Background
A native of Los Angeles, California, Nalda Bird was the daughter of James Henry Bird, Senior and Donalda Quesnel Bird. She grew up with three brothers who taught her how to play baseball.
A native of Los Angeles, California, Nalda Bird was the daughter of James Henry Bird, Senior and Donalda Quesnel Bird. She grew up with three brothers who taught her how to play baseball.
Listed at 5 ft 1 in (155 m), 115 pounds, Bird batted right-handed and threw left-handed. She was nicknamed "Birdie". Sometimes she is credited as Nelda Bird.
At age 10 she began playing organized softball, and a year later she joined a semi-professional team
She later became a top all-around athlete while in high school. At 17, she was invited to the 1945 spring training of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League at Wrigley Field in Chicago.
Before that, a player from Los Angeles Angels PCL team worked with her on playing baseball. Finally, she was signed to a contract and was allocated to the South Bend Blue Sox.
Bird was a hard-throwing and durable left-hander, but had problems with her control in her only season in the league.
She joined a South Bend pitching staff headed by Charlotte Armstrong, and contributed with 13 victories, even though she allowed the most earned runs (67), tied the league season-record for the more balks (six), and posted a 0.80 strikeout-to-walk ratio (128-to-160). Bird solidified herself in the baseball record books as one of three American professional pitchers to hurling two shutouts in a doubleheader. The others are Editor Reulbach (National League), who did it in 1908, and Big Bill Foster (Negro Leagues), who completed his heroics in 1926.
As Bird recalled in an interview, I was ready on that day and threw nothing but strikes.
In 1947 she pitched in the National Women"s Softball League of Chicago, because the AAGPBL no longer used underhand pitchers. She widowed in 1991. Nalda Bird-Phillips died in Kennesaw, Georgia, at the age of 77.
The AAGPBL Players Association movement helped to bring the league story to the public eye. The association was largely responsible for the opening of a permanent display at the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, New York since November 5, 1988 that honors those who were part of this unique experience.
Nalda Bird-Phillips coauthored the Official Song of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League along with Pepper Paire.
The theme, named Victory Song, was popularized in the 1992 film A League of Their Own, directed by Penny Marshall, which was a fictionalized account dedicated to the women who played in the league during the course of World World War World War II We come from cities near and far. We"ve got Canadians, Irish ones, and Swedes. We"re all for one, we"re one for all.
We"re all Americans.
In their annual reunions since 1998, it is usual to heard the original AAGPBL players singing We"re the members of the All-American League.