Amy Shuman
Amy Shuman | |||
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All-American Girls Professional Baseball League | |||
First base | |||
Born: Mohrsville, Pennsylvania | March 10, 1925|||
Died: August 22, 2014 89) Wyomissing, Pennsylvania | (aged|||
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Teams | |||
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Career highlights and awards | |||
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Amy Shuman/Jurasinski [nee Dunkleberger] (March 10, 1925 – August 22, 2014) was born in Mohrsville, Pennsylvania to parents Earl and Pearl (Gerber) Dunkleberger. Amy played in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League during the 1946 season. She measured 5-foot 6-inch and weighed 140 pounds, and batted and threw left-handed.
Early love for ball
From aged 8, Amy played baseball everyday on her family’s farm, with Dorothy, Elaine and Charles, her older siblings. In later years, her younger siblings – Doris and Gladys – also joined in. All the kids were encouraged to play and develop their baseball skills by their father who would play with them when he could. Her mother on the other hand, “would get mad when [they] played all day and not do the chores she wanted us to do,” Nonetheless, every kid from the neighborhood would come most days to the field to play too.
After graduating Ontelaunee High School in 1942, Amy worked for the Reading Company and continued to excel on the softball diamond. In 1943 she and her sisters rejoined the Mohrsville Dodgers. A little while later, the girls played for the Diamond Lil’s, a team that did pretty well in Pennsylvania but not so good in state tournaments against the Kaufmann Maids. Amy was named ‘Rookie of the Year,’ when she was just in ninth grade. oach Clemens described the girls as “tireless performers,” and they truly were the team’s backbone. Amy played in outfield and first base; Elaine in center field; Gladys was a catcher, and Doris a pitcher.
Professional baseball
Amy only played professional baseball for a short while. While playing for the Mohrsville Dodgers in Lancaster, she was spotted by an AAGPBL scout. In 1946, she played for the Grand Rapids Chicks and the South Bend Blue Sox in the position of first base. Her career was cut short just a few months later however, as her husband – Mark Shuman accompanied by his mother – went to visit her in Indiana to try to convince her to come back home with them to Mohrsville. She was torn by that visit and a telegram from a father urging to her “stick to [her] guns.” So for a week she followed his advice, telling her husband and his mother that she was going to complete the last six weeks of the season.
Amy signed her contract in the presence of Max Carey, AAGPBL’s president. She did not know he had been a star player for the Pittsburgh Pirates. Carey was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1961. While playing in the AAGPBL, Amy made $65 a week but was disappointed that she did not get to play so much in the exhibitions as she was a rookie. Nonetheless, she got to play catch a lot with South Bend's manager Chet Grant.
Family ties
Mark was not going to let it go without a fight. Thus he arrived at league practice and, as Amy recalls, “just picked [her] up [and] practically threw [her] over the locker-room fence. [He] told [her] to get all [her] belongings – that [she]was going home.” Amy did as she was told and went back, broken-hearted. She recalls that she “cried all the way home and then for another week after [she] got back. [Mark] was just like the big boss and, you know, at that time you listened to your husband.” She had married him at 19, just as he was being shipped out to the army. Like Fern Shollenberger – who played with Amy on the Mohrsville Dodgers team – she struggled with an army husband who wasn’t happy with her professional baseball career. Amy said: “Fern and I both agreed that if we made the teams, we weren’t coming back.” But, Amy was strong, recalling of the tryouts that she was “a lot stronger than a lot of the girls, and could really hit a ball further than they. And when it came to fielding, [she] did not miss anything.” Both she and Fern got in: “When I heard my name, I almost fell over, I was so happy,”
Post-baseball
After she returned home she missed her professional baseball league days, but, more upsetting was that she had to “look for a job.” In 1947 she started work for the Berkshire Knitting Mills, as a seamstress. Still, she was able to participate in various AAGPBL events as well as the Baseball Hall of Fame’s “Women in Baseball” exhibit in 1988. Her husband was killed in 1951 in an automobile accident and in 1953, Amy married Joseph Jurasinski with whom she had two daughters. She stayed at home with them from 1959 to 1964, at which time she found work with AT&T in the production line. She stayed there for 23 years until her retirement in 1987. In 1998, Joseph died. In 2006, on Mother’s Day, Amy went to an unveiling of a statue of a female ballplayer at Cooperstown.
She died on August 22, 2014 in Wyomissing, Pennsylvania, at the age of 89.[1]
Sources
- ↑ AAGPBL Website Archived April 16, 2015, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ "Amy Shuman Jurasinski (Dunkleberger)". AAGPBL. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
- ↑ Engelhardt, Brian. "Amy Dunkleberger Jurasinski". Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved 22 September 2014.