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Mamie "Peanut" Johnson
Unbelievable Broad and former professional baseball player,
Mamie Johnson. Starting in 1953 when she was 19 years old, Mamie played three
seasons for the Negro League’s “Indianapolis Clowns”. Mamie
was one of three women to play in the league, and was the first female pitcher.
• Bats Right, Throws Right
• Height 5'4", Weight 120 lbs.
• School New York University
• Born September 27,
1935 in Ridgeway, SC USA
Mamie, who along with Connie Morgan and Toni
Stone, was one of three women to play in the Negro leagues. Mamie Johnson,
the daughter of Gentry Harrison and Della Belton Havelow, was born on
September 27, 1935, in Ridgeway, South Carolina. When she was only seven
years old, she would play baseball every day. When she left South Carolina
to pursue her college education in 1943, she refused to let anyone or
anything interfere with her love of playing baseball. She practiced while
pursuing her studies at New York University.
At the time, amateur and
professional baseball teams were segregated. When she was 17 years old,
Ms. Johnson was rejected as a team member by the White Female Baseball
League. This unfair treatment and prejudice became her own victory. She
proclaimed, "If
I had played with white girls, I would have been just another player,
but now I am somebody who has done something that no other woman has done." In
1953, Bish Tyson, a former player with the Negro League, observed Ms.
Johnson practicing on a field in Washington, D.C. He was overwhelmed by
her athletic abilities. He maintained that she was a great player and
suggested that she play professional baseball. He introduced her to Bunny
Downs, Manager of the Indianapolis Clowns.
After one tryout, Mamie Johnson
made the team. What an outstanding achievement for a female athlete! While
pitching her first game with the Clowns, a batter on the opposing team
yelled to her, ""What
makes you think you can strike a batter out? Why, you aren't any larger
than a peanut!"" Mamie
never said a word, but the batter soon found out what she could do! 1
- 2 - 3 - OUT!
From that day, the 100 pound baseball player had the nickname,
Peanut. Mamie ‘Peanut,’ Johnson played professional baseball
for three seasons, from 1953 to 1955, with the Indianapolis Clowns. During
her tenure, she won 33 games and lost 8 games. Her batting average ranged
from .262 to .284. Of this opportunity, she exclaimed, "Just to know
that you were among some of the best male ball players that ever picked
up the bat, made all of my baseball moments great moments."
After her
baseball career ended, Ms. Johnson was a licensed nurse for thirty years.
Currently, she manages the Negro Baseball League's Memorabilia Shop in
Prince George's County, Maryland.
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