Women's International Bowling Congress


The Women's International Bowling Congress was an organization for women bowlers formed in 1916 as a counterpart to the American Bowling Congress.
In 2005, the WIBC merged with the ABC, the Young American Bowling Alliance and USA Bowling to form the United States Bowling Congress.

Founding of the WIBC

Originally called the Woman's National Bowling Association, the Women's International Bowling Congress was formed in St. Louis, Missouri, in late November 1916. It was the first widely recognized women's association for the sport of ten-pin bowling. The founding women were aided by male bowling alley proprietor Dennis J. Sweeney, who obtained permission from the American Bowling Congress in 1907 to hold a national women's tournament on their lanes, and held one in 1916, providing the inspiration.
The founding members of the WIBC were:
The first official meeting of the WNBA was held on October 26, 1917, in St. Louis. 40 women from 11 cities attended the meeting and voted on the organization's constitution, bylaws, and first 16-member executive committee. The purpose of the organization was agreed to be:

"To provide, adopt and enforce uniform rules and regulations governing the play of American tenpins; to provide and enforce uniform qualifications for tournaments and their participants; to hold a national tournament, and to encourage good feeling and create interest in the bowling game."

The WNBA held its first national tournament — today's USBC Queens event — in Cincinnati, Ohio, on March 11 – 12, 1918.

Membership

When it became a part of USBC in 2005, there were over 1.2 million WIBC members playing in 67,000 sanctioned leagues in over 2,700 local associations. Local associations exist in every state as well some foreign countries. The national tournament held by the WIBC, now called the USBC Women's Championships, is the largest women's sporting event in the world. The 1997 tournament in Reno, Nevada, attracted 14,872 five-woman teams, the largest entry for any team tournament in history and a women's world record.