1926 Pottsville Maroons Real Photo Post Cards Posted on February 8, 2013 by MM

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

1926 Pottsville Maroons Real Photo Post Cards Posted on February 8, 2013 by MM Football Findings Artifacts From The First 100 Years of American Football 1926 Pottsville Maroons Real Photo Post Cards Posted on February 8, 2013 by MM In 1926 the Mack Studio in Pottsville, Pennsylvania produced a series of real photo post cards of members of the Pottsville Maroon NFL football team. Some would consider this is the first set of cards for professional football. Frank Racis Pictured above is Frank Racis, a member of the Pottsville squad from 1925 to 1928. He and my father were teammates on the 1928 Pottsville squad which ended its season on November 29 with a loss to the Providence Steam Roller. Then my father went to the NY Giants and Racis went to the NY Yankees and they played against each other on December 16th at Yankee Stadium. They met on the field a number of times in the following years as my father stayed with the Giants and Racis went to the Boston Bulldogs in 1929, the Providence Steam Rollers in 1930, and the Frankford Yellow Jackets in 1931. Although the postcard has a notation that Racis went to Yale, the official NFL records list no college. This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink. One Response to 1926 Pottsville Maroons Real Photo Post Cards Lorraine Yabroski Bonner says: August 3, 2016 at 6:00 am The Best man For My Parents Vic & Anna Yabriski wedding in 1940 in Shenandoah was named Frank Racis. And I believe he was my Godfather MAID of Honor was Adele Moleski Just wondering if this might be the same man * would like to follow up with descenfdsnts Reply Football Findings Proudly powered by WordPress..
Recommended publications
  • Pennsylvania History
    Pennsylvania History a journal of mid-a lan ic s udies Pvolume 79, numberH 1 · win er 2012 This issue is dedicated to the memory of Hilary Lloyd Yewlett. Articles Early Modern Migration from the Mid-Wales County of Radnorshire to Southeastern ennsylvania, with Special Reference to Three Meredith Families Hilary Lloyd Yewlett 1 “Your etitioners Are in Need”: leasant Hills as a Case Study in Borough Incorporation Richard L. Lind erg 33 Saving the Birthplace of the American Revolution, with Introductory Remarks by atrick Spero and Nathan Kozuskanich Karen Rams urg 49 review essAys Review of the National Museum of American Jewish History, hiladelphia De orah Waxman 65 Beyond the Furnace: Concrete, Conservation, and Community in ostindustrial ittsburgh Alan Dieterich-Ward 76 This content downloaded from 128.118.152.206 on Wed, 14 Mar 2018 15:22:27 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms BOOK reviews Mark A ot Stern, David Franks: Colonial Merchant. Reviewed by Benjamin G. Scharff 83 Judith Ridner. A Town In-Between: Carlisle, ennsylvania, and the Early Mid-Atlantic Interior. Reviewed by Larry A. Skillin 86 Joe W. Trotter and Jared N. Day. Race and Renaissance: African Americans in ittsburgh since World War II. Reviewed by Gregory Wood 88 Scott Ga riel Knowles, ed. Imagining hiladelphia: Edmund Bacon and the Future of the City. Reviewed by Nicole Maurantonio 92 cOntriButOrs 95 AnnOuncements 97 index 99 This content downloaded from 128.118.152.206 on Wed, 14 Mar 2018 15:22:27 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms PAH 79.1_FM.indd 2 10/03/12 10:01 AM submission informa ion Pennsylvania History publishes documents previously unpublished and of interest to scholars of the Middle Atlantic region.
    [Show full text]
  • Lafayette Football 1913-1925 1913 (4-5-1) 1919 (6-2) 11/15 Alfred
    tHe tRaDItIon 2011 lafayette football 99 tRaDItIon of excellence mIlestone football WIns lafayette Ranks 36tH In Since fielding its first college football team in the fall of 1882, all-tIme WIns Lafayette has had a proud, colorful gridiron tradition on the way to Lafayette College fielded its first football team in 1882 and won a total of 633 victories. Football followers on College Hill have been its first game in the fourth contest of the following season, beating able to lay claim to two outright national championships and a share Rutgers, 25-0. Since that win, the Leopards have joined the elite of still another. In 1896, Lafayette and Princeton both claimed a piece group of institutions with 600 or more football victories. Lafayette of the national championship following a scoreless tie. The Leopards played its 1,000th football game on Sept. 16, 1989, and was the first finished the season 11-0-1 while the Tigers were 10-0-1. Undefeated founding Patriot League school to eclipse the 500-victory plateau. 9-0 records in 1921 and 1926 gave Lafayette followers reason to believe they were number one in the country both seasons. Rank School NCAA Division # of Wins 1. Michigan FBS 884 Victory # Year Opponent (Score) 2. Yale FCS 864 1 1883 Rutgers (25-0) 3. Texas FBS 850 58 1896 Princeton (0-0) 4. Notre Dame FBS 844 (tied for national championship) 5. Nebraska FBS 837 100 1900 Dickinson (10-6) 6. Ohio State FBS 830 7. Alabama FBS 823 200 1915 Pennsylvania (17-0) 8. Penn State FBS 818 231 1921 Lehigh (28-6) 9.
    [Show full text]
  • Week 5 NFL Preview
    FOR USE AS DESIRED 10/6/20 COMEBACKS CONTINUE, SEVERAL TEAMS OFF TO HISTORIC STARTS AS NFL ENTERS WEEK 5 Hope thrives in the NFL. Just ask any of the teams that have erased leads of at least 16 points and won a game in 2020: the DALLAS COWBOYS, TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS, WASHINGTON FOOTBALL TEAM or the CHICAGO BEARS, who’ve actually done it twice. This year is the first in which at least one team has overcome a deficit of 16-or-more points and won in each of the first four weeks of the season in NFL history. And while comebacks in games are frequent of late, comebacks in seasons the year after missing the playoffs are common as well. Six teams that missed the 2019 playoffs have started this season with three wins: the CHICAGO BEARS (3-1), CLEVELAND BROWNS (3-1), INDIANAPOLIS COLTS (3-1), LOS ANGELES RAMS (3-1), PITTSBURGH STEELERS (3-0) and TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS (3-1). Since 1990, at least four teams each season have qualified for the playoffs after missing the postseason the year before. The Week 5 schedule highlights two games involving those clubs. The Buccaneers travel to Chicago for a Thursday Night Football matchup (8:20 PM ET, FOX/NFLN/Amazon) while the Colts head to Cleveland on Sunday to meet the Browns (4:25 PM ET, CBS). Cleveland and wide receiver ODELL BECKHAM JR., who recorded 154 scrimmage yards (81 receiving, 73 rushing) and three touchdowns (two receiving, one rushing) in the Browns' 49-38 win in Week 4, have the AFC’s top scoring offense (31.0 points per game) and lead the NFL in both takeaways (10) and turnover margin (plus six).
    [Show full text]
  • NFL 1926 in Theory & Practice
    THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 24, No. 3 (2002) One division, no playoffs, no championship game. Was there ANY organization to pro football before 1933? Forget the official history for a moment, put on your leather thinking cap, and consider the possibilities of NFL 1926 in Theory and Practice By Mark L. Ford 1926 and 2001 The year 1926 makes an interesting study. For one thing, it was 75 years earlier than the just completed season. More importantly, 1926, like 2001, saw thirty-one pro football teams in competition. The NFL had a record 22 clubs, and Red Grange’s manager had organized the new 9 team American Football League. Besides the Chicago Bears, Green Bay Packers and New York Giants, and the Cardinals (who would not move from Chicago until 1959), there were other team names that would be familiar today – Buccaneers (Los Angeles), Lions (Brooklyn), Cowboys (Kansas City) and Panthers (Detroit). The AFL created rivals in major cities, with American League Yankees to match the National League Giants, a pre-NBA Chicago Bulls to match the Bears, Philadelphia Quakers against the Philly-suburb Frankford Yellowjackets, a Brooklyn rival formed around the two of the Four Horsemen turned pro, and another “Los Angeles” team. The official summary of 1926 might look chaotic and unorganized – 22 teams grouped in one division in a hodgepodge of large cities and small towns, and is summarized as “Frankford, Chicago Bears, Pottsville, Kansas City, Green Bay, Los Angeles, New York, Duluth, Buffalo, Chicago Cardinals, Providence, Detroit, Hartford, Brooklyn, Milwaukee, Akron, Dayton, Racine, Columbus, Canton, Hammond, Louisville”.
    [Show full text]
  • National Pastime a REVIEW of BASEBALL HISTORY
    THE National Pastime A REVIEW OF BASEBALL HISTORY CONTENTS The Chicago Cubs' College of Coaches Richard J. Puerzer ................. 3 Dizzy Dean, Brownie for a Day Ronnie Joyner. .................. .. 18 The '62 Mets Keith Olbermann ................ .. 23 Professional Baseball and Football Brian McKenna. ................ •.. 26 Wallace Goldsmith, Sports Cartoonist '.' . Ed Brackett ..................... .. 33 About the Boston Pilgrims Bill Nowlin. ..................... .. 40 Danny Gardella and the Reserve Clause David Mandell, ,................. .. 41 Bringing Home the Bacon Jacob Pomrenke ................. .. 45 "Why, They'll Bet on a Foul Ball" Warren Corbett. ................. .. 54 Clemente's Entry into Organized Baseball Stew Thornley. ................. 61 The Winning Team Rob Edelman. ................... .. 72 Fascinating Aspects About Detroit Tiger Uniform Numbers Herm Krabbenhoft. .............. .. 77 Crossing Red River: Spring Training in Texas Frank Jackson ................... .. 85 The Windowbreakers: The 1947 Giants Steve Treder. .................... .. 92 Marathon Men: Rube and Cy Go the Distance Dan O'Brien .................... .. 95 I'm a Faster Man Than You Are, Heinie Zim Richard A. Smiley. ............... .. 97 Twilight at Ebbets Field Rory Costello 104 Was Roy Cullenbine a Better Batter than Joe DiMaggio? Walter Dunn Tucker 110 The 1945 All-Star Game Bill Nowlin 111 The First Unknown Soldier Bob Bailey 115 This Is Your Sport on Cocaine Steve Beitler 119 Sound BITES Darryl Brock 123 Death in the Ohio State League Craig
    [Show full text]
  • Lehigh Preserve Institutional Repository
    Lehigh Preserve Institutional Repository The role of sports in the Bethlehem community, 1915-1938 : a social barometer Kungl, Daniel J. 1994 Find more at https://preserve.lib.lehigh.edu/ This document is brought to you for free and open access by Lehigh Preserve. It has been accepted for inclusion by an authorized administrator of Lehigh Preserve. For more information, please contact [email protected]. AUTHOR: Kungl, Daniel J. TITLE: The Role of Sports in the Bethlehem Community 1915-1938: A Social Barometer DATE: May 29,1994 The Role of Sports in the Bethlehem Community, 1915-1938: A Social Barometer by Daniel J. Kungl A Thesis Presented to the Graduate Committee of Lehigh University in Candidacy for the Degree of Master of Arts in History Lehigh University 1994 Acknowledgements The author would like to acknowledge with gratitude the help and understanding of a number of individuals. Mr. Lance Metz of the Canal Museum in Easton provided assistance in finding information on the history of Bethlehem Steel and the soccer team. A very special word of thanks must be given to Mf." Charles Altemose. He allowed the author to incessantly tum to him over the course of three months on all subjects, and he opened his vast collection of memorabilia on soccer for inspection which proved to be invaluable. Professor Gail Cooper provided counsel, advice, and encouragement. Professor Roger Simon, among a whirlwind of activities, always found time to provide help and understanding in this work. Five additional people deserve recognition for their contributions to this effort. I want to thank my sister, Krist~, for her unbelievable patience in teaching me the workings of the computer.
    [Show full text]
  • Pro Football Hall of Fame
    PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME The Professional Football Hall Between four and seven new MARCUS ALLEN CLIFF BATTLES of Fame is located in Canton, members are elected each Running back. 6-2, 210. Born Halfback. 6-1, 195. Born in Ohio, site of the organizational year. An affirmative vote of in San Diego, California, Akron, Ohio, May 1, 1910. meeting on September 17, approximately 80 percent is March 26, 1960. Southern Died April 28, 1981. West Vir- 1920, from which the National needed for election. California. Inducted in 2003. ginia Wesleyan. Inducted in Football League evolved. The Any fan may nominate any 1982-1992 Los Angeles 1968. 1932 Boston Braves, NFL recognized Canton as the eligible player or contributor Raiders, 1993-1997 Kansas 1933-36 Boston Redskins, Hall of Fame site on April 27, simply by writing to the Pro City Chiefs. Highlights: First 1937 Washington Redskins. 1961. Canton area individuals, Football Hall of Fame. Players player in NFL history to tally High lights: NFL rushing foundations, and companies and coaches must have last 10,000 rushing yards and champion 1932, 1937. First to donated almost $400,000 in played or coached at least five 5,000 receiving yards. MVP, gain more than 200 yards in a cash and services to provide years before he is eligible. Super Bowl XVIII. game, 1933. funds for the construction of Contributors (administrators, the original two-building com- owners, et al.) may be elected LANCE ALWORTH SAMMY BAUGH plex, which was dedicated on while they are still active. Wide receiver. 6-0, 184. Born Quarterback.
    [Show full text]
  • Brothers Who Have Played Pro Football
    Brothers Who Played Pro Football 373 documented sets of brothers who have played pro football (List includes players from AAFC, AFL and NFL) ♦ Brothers played on the same team during the same season; * Active during 2014 Season ABIAMIRI AYANBADEJO Rob – TE – 2006 Baltimore Ravens Obafemi – FB – 1998-99 Minnesota Vikings, 1999-2001 Baltimore Victor – DE – 2007-present Philadelphia Eagles Ravens, 2003 Miami Dolphins, 2004-2006 Arizona Cardinals Brendon – LB – 2003-04 Miami Dolphins, 2005-present Chicago ABDULLAH Bears, 2008-2012Baltimore Ravens Rahim – LB – 1999-2000 Cleveland Browns Khalid – LB – 2003 Cincinnati Bengals BABINEAUX Jordan – DB – 2004-2010 Seattle Seahawks, 2011-12 Tennessee ABDULLAH Titans Hamza – DB – 2005-08 Denver Broncos, 2009-2011Arizona *Jonathan – DT – 2005-present Atlanta Falcons Cardinals Husain – FS – 2008-2011Minnesota Vikings BAHR Chris – K – 1976-79 Cincinnati Bengals, 1980-89 Oakland/LA ACHO Raiders, 1989 San Diego Chargers *Emmanuel – LB – 2013-present Philadelphia Eagles Matt – K – 1979-1980 Pittsburgh Steelers, 1981 San Francisco *Sam – LB – 2011-present Arizona Cardinals 49ers, 1981-89 Cleveland Browns, 1990-92 New York Giants, 1993 Philadelphia Eagles, 1993-95 New England Patriots ADIBI Nathaniel - DE – 1994 Pittsburgh Steelers BAILEY ♦ Xavier – LB – 2008-2010 Houston Texans, 2011 Minnesota Boss – LB – 2003-present Detroit Lions, 2008 Denver Broncos Vikings Champ – CB – 1999-2003 Washington Redskins, 2004-present Denver Broncos ADICKES John – C – 1987-88 Chicago Bears, 1989 Minnesota Vikings BAKHTIARI
    [Show full text]
  • Vol. 29, No. 6 2007
    Vol. 29, No. 6 2007 PFRA Committees 2 Football’s Best Pennant Races 5 Bob Gain 11 Baseball & Football Close Relationship 12 Right Place – Wrong Time 18 Overtime Opinion 19 Forward Pass Rules 21 Classifieds 24 THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 29, No. 6 (2007) 2 Class of 2003: Class of 2004: Gino Cappelletti Gene Brito Carl Eller* John Brodie PFRA Pat Fischer Jack Butler Benny Friedman* Chris Hanburger Gene Hickerson* Bob Hayes COMMITTEES Jerry Kramer Billy Howton By Ken Crippen Johnny Robinson Jim Marshall Mac Speedie Al Nesser Mick Tingelhoff Dave Robinson We are happy to report that another committee has Al Wistert Duke Slater been formed since the last update. Gretchen Atwood is heading up the Football, Culture and Social Class of 2005: Class of 2006: Movements Committee. A description of the committee Maxie Baughan Charlie Conerly can be found below. Jim Benton John Hadl Lavie Dilweg Chuck Howley The Western New York Committee is underway with Pat Harder Alex Karras their newest project, detailing the Buffalo Floyd Little Eugene Lipscomb Bisons/Buffalo Bills of the AAFC. Interviews with Tommy Nobis Kyle Rote surviving players and family members of players are Pete Retzlaff Dick Stanfel underway and will continue over the next few months. Tobin Rote Otis Taylor Lou Rymkus Fuzzy Thurston The Hall of Very Good committee reports the following: Del Shofner Deacon Dan Towler In 2002, Bob Carroll began the Hall of Very Good as a Class of 2007: way for PFRA members to honor outstanding players Frankie Albert and coaches who are not in the Pro Football Hall of Roger Brown Fame and who are not likely to ever make it.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Download
    contributors BARRY LEVY teaches history at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. He is the author of Quakers and the American Family : British Settlement in the Delaware Valley (1988) and Town Born: The Political Economy of New England from Its Founding to the Revolution (2009). The present comparative essay summarizes and extends his work on the political economies of the two colonies. TIMOTHY OLEWNICZAK is a graduate student pursuing a New York State Teacher Certification in Social Studies at the State University of New York at Buffalo. He received his M.A. in history in 2008 and B.A. in history and psychology in 2005 from the State University of New York at Buffalo. He currently works as a data manager on several public health research projects for the Survey Research and Data Acquisition Resource (SRDAR) at Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, N.Y. 84 This content downloaded from 128.118.152.206 on Wed, 08 Mar 2017 22:01:48 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms PAH78.1_07Contributors.indd 84 12/9/10 4:07:56 AM INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERS OF THE PENNSYLVANIA HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION The Pennsylvania Historical Association wishes to express its gratitude to the hundreds of institutions across the United States and around the world who choose to support the mission of the PHA through institutional membership. international B. F. Jones Memorial Library Bailey Library, Slippery Rock University British Library Baker Berry Library, Dartmouth College Cambridge University Library Barbara Moscato Brown Memorial Library D. B. Weldon Library, University of Western Baron-Forness Library, Edinboro University of Ontario Pennsylvania Göttingen University Library Beaver Campus Library, Penn State University Hokei Library, Gakushuin University Bedford County Historical Society James A.
    [Show full text]
  • The Anthracite Football League
    PFRA ANNUAL 1987 (No. 8) THE ANTHRACITE FOOTBALL LEAGUE By Joe Zagorski The hills and mountains of the coal region of Northeastern Pennsylvania are alive with history. One particular moment of coal region history, however, has passed nearly into oblivion. In an area of the country where pro football took center stage during the golden age of sports, a new league was born in 1924 that grabbed the spotlight for a brief moment, then relinquished it to the future. The Anthracite Football League was formed not by the hardened coal that supplied its name, but by a strong desire to set a handful of teams on a smoother organizational path. It lasted only one season, and was considered by many to be a success for even less time than that. Nevertheless, it provided something different for the fans, and everyone agreed that it made a difference in the game. The Anthracite League was conceived by a group of people who attempted, in a somewhat feeble way, to imitate the five-year-old National Football League. With the coal region teams, as well as with the NFL teams of a half- decade earlier, player raiding was running rampant, and a poorly designed scheduling system left game day matters in utter disarray. Moreover, the secret buying of assorted ringers (several of whom could produce, even guarantee, victory) made keeping a steady lineup almost impossible. The pro game in Schuylkill County was in desperate need of some common-sense organization and standardized rules to live by. The Pottsville Republican provided the first sign that such elements were about to play a part in the game when it editorialized during the latter part of August that local pro football was in a heap of trouble.
    [Show full text]
  • 1926 Buffalo Rangers Ken Crippen
    1926 Buffalo Rangers Ken Crippen 1926 BUFFALO RANGERS By Ken Crippen After a dismal 1-6-2 season in 1925, Buffalo needed to make a change with their pro football team. Jim Kendrick was hired to replace Wally Koppisch as manager. Kendrick, a former Texas A&M player who played seven games for the Buffalo Bisons in 1925, planned to put together an all-Texas team. This team was sometimes called the “Texas” Rangers or “Cowboys,” but they represented the Queen City in the National Football League (NFL). Made up of “Southwestern products,” Kendrick believed that if the players had no outside interests or anything to divert their minds from playing football, they would play better. The player’s families would remain in the southern states, while they were alone in Buffalo. This was an experiment for the new manager and the season would determine if his theory was correct. Professional football had gained popularity since the NFL was formed. The 1926 season saw the emergence of a rival to the NFL: the first incarnation of the American Football League (AFL). Illinois gridiron legend Red Grange and sports agent Charles C. “C.C.” Pyle – sometimes referred to as “Cash-and-Carry” Pyle – started the league after NFL President Joe Carr refused the pair a franchise in New York City. The league only lasted one season, but it was the first competition for the relatively new NFL. While they were waiting for their new home in Bison Stadium to be ready for football, the Rangers practiced at Grover Cleveland Park on Bailey Avenue.
    [Show full text]