with Spokane and with the Portland Beavers of the Pacific Coast League. Williams hit 24 home runs along with a.313 batting average for Portland in before being purchased by the St. Louis Browns. Williams was drafted into the United States Army in April 1918, and appeared in only two games for the Browns that season. He returned to the Browns in 1919 and hit.300 with 6 homeruns in 65 games. In, Major League Baseball outlawed specialty pitches such as the spitball and experienced a subsequent jump in the league batting averages as well as home runs. In Williams' first full season as a regular player in 1920, he posted a.307 batting average along with 10 home runs and 72 runs batted in. He continued to improve in 1921 with a.347 batting average with 24 home runs, 117 runs batted in and a career-high.429 on-base percentage. Williams had the best season of his career in 1922, leading the American League with 39 home runs and 155 runs batted in, as the Browns finished the season one game behind the pennant-winning New York Yankees. 32 of his 39 home runs were hit at home in Sportsman's Park. On August 7, 1922, during a game against the Washington Senators, he became the first player in American League history to hit two home runs in one inning. His 39 home runs topped Babe Ruth, who had led the league the previous four seasons, although Ruth had been suspended well into the 1922 season by Baseball CommissionerKenesaw Mountain Landis for violating a curb on barnstorming. Williams was one of only two players to break Babe Ruth's twelve-year string in which he led the American League in home runs. Also in 1922, Williams also became the first player in major league history to have 30 home runs and 30-plus stolen bases in the same season; a feat which would not be achieved again until Willie Mays accomplished it with the New York Giants in. In August1923, the Washington Senators came into possession of one of Williams' bats and discovered that it had been bored out and plugged with a lighter wood. The bat was turned over to National League umpire George Hildebrand for investigation and the Senators protested all the victories by the Browns in which Williams had used the bat. Williams explained that he had ordered the bat specially made, but when he received it, he found it to be too heavy, so he plugged it with a lighter wood. He was cited in the 1924 Reach Guide for using a corked bat, although major league baseball hadn't ruled plugged bats illegal at the time. He finished the 1923 season with a career-high.357 batting average along with 29 home runs and 91 runs batted in and ended the season 15th in Most Valuable Player Award balloting. In November 1924, it was rumored that the Yankees were trying to trade for Williams, which would have teamed him with Ruth to make one of the most powerful home run combinations in baseball. However, St. Louis manager George Sisler's insistence on the Yankees trading Waite Hoyt for Williams was too high a price for Yankees owner Jacob Ruppert. Williams had another productive season in 1925, hitting.331 with 25 home runs and 105 runs batted in, and led the league with a.613 slugging percentage. Williams continued to hit well for the remainder of his career with St. Louis until December 15, 1927, when he was purchased by the Boston Red Sox for $10,000. He played two more seasons for the Red Sox, hitting for a.345 average in 1929 at the age of 39. Williams returned to the minor leagues in to play two more seasons for the Portland Beavers before retiring in at the age of 41.
Career statistics
In a fourteen-year major league career, Williams played in 1,397 games, accumulating 1,552 hits in 4,862 at bats for a.319 career batting average along with 196 home runs, 916 runs batted in and an on-base percentage of.393. Of his 196 home runs, 142 came at his home park. He retired with a.958 fielding percentage. As baseball evolved out of the dead-ball era, Williams finished in the top four in the American League in home runs in seven consecutive seasons. He posted ten seasons with a batting average above.300, and three seasons in which he scored more than 100 runs. As of, Williams'.319 career batting average ranked 53rd all-time in major league history. His.924 career on-base plus slugging percentage and his.530 career slugging percentage, ranked 45th and 48th respectively all-time among major league players. Williams holds the St. Louis Browns / Baltimore Orioles single season record for runs batted in with 155 in. He is the St. Louis Browns' all-time leader in on-base percentage, slugging percentage and OPS. In the 2001 book The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract, Bill James ranked Williams as the 50th greatest left fielder of all-time.
Post-baseball
Williams returned to Grants Pass and worked as a police officer before becoming owner and operator of the Owl Club, a restaurant and billiard parlor on G Street.