Women’s Basketball Timeline

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James Yost
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Shattered Globe Theatre presents
THE TALL GIRLS
by Meg Miroshnik
directed by Lou Contey
playing January 12-February 25
at Theater Wit (1229 W Belmont, Chicago, IL)

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History of Women’s Basketball in America

Adapted from A Timeline of Women’s Basketball History 1891 to Present, by Jone Johnson Lewis

1891

  • James Naismith invented basketball at a Massachusetts YMCA school.

 1892

  • First women’s basketball team organized by Senda Berenson at Smith College, adapting Naismith’s rules to emphasize cooperation, with three zones and six players on each team.

1893

  • First women’s college basketball game played at Smith College; no men were admitted to the game (March 21).
  • Women’s basketball began at Iowa State College, Carleton College, Mount Holyoke College, and Sophie Newcomb College (Tulane) in New Orleans; each year more schools added women’s basketball to their sports offerings for girls.

 1895

  • Basketball was being played at many women’s colleges, including Vassar College, Bryn Mawr College, and Wellesley College.

1896

  • Bloomers introduced as a playing costume at Sophie Newcomb College, New Orleans.
  • Stanford and the University of California at Berkeley played the first women’s intercollegiate game; Stanford won, 2-1, and men were excluded, with women guarding the windows and doors to exclude men.
  • First known women’s basketball game between two high schools was played in the Chicago area, with Chicago Austin High School against Oak Park High School.

1899

  • Conference of Physical Training established a committee to form uniform rules for women’s basketball.
  • Stanford banned women’s basketball from intercollegiate competition, as did the University of California.

1908

  • AAU (Amateur Athletic Union) took the position that women or girls should not play basketball in public.

1914

  • The American Olympic Committee declared its opposition to the participation of women in the Olympics competition.

1921

  • Jeux Olympiques Féminines held in Monaco, an all-women’s sports competition for sports excluded from the Olympics; sports included basketball, track and field; Britain’s team won the basketball event.

1928

  • Olympics included women’s basketball — as an exhibition event.

1931

  • Golden Cyclones won AAU Championship, led by “Babe” Didrikson.

1930s

  • Isadore Channels (of the Chicago Romas team) and Ora Mae Washington (of the Philadelphia Tribunes) were stars in two rival black women’s basketball barnstorming teams; both women were also American Tennis Association title winners.
  • WDNAAF continued to pressure states to ban women’s basketball tournaments, with success in many states.

1940s

  • During World War II, competition and recreational basketball was common; relocation centers for Japanese Americans, for instance, included regularly scheduled women’s basketball games.

1953

  • International competition in women’s basketball was reorganized.

1955

  • First Pan-American Games included women’s basketball; USA won the gold medal.

1969

  • Women’s basketball was included in the Paralympics.

 1972

  • Title IX enacted, requiring federally-funded schools to fund women’s sports equitably, including teams, scholarships, recruitment, and media coverage.
  • AAU established national basketball tournaments for girls younger than college age.

1976

  • Women’s basketball became an Olympic sport; the Soviet team won the gold, USA won the silver.

1984

  • Lynette Woodard began playing with the Harlem Globetrotters, the first woman to play with that team.

1985

  • Senda Berenson Abbott, L. Margaret Wade, and Bertha F. Teague were inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, the first women to be so honored.

1988

  • Olympic women’s basketball event won by USA team.

1999

  • Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame opened with 25 inductees.

2000

  • Olympics held in Sydney, Australia; USA team won the gold medal; Teresa Edwards became the first basketball player to play on five consecutive Olympic teams and win five Olympic medals.

2002

  • Ashley McElhiney became the first woman head coach for a men’s professional basketball team (ABA, Nashville Rhythm); she resigned in 2005 with a 21-10 record.

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The Tall Girls by Meg Miroshnik plays January 12th-February 25 at Theater Wit (1229 W Belmont, Chicago, IL). Single tickets are available via the Theater Wit Box Office. More info about Season Traveler Memberships–the best way to see all three shows in SGT’s 2016-2017 Season–are available here.
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