All-American Girls Professional Baseball League
The Millerettes' uniform consisted of a maroon cap and socks and a pink dress uniform with the circular Minneapolis city seal at the center of the chest.
Like their expansion counterparts the Milwaukee Chicks, the team did not have an official nickname.
They were alternately known as "Millerettes", after the city's American Association ballclub, and "Lakers" from Minnesota's nickname, "Land of 10,000 Lakes". [1]
That nickname would be adopted by the city's professional basketball team three years later.
Halfway through the season, the league gave up on the Minneapolis market and the Millerettes became a traveling team playing all games on the road, earning another nickname, the "Orphans".
The team was manager by Bubber Jonnard, and finished 26 and a half games out of first place, with a 45–72 record.
The most significant players were pitcher Dorothy Wiltse, who posted a 20–16 record and a 1.88 ERA in 38 appearances, and outfielder Helen Callaghan, who finished second in the league in average (.287) and third in runs (81), hits (114), home runs(3), and total bases (136).
Pitcher Annabelle Lee threw the first perfect game in AAGPBL history on July 29, 1944, against the Kenosha Comets.
The following year, the Millerettes moved to Fort Wayne, Indiana, where they became the Fort Wayne Daisies.