Shooting Hoops In The In The Great Depression “Dust Bowl”
Click below to link to an NPR piece on women's basketball in Oklahoma in the Great Depression 1930s:
http://www.wbur.org/onlyagame/2017/03/03/dust-bowl-girls-lydia-reeder-book
March Is Women's History
Winthrop Steele comment:
Usually, according to
site moderator Peter Paul Markin, this space deals with hard-core history and
politics and he can only remember a couple of occasions when sports, you know
football, baseball, basketball, golf and such, have invaded this blog. Once
when he personally had gone off the deep end and spent one college football
season commenting on the weekly AP Top Twenty-Five and again a couple of years
ago when Lance Lawrence went on and on about golf. Not professional golf, or
low handicap golf, but the doings of he and his golf buddies high handicap
golf. (For those not in the know “handicap” in golf means how many strokes off
of par on average one person in against another so that there is a “level
playing field.”)
That said, I am
commenting today on the subject of the link above-women’s basketball out in
Oklahoma in the 1930s, out in the “dust bowl.” Now usually when I think of
Oklahoma in the 1930s I think about Woody Guthrie, a son of Oklahoma, and his
dust bowl ballads, mostly about the “Okies” heading out further west,
especially to Garden of Eden California. Or I think literature and of course about
John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath and Tom Joad and Preacher Jack which took
place at that same time. So add this piece from NPR “sports” about women out in
the dust bowl who had game, who could go to the hoop and lived to talk about
it.
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