Throughout her life, Vera Templin enjoyed the benefits of playing girls' basketball in the 1920s.
Templin, long known as Vera Ilstrup, died March 6 in Buffalo, where she lived. She was 99.
Not long after her playing days -- when she was Vera Learned, the valedictorian of her 1926 Buffalo High School class -- so-called experts deemed the game of basketball too rough for girls.
She disagreed, though she suffered minor injuries on the court, such as a black eye from a fellow who later became her second husband.
After teaching a few years, raising a family with her first husband, Ray Ilstrup, and serving as Wright County's elected registrar of deeds, she helped promote girls' and women's athletics, said Dorothy McIntyre, retired associate director of the Minnesota State High School League.
"She was a role model of an athlete who lived a happy and healthy life," said McIntyre, co-author of "Daughters of the Game -- the First Era of Minnesota Girls High School Basketball, 1891-1942."
McIntyre said Templin played in the heyday of that early era, when many Minnesota towns had girls' teams. But by 1942, there were none, after a national effort to eliminate the girls' game.
Templin, who appears in McIntyre's book, was a "premier storyteller," McIntyre said.