Lois Youngen

“I grew up in the 1940s when a woman’s place was at home, but I always knew it was at home, first, second and third!” 

In the summer of 1950, the 16-year-old teenager took a car trip with her parents to see family in Indiana and she ended up with a tryout to play in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League.

Lois Youngen spent four seasons catching in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League. She joined the Fort Wayne Daisies as a 17-year-old in 1951, and two years later with the South Bend Blue Sox she caught a perfect game thrown by Jean Faut. The 89-year-old former catcher and outfielder played for two Hall of Famers, who served as her managers during her career: Max Carey and Jimmie Foxx. Paying her way through college with the money she saved from playing, Lois earned her doctorate in Physical Education from Ohio State University and enjoyed a 36-year career with the University of Oregon where she served as the Director of Physical Activity and Recreation.

“I went to the senior prom, graduated from high school and became a Fort Wayne Daisy all in one week.”

The catcher from Ohio spent four seasons in the AAGPBL and vividly remembers the first time she stepped into a batter’s box, and fondly remembers the baseball legends who managed her.

After her playing days, “Dr. Youngen” climbed to the top of the ladder as a college professor and administrator — and there’s a ball field in Eugene that carries her name as a lasting tribute to her contributions to baseball and her community. 

No one had more fun playing in the AAGPBL than Lois and her recollections are vivid.

closeup image of baseball glove and signed ball