Read Girls of Summer: In Their Own League Online
Authors: Lois Browne
Kenosha Comets | 1943-51 | Kenosha, Wisconsin |
Racine Belles | 1943-50 | Racine, Wisconsin |
Rockford Peaches | 1943-54 | Rockford, Illinois |
South Bend Blue Sox | 1943-54 | South Bend, Indiana |
Milwaukee Chicks | 1944 | Milwaukee, Wisconsin |
Minneapolis Millerettes | 1944 | Milwaukee, Wisconsin |
Fort Wayne Daisies | 1945-54 | Fort Wayne, Indiana |
Grand Rapids Chicks | 1945-54 | Grand Rapids, Michigan |
Muskegon Lassies | 1946-50 | Muskegon, Michigan |
Peoria Redwings | 1946-51 | Peoria, Illinois |
Chicago Colleens | 1948 | Chicago, Illinois |
Springfield Sallies | 1948 | Springfield, Illinois |
Battle Creek Belles | 1951-52 | Battle Creek, Michigan |
Kalamazoo Lassies | 1950-54 | Kalamazoo, Michigan |
Muskegon Belles | 1953 | Muskegon, Michigan |
The League champion or pennant winner was the team that topped the standings at the end of the regular season. The play-off champion was the team that won the post season play-offs.
| League Champions | Play-Off Champions |
| | |
1943 | Racine Belles (1st half) Kenosha Comets (2nd half) | Racine Belles |
1944 | Kenosha Comets (1st half) Milwaukee Chicks (2nd half) | Milwaukee Chicks |
1945 | Rockford Peaches | Rockford Peaches |
1946 | Racine Belles | Racine Belles |
1947 | Muskegon Lassies | Muskegon Lassies |
1948 | Grand Rapids Chicks (1st half) Racine Belles (2nd half) | Rockford Peaches |
1949 | Rockford Peaches | Rockford Peaches |
1950 | Rockford Peaches | Rockford Peaches |
1951 | South Bend Blue Sox | South Bend Blue Sox |
1952 | Fort Wayne Daisies | South Bend Blue Sox |
1953 | Fort Wayne Daisies | Grand Rapids Chicks |
1954 | Fort Wayne Daisies | Kalamazoo Lassies |
1943 | Gladys “Terrie” Davis | .332 |
1944 | Betsy Jochum | .296 |
1945 | Mary Crews Helen Callaghan | .319 .299 |
1946 | Dorothy Kamenshek | .316 |
1947 | Dorothy Kamenshek | .306 |
1948 | Audrey Wagner | .312 |
1949 | Jean Faut Doris Sams | .291 .279 |
1950 | Betty Foss | .346 |
1951 | Betty Foss | .368 |
1952 | Joanne Weaver | .344 |
1953 | Joanne Weaver | .346 |
1954 | Joanne Weaver | .429 |
Hi. I hope you have enjoyed
Girls of Summer
and that you have a sense that you met the women who played professional baseball in the American Midwest for more than a decade. Many of those who appear in the book have now passed on. Because of the renewed recognition that came to them late in life, you can find more information about them on the Internet. You can also visit my
Girls of Summer
page at
intheirownleague.wordpress.com
and sign up for my blog
. I'm dipping into the research I did on the League and sharing what I find.
You can also connect with me online at:
Twitter
:
http://twitter.com/loislmb
Goodreads:
http://www.goodreads.com/loislmb
Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/loislmb
When I first heard about the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, I was a researcher at CTV’s public affairs program,
W5
. At my suggestion, the program covered a reunion that former League players were holding in Saskatchewan.
V
iewers loved it, and it was from my work as researcher on that piece that I had the chance to write this book. Since then, everyone I’ve spoken to about the League has been encouraging and interested in the book’s progress.
I would like to thank:
my friends and colleagues at CTV’s
W5
, particularly Pam Bertrand, for the great job she did producing the segment on the All-American League reunion; Stan and Nancy Colbert of HarperCollins Canada who saw the
W5
piece and liked it enough to suggest I write a book; to the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League who made time for me, with special thanks to Arleene Johnson Noga in Regina, Fran Janssen in South Bend, Indiana, Dorothy Ferguson Key in Rockford, Illinois, Marilyn Jenkins and Earlene “Beans” Risinger in Grand Rapids, Michigan and Helen Nicol Fox in Phoenix, Arizona; and to all the others who were helpful: Lou Arnold, Mary Baker, Arnold Bauer, Marge Callaghan, Faye Dancer, Judy Dusanko, Thelma “Tiby” Eisen, Madeline English, Merrie Fidler, Don Key, Harold Greiner, Dorothy Harrell Doyle, Irene Hickson, Dorothy Hunter, Lillian Jackson, Christine Jewett Beckett, Betsy Jochum, Daisy and Dave Junor, Dorothy Kamenshek, Sohie Kurys, Fred Leo, Mildred Lundahl, Elizabeth Mahon, Ruby Knezovich Martz, Lucille Moore, Carl Orwant, Lavone “Pepper” Davis, Janet Perkins, Mary Rountree, Doris Satterfield, Yolands, Schick, Dorothy Schroeder, Ken Sells, Mary Shastal, Twila Shively, Betty Tucker, Alice Udall (daughter of Bill Allington), Sue Waddell, Joanne Winter, Connie Wisniewski, Alma “Gabby” Ziegler and Jethro Kyle, curator of the Sports Research Department, University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Indiana; and to my friends who encouraged me, with special thanks to Johanna Brand and Lin Gibson whose support and good advice were invaluable to me.