Career
She batted and threw right-handed. The diligent and dedicated Barbara Liebrich gave seven years of good service in the All-American Girls Professional League through different facets. Liebrich did not get much playing time, but she became a manager of one of the traveling teams and also served as a chaperone.
Born in Providence, Rhode Island, Liebrich was the second girl of four children into the family of George and Lillian (Leicht) Liebrich.
As a child, she grew up in a baseball household as his father was a semi-professional pitcher for many years, although she began playing softball with the Hudson Motor Carolina Company team after high school graduation in 1940, appearing in national tournaments in Detroit in 1941 and 1943. A late bloomer, Liebrich did not start playing professionally until she joined the AAGPBL as a rookie 25-year-old in 1948.
She spent the year with the Rockford Peaches and the Kenosha Comets, but did not get much playing time, batting a.250 average in three games as a replacement at second base. Liebrich became a chaperone for the expansion Springfield Sallies in 1948.
The team, managed by Carson Bigbee, finished in last place with a 41–84 record, 35 and a half games behind the Racine Belles in the Western Division.
In 1949, the Sallies joined the Chicago Colleens as touring player development teams, while Leibrich replaced Bigbee as the team"s manager. From 1951 through 1954 Liebrich worked as a chaperone for the Kalamazoo Lassies. Following her baseball career, Liebrich became the chief accountant for a large manufacturing firm.
Since 1988 she is part of Women in Baseball, a permanent display based at the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, New York, which was unveiled to honor the entire All-American Girls Professional Baseball League rather than individual baseball personalities.
Liebrich was a longtime resident of Portuguese Charlotte, Florida, where she died at the age of 83.