Toni Stone

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Toni Stone (July 17, 1931 - November 2, 1996), also known by her married name Marcenia Lyle Alberga, was the first of three women to play Negro league baseball.

Toni Stone graduated from Roosevelt High School (Minneapolis). She married Aurelious Alberga, a man forty years her elder and one of the many people who didn’t want her playing baseball. She had always been referred to as a “Tomboy” growing up and consequently received the nickname “Toni” because it sounded like “Tomboy”. She enjoyed the name and eventually adopted it as her own.”‘I loved my trousers. I love cars. Most of all I loved to ride horses with no saddles. I wasn’t classified. People weren’t ready for me,” she said.

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[edit] Playing Career

Toni Stone’s playing career began when she was only ten years old when she participated in a Catholic Midget League, which is similar today’s Little League. She then moved on to play for the Girl’s Highlex Softball Club in St. Paul, Minnesota. By the age of fifteen, Toni Stone played for the St. Paul Giants, a men’s semi-professional team. Stone soon began playing on Al Love’s American Legion championship team. She began her professional career with the San Francisco Sea Lions (1949), where she batted in two runs in her first time up. Toni soon became discontent with the owner of the Sea Lions after she did not receive the pay she had been promised. She quit the team and joined the Black Pelicans of New Orleans. After a short stint with the Black Pelicans, Stone joined the New Orleans Creoles (1949-1952). She was signed by Syd Pollack, owner of the Indianapolis Clowns in 1953 to play second base, the position Hank Aaron had played for the team two years earlier. She did this as part of a publicity stunt. The Clowns were compared to the Harlem Globetrotters of the basketball world, so having a woman on the team attracted more fans. During the fifty games that Stone played for the Clowns, she maintained a .243 batting average and one of her hits was off the legendary Satchel Paige. All of these accomplishments may make her “one of the best players you have never heard of,” according to the NLBPA website. Stone's contract was sold to the Kansas City Monarchs prior to the 1954 season and she retired following the season because of lack of playing time. After the 1954 season, Stone moved to Oakland, California to work as a nurse and care for her sick husband who later died in 1987 at age 103. Toni died on November 2, 1996 at a nursing home in Alameda, California. She was 75 years old.

[edit] Struggles

Although Stone was the first female player in the Negro Leagues, she was not met with open arms. Most of the men shunned her and gave her a hard time because she was a woman. Stone was quite proud of the fact that the male players were out to get her. She would show off the scars on her left wrist and remember the time she had been spiked by a runner trying to take out the woman standing on second base. ‘He was out,’ she recalled. Even though she was part of the team, she wasn’t allowed in the locker room. If she was lucky, she would be allowed to change in the umpire’s locker room. Once, Stone was asked to wear a skirt while playing for sex appeal, but she wouldn’t do it. Even though she felt like she was “one of the guys,” the people around her didn’t. While playing for the Kansas City Monarchs, she spent most the game on the bench, next to the men who hated her. “It was hell,” she said.

[edit] Awards

Toni Stone became one of the first women to play as a regular on a big-league professional team in 1953. In 1985 Stone was inducted into the Women’s Sports Foundation’s International Women’s Sports Hall of Fame. In 1990 she was also inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame where she is a part of two separate exhibits including “Women in Baseball” and “Negro League Baseball”. In 1993 Stone was also inducted into the Women’s Sports Hall of Fame, as well as, the Sudafed International Women’s Sports Hall of Fame. In 1990, Stone’s hometown of St. Paul, Minnesota declared March 6th as “Toni Stone Day.” St. Paul also has a field named after Toni Stone located at the Dunning Baseball Complex.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Hubbard, Crystal, Catching the Moon: The Story of a Young Girl's Baseball Dream, (Lee and Low Books: 2005) ISBN 1-58430-243-7
  • NLBPA. Toni Stone
  • Pitch Black Baseball [1]
  • MLB.com [2]
  • Black Athlete [3]
  • New York Times [4]
  • Baseball Guru[5]
  • Gregorich, Barbara (1993). Women at Play: The Story of Women in Baseball. Harcourt Brace and Company, pp. 169-176.