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About Midge
Our
mascot Midge is named after Midge "Toughie" Brasuhn. Roller
Derby may have started in 1935 as an endurance sport but by 1937, it
had evolved into a full team sport. Four teams had formed in Chicago,
New York, Brooklyn, and Philly-Bronx - each team having equal numbers
of men and women.
Although
women had been skating from the very beginning, two outstanding skaters,
Gerry Murray and Midge, who played on opposing teams, initiated the
famous rivalry that firmly established the role of the Derby woman as
an athlete and as a performer.
Gerry
was the captain of the New York Chiefs. Midge was the captain of the
Brooklyn Red Devils. "Together the two women, whose on-track brawling
became a symbol of the Derby's wild image, attracted thousands of spectators
to the sport." Midge was always one hundred percent devoted to
roller derby. Her ex-husband, skater Ken Monte (also known as the "Dean
Martin of Roller Derby") said: "She gave the Derby something;
people can look at the game today and see that the girls are equals.
On the same basis as a man. I think before
your Midge or your Gerry Murray, those two particularly, people always
thought of the girl skater as a freak or a sideshow. But these two girls
made women mean something to the game, showed they were just as strong,
that a point was just as important if it was scored by a girl."
Midge
skated for about 17 years altogether. She retired in Hawaii after she
developed arthritis. If it weren't for Midge, who knows if we would
have had all these fabulous derby "melees" and if folks would
have figured out "that a point was just as important if it was
scored by a girl."
Long
live the memory of Midge! |