Notes
Note N1980
Index
Age 4, Gender Male, Port of Arrival: New York, Port of Departure: Havre, Place of Origin: Deutschland, Ship: Sully, Family Identification 88111.
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Note N1981
Index
Still a Minor
Notes
Note N1982
Index
11th Ward
Notes
Note N1985
Index
Occupation: Lawyer.
Notes
Note N1986
Index
Mentioned in their mother's obit 19 April 1927.
Notes
Note N1989
Index
Student at the "Female Seminary"
Notes
Note N1990
Index
Age 5, Port of Arrival New York, Port of Departure Havre, Place of Origin Deutschland, Ship Sully, Family Identification 88111
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Note N1991
Index
Of Sippersfeld. Left Hamburg Germany 19 May 1869. Arrived New York 1 Jun 1869 on ship Holsatia with Jacob, George, Anna and Augustus Liebrich. Living with son Otto L Hertzel in 1920
Notes
Note N1992
Index
Occupation: Collecting Money
Notes
Note N1993
Index
Last residence : Rosedale, NY
Notes
Note N1994
Index
1870 Census says Ohio for birth place
Notes
Note N1995
Index
1900 Census gives birthdate as Aug 1864.
Notes
Note N1996
Index
Occupation: Pastor
Notes
Note N1997
Index
Barbara "Bobbie" Liebrich was in a league of her own as one of the nation's few female professional baseball players, but it wasn't something she bragged about. "It was something that was in our past and we went on to do other things," said longtime friend Pat Barringer, who was also in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League in the late 1940s. Liebrich, who retired to Port Charlotte in 1999, died July 17 after a series of strokes. She was 83.
A talented softball player as a teenager in Rhode Island, Liebrich tried out for the expanding league in 1947 and began her six-year baseball career playing second base for the Rockford (Ill.) Peaches in 1948. She also played for the Kenosha (Wis.) Comets, managed the Springfield (Ill.) Sallies on the Rookie Touring Team and chaperoned the Kalamazoo (Mich.) Lassies, which won the championship in 1954. Liebrich was named the All-Star chaperone that year, the final year of the women's baseball league. Liebrich later worked as an accountant and retired as the chief accounting officer for the Kalamazoo Label Co., where few co-workers were aware of her days on the diamond. Many of the friends she made playing golf in Florida also were unaware of her past, said Barringer, of Port Charlotte. The women's baseball league was launched in 1943 in an attempt to fill baseball stadiums around the country while many of the nation's young men were headed off to war.
The short-lived league became the subject of the 1992 movie "A League of Their Own" starring Geena Davis, Madonna and Tom Hanks. "We both liked the movie, but (director) Penny Marshall made it 'Hollywood,'" Barringer said. "She put in a lot of things that weren't true, but she put in a lot of things that were true, and nobody tells Penny Marshall what to do." Barringer said she and Liebrich and many of their former teammates interacted with Marshall while she was doing research for the movie. They met her during a reunion in Cooperstown, N.Y., home of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. One fictionalized account in the movie, Barringer said, was when Tom Hanks' character enters the women's locker room. "No male manager in the league ever went into the women's locker room, ever. He would meet them outside the locker room," Barringer said.
The Baseball Hall of Fame recently dedicated its first statue honoring the more than 600 women who played the game professionally. Liebrich's survivors include a brother, Robert, of Cranston, R.I.; sisters Jean Liebrich of Cranston and Ann Hays of Warwick, R.I.; and several nieces and nephews. A memorial service will be held in Rhode Island. Memorial donations may be made to the National Wildlife Federation, 11100 Wildlife Center Drive, Reston, VA 20190.