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- Marguerite_Pearson abstract "Marguerite Pearson (Tesseine) (September 6, 1932 – January 4, 2005) was a utility player who played in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League between the 1948 and 1954 seasons. Listed at 5 ft 5 in (1.65 m), 125 lb., Pearson batted and thew right-handed. She was nicknamed ″Dolly\".The All-American Girls Professional Baseball League flourished in the 1940s when Major League Baseball went on hold as men went to World War II. The league was created in 1943 by the Chicago Cubs' owner Philip K. Wrigley, and disbanded at the end of the 1954 season. In its twelve years of history, the AAGPBL gave over 600 women athletes the opportunity to play professional baseball and to play it at a level never before attained.During her seven-year tenure in the AAGPBL, Dolly Pearson moved around for a while, playing for seven different clubs in seven different cities as the league shifted players as needed to help weak teams stay afloat. A versatile utility, she played all positions except catcher before becoming a regular shortstop. Pearson never had the opportunity to play for a pennant contender or a champion team.After her baseball career was over, Pearson made a name for herself promoting youth sports activities to provide a safe and family-oriented environment on the field, which gained her induction in several Halls of Fame.Born in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania neighborhood of Hazelwood, Pearson was the daughter of William and Retha (Hayes) Pearson. She graduated from Allderdice High School. She was playing sandlot baseball with the boys and was gaining a reputation. And a AAGPBL scout caught wind, and signed Pearson at the age of 14 nearing 15, the youngest player ever to play in the league.Pearson entered the league in 1948 with the Muskegon Lassies, playing for them for one year before joining the Peoria Redwings (1949), Racine Belles (1950), Battle Creek Belles (1951), Kalamazoo Lassies (1951–1952), South Bend Blue Sox (1953) and Grand Rapids Chicks (1954).On the last day of her rookie season, Pearson celebrated her 16th birthday to everybody's surprise, because everyone thought she was already 16 (the minimum age according to the rules), so she had played illegally all year. In addition to Dolly, she also received one of the more unusual nicknames in the AAGPBL – \"Buttons\". Pearson received her curious nickname on a trip with the club, when she wanted to play with all the push-buttons in the train. Overall, Pearson appeared in 82 games and hit .182 with 15 runs and 12 RBI.In 1949, Pearson batted .216 with Peoria, playing only in 30 games at various positions. At Racine the next year, she started at center field and posted a .235 average with 41 runs and 47 RBI in a career-high 110 games. Then in 1951 she found herself on the move again, this time to Battle Creek, where she started at shortstop, the position she would play for the rest of her career. In addition, she was sent to Kalamazoo in the midseason, combining for a .190 average in 100 games for both teams.Pearson hit .185 in 44 games for Kalamazoo in 1952 and moved to South Bend in 1953. She appeared in 90 games for the Blue Sox, batting .185 with 29 RBI and 38 runs scored, being selected for the All-Star Team in 1953. Then she joined Grand Rapids in 1954, during what turned out to be the AAGPBL's final season. The league reduced the size of the ball 10 inches to major league size that year. As a result, Pearson started hitting the ball with authority and posted a .327 average w/272 at bats, 18 home runs, 10 stolen bases, a slugging percentage of .544, driving in 57 runs while scoring 68 times, setting career-marks. In 85 games, she committed 29 errors in 350 chances for a .917 fielding average.Once the league folded, Pearson started playing slow-pitch softball in Mount Pleasant, Michigan, playing until the age of 65, where her club won 18 championships. She married Edward Tesseine in 1955. The couple raised four children: Retha, Sam, Ron and Ed, and had five grandchildren; Taylon, Kaedria (Sam), Stacy, Rodney and Russell (Retha). She worked in the Central Michigan University athletics department for several years, while helping her husband run the bar they owned at Mount Pleasant, E.J.'s Lounge, until 1981.Widowed in 1991, Pearson retired in 1994 and was involved in the Foster Grandparents Program. Children were always an integral part of her life, as she started the first T-ball program in Mt. Pleasant. She also trained and coached boys' baseball and girls' softball at various levels in the Michigan area, and coached senior girls' bowling for many years.She was the Grand Rapids, Michigan City Woman's singles' bowling Champion in 1968.".
- Marguerite_Pearson alias "Tesseine, Dolly".
- Marguerite_Pearson birthDate "1932-09-06".
- Marguerite_Pearson birthPlace Pennsylvania.
- Marguerite_Pearson birthPlace Pittsburgh.
- Marguerite_Pearson birthYear "1932".
- Marguerite_Pearson deathDate "2005-01-04".
- Marguerite_Pearson deathPlace Mount_Pleasant,_Michigan.
- Marguerite_Pearson deathYear "2005".
- Marguerite_Pearson position Infield.
- Marguerite_Pearson position Outfield.
- Marguerite_Pearson position Pitcher.
- Marguerite_Pearson team All-American_Girls_Professional_Baseball_League.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageID "31171720".
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageLength "10474".
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageOutDegree "87".
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageRevisionID "696087316".
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink All-American_Girls_Professional_Baseball_League.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink All-American_Girls_Professional_Baseball_League_All-Star_Team.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Assist_(baseball).
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink At_bat.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Base_on_balls.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Batting_average.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Battle_Creek_Belles.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Catcher.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Category:1932_births.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Category:2005_deaths.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Category:All-American_Girls_Professional_Baseball_League_players.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Category:Baseball_players_from_Pennsylvania.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Category:Central_Michigan_University_alumni.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Grand_Rapids,_Michigan.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Mount_Pleasant,_Michigan.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Pittsburgh,_Pennsylvania.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Center_fielder.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Chicago_Cubs.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Cooperstown,_New_York.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Double_(baseball).
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Double_play.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Earned_run_average.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Error_(baseball).
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Fielding_percentage.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Games_pitched.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Games_played.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Grand_Rapids_Chicks.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Hazelwood_(Pittsburgh).
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Hit_(baseball).
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Home_run.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Infield.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Innings_pitched.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Kalamazoo_Lassies.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Major_League_Baseball.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Mount_Pleasant,_Michigan.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Muskegon_Lassies.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink National_Baseball_Hall_of_Fame_and_Museum.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink On-base_percentage.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Outfield.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Pennsylvania.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Peoria_Redwings.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Philip_K._Wrigley.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Pitcher.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Pittsburgh.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Push-button.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Putout.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Racine_Belles.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Run_(baseball).
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Run_batted_in.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Senior_Corps.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Shortstop.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Slugging_percentage.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink South_Bend_Blue_Sox.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Stolen_base.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Strikeout.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Taylor_Allderdice_High_School.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Tee-ball.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Total_chances.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Triple_(baseball).
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Utility_player.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink Win–loss_record_(pitching).
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- Marguerite_Pearson wikiPageWikiLinkText "Marguerite Pearson".
- Marguerite_Pearson alternativeNames "Tesseine, Dolly".
- Marguerite_Pearson bats "Right".
- Marguerite_Pearson birthDate "1932-09-06".
- Marguerite_Pearson birthPlace Pennsylvania.
- Marguerite_Pearson birthPlace Pittsburgh.
- Marguerite_Pearson dateOfBirth "1932-09-06".
- Marguerite_Pearson dateOfDeath "2005-01-04".
- Marguerite_Pearson deathDate "2005-01-04".
- Marguerite_Pearson deathPlace Mount_Pleasant,_Michigan.
- Marguerite_Pearson ft "5".
- Marguerite_Pearson highlights "*All-Star Team *Women in Baseball – AAGPBL Permanent Display".
- Marguerite_Pearson highlights "Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum".
- Marguerite_Pearson imageSize "200".
- Marguerite_Pearson in "5".
- Marguerite_Pearson name "Marguerite Pearson".
- Marguerite_Pearson name "Pearson, Marguerite".
- Marguerite_Pearson placeOfBirth "Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania".
- Marguerite_Pearson placeOfDeath "Mount Pleasant, Michigan".
- Marguerite_Pearson position Infield.
- Marguerite_Pearson position Outfield.