In 1950, a new kid named Tubby Johnston showed up for Little League baseball tryouts in Corning, New York. The 12-year-old was really good—and a great hitter—so it was no surprise when Tubby made the team.
After a few practices, however, the kid came clean to the coach: Tubby was actually a girl named Kathryn Johnston.
Kathryn grew up during a time when girls weren’t encouraged to play sports. In her town, for example, she could take part only in tennis, swimming, or track.
But Kathryn loved baseball. Although Little League didn’t have official rules against girls taking part in the sport, no girl had ever played in the league before. So Kathryn and her mother came up with a plan: Kathryn would go to tryouts disguised as a boy. They cut her braids, and before long she was playing first base for the local team.
Kathryn’s coach and teammates welcomed her after she revealed her true identity, but players from other teams often tried to push her around. Still, she finished the season. But it would be years before another girl played Little League baseball. In 1951, the league officially banned female players in a decision known as the “Tubby Rule.”
However, over the next two decades the world began to change, and a new generation of girls challenged the policy, with some even trying out for Little League teams. In 1974, two years after the passage of Title IX, the Tubby Rule was finally abolished. Since then, hundreds of thousands of girls in the U.S. have played Little League baseball.
As for Kathryn, today her photograph hangs in the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. It’s part of an exhibit celebrating women’s many achievements in baseball.