Pam Postema
Pamela Postema is an American former baseball umpire. In 1988 she became the first female baseball umpire to officiate a Major League Baseball spring training game. For her unique contributions to the game, she was inducted into the Baseball Reliquary's Shrine of the Eternals in 2000.
Education
After high school, Postema spent a year working in a rubber factory in Willard, Ohio before moving with her sister to Florida where she planned to enroll in the University of Florida. While in Florida, she saw a newspaper ad for Al Somers Umpire School in Daytona Beach. Postema first applied to the Al Somers Umpire School in Florida in 1976. She submitted three applications before finally being enrolled. Her class was originally 130 but by the end of the season, 30 had quit or been asked to leave. Postema, despite graduating seventeenth in her class, struggled to find a job for three months post-graduation.Early career
In 1977, Postema received an offer for a job in the rookie Gulf Coast League. She spent two years there, after which she had two-year stints in both Class A and Double-A, becoming the first woman to umpire at those levels, before being promoted to Triple-A baseball in the Pacific Coast League. During her six years at the Triple-A level, Postema was looked highly upon by many players, although other players objected to the notion of a female umpire.Postema was involved in an unusual incident during a May 30, 1984, game between the Portland Beavers and Vancouver Canadians. Beavers manager Lee Elia was ejected for arguing a called third strike, and subsequently threw a chair onto the field before leaving the dugout. Postema then directed the team's batboy to retrieve the chair from the field. Acting on instructions from Beavers players in the dugout, he refused, resulting in Postema ejecting the batboy.