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Collection Subject- All-American Girls Professional Baseball League--Personal narratives (7)
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- Baseball for women--United States (7)
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- Text: ...That was great and we were in a theater of some sort, I think it was a theater. Interviewer: “Had you ever been in a limousine before?" No Interviewer: “Tell the story.” I thought, “that can’t be me going in a limousine like that”, and then they were so great to me...
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- Text: ...hose things are much more available to women today than they use to be just as they’re available to someone who is good in theater or good in art, we have that in sports now and people will have to look for it, but it’s there. Some of the legislation is helping also. 27:58 Interviewer: ...
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- Text: ...ave a little fun and that was kind of nice. 51:47 Interviewer: “When did you see the movie? Did you just walk into a movie theater or did they have a special screening for you?” They had something at the Star Theater here and the fact is, somebody made me a collage and I gave i...
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- Text: ...Interviewer: “So, you went to a premiere of it? Did you see it in a movie or you just went to a movie theater and saw it?” It was on television and everything you know. 18 Interviewer: “You never saw it in a theater?” No, no Interviewer: “Oh my gosh.” No, when it cam...
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- Text: ...He was going into the V12 training and so, what‘s this drummer, Gene Krupa, he was going to put on a show in a Kansas City theater, so we got off the train in Kansas City and went to that show and it was really fun. Interviewer: “A little hard to go back to the farm after those experien...
Lois Youngen was born in a small town in Ohio in 1933. She grew up playing baseball with boys from her town, and played on a boys' team for several years before switching to a girls' softball team while in high school. She learned about the All American League while visiting a relative in Fort Wayne in 1950. She joined the league the next year and played for Fort Wayne, Kenosha and South Bend as a catcher and outfielder until the league folded in 1954. She used the money she earned as a player to go to college, and eventually earned a doctorate in Physical Education and taught at the University of Oregon.
Jacqueline Baumgart (née Mattson) was born in Waukegan, Illinois. She grew up in Waukegan area and played with the neighborhood boys. She played outfield positions as a kid. In 1942, her family moved to Milwaukee, WI where she played with as a catcher for a few local softball teams. Eventually, she was scouted for the All American Girls Baseball League. At the start of her first spring training she had not been assigned to a team yet. She was eventually assigned to the Springfield Sallies in 1950. She played the 1950 season with them and was then traded to the Kenosha Comets and played the 1951 season with them. One of her main career highlights was having the opportunity to play as a professional in Yankee Stadium.