Women's sports were widely condemned in the 1890s. Modern Olympics Games founder Baron Pierre de Coubertin called the activities "indecent," and even bicycle riding by women was decried as "vicious" by The Atlantic, a prestigious magazine. But the norms of the era didn't deter a Massachusetts college physical education director named Senda Berenson from organizing the first women's college basketball game in the spring of 1893.
A little more than a year earlier, Berenson, a 25-year-old Jewish immigrant from Lithuania, read about the invention of basketball by Dr. James Naismith, who was born in Canada. Naismith wrote the sport’s original 13 rules as part of a December 1891 class assignment at a YMCA training school in Springfield, Massachusetts.
Intrigued and eager to promote physical fitness, Berenson began the sport as a class exercise at the women-only Smith College in Northhampton, Massachusetts. The first game between teams was played at the campus gymnasium on March 22, 1893, with Berenson officiating.
Hung from the ceiling, two wastebaskets served as hoops. The competitors, clad in long, dark bloomers, played two 15-minute halves, with a 10-minute intermission in between. Each team earned one point for a made basket. A crowd of roughly 800 wildly cheering women students—men weren't allowed to attend—watched the sophomores win, 5-4.
"The running track of the gymnasium was crowded with spectators, and gay with the colors of the two classes," according to a newspaper account. "One side was occupied by sophomores and seniors, the other by juniors and freshmen, and a lively rivalry between the two parties was maintained throughout the contest."
The winning team received a gold and green banner.
Nearly a century later, Berenson—who became known as "The Mother of Women's Basketball"—received recognition as a basketball contributor with a posthumous induction into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame.