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John William Heisman (October 23, 1869 – October 3, 1936) was a player and coach of
American football American football (referred to simply as football in the United States and Canada), also known as gridiron, is a team sport played by two teams of eleven players on a rectangular field with goalposts at each end. The offense, the team wi ...
, baseball, and basketball, as well as a sportswriter and actor. He served as the head football coach at Oberlin College, Buchtel College (now known as the University of Akron),
Auburn University Auburn University (AU or Auburn) is a public land-grant research university in Auburn, Alabama. With more than 24,600 undergraduate students and a total enrollment of more than 30,000 with 1,330 faculty members, Auburn is the second largest ...
, Clemson University, Georgia Tech, the
University of Pennsylvania The University of Pennsylvania (also known as Penn or UPenn) is a Private university, private research university in Philadelphia. It is the fourth-oldest institution of higher education in the United States and is ranked among the highest- ...
,
Washington & Jefferson College Washington & Jefferson College (W&J College or W&J) is a private liberal arts college in Washington, Pennsylvania. The college traces its origin to three log cabin colleges in Washington County established by three Presbyterian missionaries t ...
, and
Rice University William Marsh Rice University (Rice University) is a Private university, private research university in Houston, Houston, Texas. It is on a 300-acre campus near the Houston Museum District and adjacent to the Texas Medical Center. Rice is ranke ...
, compiling a career
college football College football (french: Football universitaire) refers to gridiron football played by teams of student athletes. It was through college football play that American football in the United States, American football rules first gained populari ...
record of 186–70–18. Heisman was also the head basketball coach at Georgia Tech, tallying a mark of 9–14, and the head baseball coach at Buchtel, Clemson, and Georgia Tech, amassing a career
college baseball College baseball is baseball that is played on the intercollegiate level at institutions of higher education. In comparison to football and basketball, college competition in the United States plays a smaller role in developing professional pl ...
record of 199–108–7. He served as the
athletic director An athletic director (commonly "athletics director" or "AD") is an administrator at many American clubs or institutions, such as colleges and universities, as well as in larger high schools and middle schools, who oversees the work of coaches and ...
at Georgia Tech and Rice. While at Georgia Tech, he was also the president of the Atlanta Crackers baseball team. Sportswriter
Fuzzy Woodruff Lorenzo Ferguson "Fuzzy" Woodruff (May 27, 1884 – December 7, 1929) was an early 20th-century American sportswriter known throughout most of the southeast for his vivid writing. He was also a music and drama critic. He began his newspaper c ...
dubbed Heisman the "pioneer of
Southern Southern may refer to: Businesses * China Southern Airlines, airline based in Guangzhou, China * Southern Airways, defunct US airline * Southern Air, air cargo transportation company based in Norwalk, Connecticut, US * Southern Airways Express, M ...
football". He was inducted into the
College Football Hall of Fame The College Football Hall of Fame is a hall of fame and interactive attraction devoted to college football. The National Football Foundation (NFF) founded the Hall in 1951 to immortalize the players and coaches of college football that were vo ...
as a coach in 1954. His entry there notes that Heisman "stands only behind Amos Alonzo Stagg,
Pop Warner Glenn Scobey Warner (April 5, 1871 – September 7, 1954), most commonly known as Pop Warner, was an American college football coach at various institutions who is responsible for several key aspects of the modern game. Included among his inn ...
, and Walter Camp as a master innovator of the brand of football of his day". He was instrumental in several changes to the game, including legalizing the
forward pass In several forms of football, a forward pass is the throwing of the ball in the direction in which the offensive team is trying to move, towards the defensive team's goal line. The forward pass is one of the main distinguishers between gridiro ...
. The Heisman Trophy, awarded annually to the season's most outstanding college football player, is named after him.


Early life and playing career

John Heisman was born Johann Wilhelm Heisman on October 23, 1869, in
Cleveland, Ohio Cleveland ( ), officially the City of Cleveland, is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Cuyahoga County. Located in the northeastern part of the state, it is situated along the southern shore of Lake Erie, across the U.S ...
, the son of
Bavaria Bavaria ( ; ), officially the Free State of Bavaria (german: Freistaat Bayern, link=no ), is a state in the south-east of Germany. With an area of , Bavaria is the largest German state by land area, comprising roughly a fifth of the total l ...
n
German German(s) may refer to: * Germany (of or related to) **Germania (historical use) * Germans, citizens of Germany, people of German ancestry, or native speakers of the German language ** For citizens of Germany, see also German nationality law **Ge ...
immigrant Johann Michael Heissmann and Sara Lehr Heissman. He grew up in northwestern Pennsylvania near Titusville and was
salutatorian Salutatorian is an academic title given in the United States, Armenia, and the Philippines to the second-highest-ranked graduate of the entire graduating class of a specific discipline. Only the valedictorian is ranked higher. This honor is tr ...
of his graduating class at Titusville High School. His oration at his graduation entitled "The Dramatist as Sermonizer" was described as "full of dramatic emphasis and fire, and showed how the masterpieces of
Shakespeare William Shakespeare ( 26 April 1564 – 23 April 1616) was an English playwright, poet and actor. He is widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's pre-eminent dramatist. He is often called England's nation ...
depicted the ends of unchecked passion." Although he was a drama student, he confessed he was "football mad". He played varsity football for Titusville High School from 1884 to 1886. Heisman's father refused to watch him play at Titusville, calling football "bestial". Heisman went on to play football as a lineman at
Brown University Brown University is a private research university in Providence, Rhode Island. Brown is the seventh-oldest institution of higher education in the United States, founded in 1764 as the College in the English Colony of Rhode Island and Providenc ...
and at the University of Pennsylvania. He also played baseball at Penn. On Brown's football team, he was a substitute
guard Guard or guards may refer to: Professional occupations * Bodyguard, who protects an individual from personal assault * Crossing guard, who stops traffic so pedestrians can cross the street * Lifeguard, who rescues people from drowning * Prison gu ...
in 1887, and a starting tackle in 1888. At Penn, he was a substitute center in 1889, a substitute center and tackle in 1890, and a starting end in 1891. Sportswriter Edwin Pope tells us Heisman was "a 158-pound center ... in constant dread that his immediate teammatesguards weighing 212 and 243would fall on him." He had a flat nose due to being struck in the face by a football, when he tried to block a kick against Penn State by leap-frogging the center. Heisman graduated from the University of Pennsylvania Law School in 1892. Due to poor eyesight, he took his exams orally.


Coaching career

In his book ''Principles of Football'', Heisman described his coaching strategy: "The coach should be masterful and commanding, even dictatorial. He has no time to say 'please' or 'mister'. At times he must be severe, arbitrary, and little short of a czar." Heisman always used a megaphone at practice. He was known for his use of polysyllabic language. "Heisman's voice was deep, his diction perfect, his tone biting." He was known to repeat this annually, at the start of each football season:


Early coaching career: Oberlin and Buchtel

Heisman first coached at Oberlin College. In 1892, ''The Oberlin Review'' wrote: "Mr. Heisman has entirely remade our football. He has taught us scientific football." He used the double pass, from tackle to halfback, and moved his
quarterback The quarterback (commonly abbreviated "QB"), colloquially known as the "signal caller", is a position in gridiron football. Quarterbacks are members of the offensive platoon and mostly line up directly behind the offensive line. In modern Am ...
to the
safety Safety is the state of being "safe", the condition of being protected from harm or other danger. Safety can also refer to the control of recognized hazards in order to achieve an acceptable level of risk. Meanings There are two slightly di ...
position on
defense Defense or defence may refer to: Tactical, martial, and political acts or groups * Defense (military), forces primarily intended for warfare * Civil defense, the organizing of civilians to deal with emergencies or enemy attacks * Defense indus ...
. Influenced by
Yale Yale University is a private research university in New Haven, Connecticut. Established in 1701 as the Collegiate School, it is the third-oldest institution of higher education in the United States and among the most prestigious in the wor ...
and Pudge Heffelfinger, Heisman implemented the now illegal " flying wedge"
formation Formation may refer to: Linguistics * Back-formation, the process of creating a new lexeme by removing or affixes * Word formation, the creation of a new word by adding affixes Mathematics and science * Cave formation or speleothem, a secondar ...
. It involved seven players arranged as a "V" to protect the ball carrier. Heisman was also likely influenced by Heffelfinger to pull guards on end runs.


1892

On his 1892 team, Heisman's trainer was Clarence Hemingway, the father of author
Ernest Hemingway Ernest Miller Hemingway (July 21, 1899 – July 2, 1961) was an American novelist, short-story writer, and journalist. His economical and understated style—which he termed the iceberg theory—had a strong influence on 20th-century f ...
and one of his linemen was the first Hawaiian to play college football, the future politician
John Henry Wise John Henry Wise (July 19, 1868 – August 12, 1937) was a Native Hawaiian politician, businessman, religious leader, and educator of Hawaii. In his youth, he became the first Native Hawaiian to play college football with the Oberlin Yeomen footb ...
. The team beat
Ohio State The Ohio State University, commonly called Ohio State or OSU, is a public land-grant research university in Columbus, Ohio. A member of the University System of Ohio, it has been ranked by major institutional rankings among the best public ...
twice, and considered itself undefeated at the end of the season. However, the outcome of its game against
Michigan Michigan () is a state in the Great Lakes region of the upper Midwestern United States. With a population of nearly 10.12 million and an area of nearly , Michigan is the 10th-largest state by population, the 11th-largest by area, and t ...
is still in dispute. Michigan declared it had won the game, 26–24, but Oberlin said it won 24–22. The referee, an Oberlin substitute player, had ruled that time had expired. The
umpire An umpire is an official in a variety of sports and competition, responsible for enforcing the rules of the sport, including sportsmanship decisions such as ejection. The term derives from the Old French nonper, ''non'', "not" and ''per' ...
, a Michigan supporter, ruled otherwise. Michigan's George Jewett, who had scored all of his team's points and was the school's first
black Black is a color which results from the absence or complete absorption of visible light. It is an achromatic color, without hue, like white and grey. It is often used symbolically or figuratively to represent darkness. Black and white ha ...
player, then ran for a
touchdown A touchdown (abbreviated as TD) is a scoring play in gridiron football. Whether running, passing, returning a kickoff or punt, or recovering a turnover, a team scores a touchdown by advancing the ball into the opponent's end zone. In Amer ...
with no Oberlin players on the field. ''The Michigan Daily'' and ''Detroit Tribune'' reported that Michigan had won the game, while ''The Oberlin News'' and ''The Oberlin Review'' reported that Oberlin had won.


1893

In 1893, Heisman became the football and baseball coach at Buchtel College. A disappointing baseball season was made up for by a 5–2 football season. It was then customary for the center to begin a play by rolling or kicking the ball backwards, but this proved difficult for Buchtel's unusually tall quarterback Harry Clark. Under Heisman, the center began tossing the ball to Clark, a practice that eventually evolved into the snap. The first school to officially defeat Heisman was Case School of Applied Science, known today as Case Western Reserve.


1894

Buchtel won a single game against
Ohio State The Ohio State University, commonly called Ohio State or OSU, is a public land-grant research university in Columbus, Ohio. A member of the University System of Ohio, it has been ranked by major institutional rankings among the best public ...
at the Ohio State Fair before Heisman returned to Oberlin in 1894, posting a 4–3–1 record, including losses to
Michigan Michigan () is a state in the Great Lakes region of the upper Midwestern United States. With a population of nearly 10.12 million and an area of nearly , Michigan is the 10th-largest state by population, the 11th-largest by area, and t ...
and undefeated Penn State. The Penn State game ended with a
fair catch A fair catch is a feature of American football and several other codes of football, in which a player attempting to catch a ball kicked by the opposing team – either on a kickoff or punt – is entitled to catch the ball without interference ...
and free kick, which resulted in a field goal for Penn State. Referees were confused whether teams could kick a field goal or had to punt on a free kick, and the game ended 6–4 in favor of Oberlin, but Walter Camp over-ruled the game officials, allowing Penn State its extra free kick and the victory 9–6.


Auburn

After his two years at Oberlin and possibly due to the economic Panic of 1893, Heisman invested his savings and began working at a tomato farm in
Marshall, Texas Marshall is a city in the U.S. state of Texas. It is the county seat of Harrison County and a cultural and educational center of the Ark-La-Tex region. At the 2020 U.S. census, the population of Marshall was 23,392; The population of the Greate ...
. It was hard work in the heat and Heisman was losing money. He was contacted by Walter Riggs, then the manager of the Alabama Polytechnic Institute (
Auburn University Auburn University (AU or Auburn) is a public land-grant research university in Auburn, Alabama. With more than 24,600 undergraduate students and a total enrollment of more than 30,000 with 1,330 faculty members, Auburn is the second largest ...
) football team. Auburn was looking for a football coach, and Heisman was suggested to Riggs by his former player at Oberlin, Penn's then-captain Carl S. Williams. For a salary of $500, he accepted a part-time job as a "trainer". Heisman coached football at Auburn from 1895 to 1899. Auburn's yearbook, the ''Glomerata'', in 1897 stated "Heisman came to us in the fall of '95, and the day on which he arrived at Auburn can well be marked as the luckiest in the history of athletics at the Alabama Polytechnic Institute." At Auburn, Heisman had the idea for his quarterback to call out "hike" or "hep" to start a play and receive the ball from the center, or to draw the opposing team into an offside
penalty Penalty or The Penalty may refer to: Sports * Penalty (golf) * Penalty (gridiron football) * Penalty (ice hockey) * Penalty (rugby) * Penalty (rugby union) * Penalty kick (association football) * Penalty shoot-out (association football) * Penal ...
. He also used a fake snap to draw the other team offsides. He began his use of a type of delayed buck play where an end took a hand-off, then handed the ball to the halfback on the opposite side, who rushed up the middle. As a coach, Heisman "railed and snorted in practice, imploring players to do their all for God, country, Auburn, and Heisman. Before each game he made squadmen take a nonshirk, nonflinch oath." Due to his fondness for Shakespeare, he would sometimes use a British accent at practice. While it was then illegal to coach from the sidelines during a game, Heisman would sometimes use secret signals with a bottle or a handkerchief to communicate with his team.


1895

Heisman's first game as an Auburn coach came against Vanderbilt. Heisman had his quarterback
Reynolds Tichenor Walker Reynolds "Tick" Tichenor (January 26, 1877 – November 16, 1935) was a college football player, coach, and official, as well as a sportswriter and attorney. Tichenor was a quarterback for John Heisman's Auburn Tigers of Auburn Univ ...
 use the " hidden ball trick" to tie the game at 6 points. However, Vanderbilt answered by kicking a field goal and won 9–6, making it the first game of Southern football decided by a field goal. In the rivalry game with Georgia, Auburn won 16–6. Georgia coach Pop Warner copied the hidden ball trick, and in 1903, his
Carlisle Carlisle ( , ; from xcb, Caer Luel) is a city that lies within the Northern English county of Cumbria, south of the Scottish border at the confluence of the rivers Eden, Caldew and Petteril. It is the administrative centre of the City ...
team famously used it to defeat
Harvard Harvard University is a private Ivy League research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Founded in 1636 as Harvard College and named for its first benefactor, the Puritan clergyman John Harvard, it is the oldest institution of higher le ...
. Earlier in the 1895 season, Heisman witnessed one of the first illegal forward passes when Georgia faced
North Carolina North Carolina () is a U.S. state, state in the Southeastern United States, Southeastern region of the United States. The state is the List of U.S. states and territories by area, 28th largest and List of states and territories of the United ...
in
Atlanta Atlanta ( ) is the capital and most populous city of the U.S. state of Georgia. It is the seat of Fulton County, the most populous county in Georgia, but its territory falls in both Fulton and DeKalb counties. With a population of 498,7 ...
. Georgia was about to block a punt when UNC's Joel Whitaker tossed the ball out of desperation, and
George Stephens George Stephens may refer to: * George Stephens (playwright) (1800–1851), English author and dramatist *George Stephens (philologist) (1813–1895), British archaeologist and philologist, who worked in Scandinavia * George Washington Stephens, Sr ...
caught the pass and ran 70 yards for a touchdown. Georgia coach Pop Warner complained to the referee that the play was illegal, but the referee let the play stand because he did not see the pass. Later, Heisman became one of the main proponents of making the forward pass legal.


1896

Lineman Marvin "Babe" Pearce had transferred to Auburn from
Alabama (We dare defend our rights) , anthem = " Alabama" , image_map = Alabama in United States.svg , seat = Montgomery , LargestCity = Huntsville , LargestCounty = Baldwin County , LargestMetro = Greater Birmingham , area_total_km2 = 135,7 ...
, and Reynolds Tichenor was captain of the 1896 Auburn team, which beat Georgia Tech 45–0. Auburn players greased the train tracks the night before the game. Georgia Tech's train did not stop until Loachapoka, and the Georgia Tech players had to walk the 5 miles back to Auburn. This began a tradition of students parading through the streets in their pajamas, known as the " Wreck Tech Pajama Parade". Auburn finished the season by losing 12–6 to Pop Warner's Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association champion Georgia team, which was led by quarterback Richard Von Albade Gammon. Auburn received its first national publicity when Heisman was able to convince '' Harper's Weekly'' to publish the 1896 team's photo.


1897

The 1897 Auburn team featured linemen Pearce and
John Penton John Abner Penton (February 10, 1870 – October 17, 1919) was an American football player and coach. Penton attended the University of Virginia, Auburn University, and Johns Hopkins Medical School. He played starting guard on the 1893, 1894, ...
, a transfer from
Virginia Virginia, officially the Commonwealth of Virginia, is a state in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern regions of the United States, between the Atlantic Coast and the Appalachian Mountains. The geography and climate of the Commonwealth are ...
. Of its three games, one was a scoreless tie against Sewanee, from "
The University of the South The University of the South, familiarly known as Sewanee (), is a private Episcopal liberal arts college in Sewanee, Tennessee. It is owned by 28 southern dioceses of the Episcopal Church, and its School of Theology is an official seminary o ...
" in Tennessee. Another was a 14–4 defeat of
Nashville Nashville is the capital city of the U.S. state of Tennessee and the seat of Davidson County. With a population of 689,447 at the 2020 U.S. census, Nashville is the most populous city in the state, 21st most-populous city in the U.S., and th ...
, which featured
Bradley Walker Bradley Walker (October 14, 1877 – February 3, 1951) was a Nashville attorney who, in his youth, was found to be naturally proficient at virtually any sport he tried, including football, baseball, track, boxing, tennis and golf— in all ...
. Tichenor had transferred to Georgia. Gammon moved to fullback and died in the game against
Virginia Virginia, officially the Commonwealth of Virginia, is a state in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern regions of the United States, between the Atlantic Coast and the Appalachian Mountains. The geography and climate of the Commonwealth are ...
. Auburn finished the 1897 football season $700 in debt, and in response, Heisman took on the role of a theater producer and staged the
comedic Comedy is a genre of fiction that consists of discourses or works intended to be humorous or amusing by inducing laughter, especially in theatre, film, stand-up comedy, television, radio, books, or any other entertainment medium. The term ...
play '' David Garrick''.


1898

Having made enough money for another football season, the 1898 Auburn Tigers football team, 1898 team won two out of three games, with its loss coming against undefeated 1898 North Carolina Tar Heels football team, North Carolina. After falling behind 13–4 to 1898 Georgia Bulldogs football team, Georgia, Heisman started using fullback George Mitcham, and won the game 18–17.


1899

The 1899 team, which Heisman considered his best while at Auburn, was led by fullback Arthur Feagin and ran an early version of the hurry-up offense. As Heisman recalled, "I do not think I have ever seen so fast a team as that was." Auburn was leading 1899 Georgia Bulldogs football team, Georgia by a score of 11–6 when the game was called due to darkness, lighting not being available at that time, resulting in an official scoreless tie. Heisman fitted his linemen with straps and handles under their belts so that the other linemen could hold onto them and prevent the opposing team from breaking through the line. The umpire W. L. Taylor had to cut them. Auburn lost just one game, 11–10 to the "1899 Sewanee Tigers football team, Iron Men" of Sewanee, who shutout all their other opponents. A report of the game says "Feagin is a player of exceptional ability, and runs with such force that some ground belongs to him on every attempt." Heisman left Auburn after the 1899 season, and wrote a farewell letter with "tears in my eyes, and tears in my voice; tears even in the trembling of my hand". "You will not feel hard toward me; you will forgive me, you will not forget me? Let me ask to retain your friendship. Can a man be associated for five successive seasons with Grand Old Auburn, toiling for her, befriended by her, striving with her, and yet not love her?"


Clemson

Heisman was hired by Clemson University as Clemson Tigers football, football and Clemson Tigers baseball, baseball coach. He coached at Clemson from 1900 to 1903, and was the first Clemson coach who had experience coaching at another school. He still has the highest winning percentage in school history in both football and baseball. Again Walter Riggs, who moved on from Auburn to coach and manage at Clemson, was instrumental in the hiring. Riggs started an association to help pay Heisman's salary, which was $1,800 per year, and raised $415.11. Heisman coached baseball from 1901 to 1903, posting a 28–6–1 record. Under Heisman, pitcher Carl Sitton, Vedder Sitton was considered "one of the best twirlers in the country" and one of "the best pitchers that Clemson ever had".


Football

In his four seasons as Clemson football coach, Heisman won three SIAA titles: in 1900 Clemson Tigers football team, 1900, 1902 Clemson Tigers football team, 1902, and 1903 Clemson Tigers football team, 1903. By the time of his hiring in 1900, Heisman was "the undisputed master of Southern football". Heisman later said that his approach at Clemson was "radically different from anything on earth".


=1900

= The 1900 season had "the rise of Clemson from a little school whose football teams had never been heard of before, to become a football machine of the very first power." Clemson finished the season undefeated at 6–0, and beat Davidson Wildcats football, Davidson on opening day by a 64–0 score, then the largest ever made in the South. Clemson then beat Wofford Terriers football, Wofford 21–0, agreeing that every point scored after the first four touchdowns did not count, and 1900 South Carolina Gamecocks football team, South Carolina 51–0. The team also beat 1900 Georgia Bulldogs football team, Georgia, 1900 VPI football team, VPI, and 1900 Alabama Crimson White football team, Alabama. Clemson beat Georgia 39–5, and Clemson players were pelted with coal from the nearby dorms. Clemson beat VPI 12–5. The game was called short due to darkness, and on VPI was Hall of Famer Hunter Carpenter. Stars for the Clemson team included captain and tackle Norman Walker, end James Lynah, Jim Lynah, and halfback Buster Hunter.


=1901

= The 1901 Clemson Tigers football team, 1901 Clemson team beat Guilford Quakers football, Guilford on opening day 122–0, scoring the most points in Clemson history, and the next week it tied 1901 Tennessee Volunteers football team, Tennessee 6–6, finishing the season at 3–1–1. Clemson beat 1901 Georgia Bulldogs football team, Georgia and lost to 1901 VPI football team, VPI 17–11, with Carpenter starring for VPI. The season closed with a defeat of 1901 North Carolina Tar Heels football team, North Carolina. Lynah later transferred to Cornell and played for Pop Warner.


=1902

= Heisman was described as "a master of taking advantage of the surprise element." The day before the game against 1902 Georgia Tech football team, Georgia Tech, Heisman sent in substitutes to Atlanta, who checked into a hotel, and partied until dawn. The next day, the varsity team was well rested and prepared, while Georgia Tech was fooled and expected an easy win. Clemson won that game 44–5. In a 28–0 defeat of 1902 Furman Purple Hurricane football team, Furman, an oak tree was on the field, and Heisman called for a lateral pass using the tree as an extra blocker. The 1902 team went 6–1. Clemson lost 12–6 to the 1902 South Carolina Gamecocks football team, South Carolina Gamecocks in Columbia, SC, Columbia, for the first time since 1896 Clemson Tigers football team, 1896, when Carolina–Clemson rivalry, their rivalry began. Several fights broke out that day. As one writer put it: "The Carolina fans that week were carrying around a poster with the image of a tiger with a gamecock standing on top of it, holding the tiger's tail as if he was steering the tiger". Another brawl broke out before both sides agreed to burn the poster in an effort to defuse tensions. In the aftermath, the rivalry was suspended until 1909. The last game of the season, Clemson beat 1902 Tennessee Volunteers football team, Tennessee 11–0 in the snow, in a game during which Tennessee's A. H. Douglas, Toots Douglas launched a 109-yard punt (the field length was 110 yards in those days).


=1903

= The 1903 team went 4–1–1, and opened the season by beating 1903 Georgia Bulldogs football team, Georgia 29–0. The next week, Clemson played Georgia's Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate, rival 1903 Georgia Tech football team, Georgia Tech. To inspire Clemson, Georgia offered a bushel of apples for every point it scored after the 29th. Rushing for 615 yards, Clemson beat Georgia Tech 73–0. The team then beat NC State Wolfpack football, North Carolina A&M, lost to 1903 North Carolina Tar Heels football team, North Carolina, and beat Davidson. After the end of the season, a postseason game was scheduled with 1903 Cumberland Bulldogs football team, Cumberland, billed as the championship of the South. Clemson and Cumberland tied 11–11. While both teams can therefore be listed as champion, Heisman named Cumberland champion. In 1902 and 1903, several Clemson players made the College Football All-Southern Team, All-Southern team, an all-star team of players from the South selected by several writers after the season, analogous to College Football All-America Team, All-America teams. They included ends Vedder Sitton and Hope Sadler, quarterback John Maxwell (American football), Johnny Maxwell, and fullback Jock Hanvey. Fuzzy Woodruff relates Heisman's role in selecting All-Southern teams: "The first selections that had any pretense of being backed by a judicial consideration were made by W.Reynolds Tichenor...The next selections were made by John W. Heisman, who was as good a judge of football men as the country ever produced."


Georgia Tech

After the 73–0 defeat by Clemson, Georgia Tech approached Heisman and was able to hire him as a coach and an athletic director. A banner proclaiming "Tech Gets Heisman for 1904" was strung across Atlanta's Piedmont Park. Heisman was hired for $2,250 a year and 30% of the home ticket sales, a $50raise over his Clemson salary. He coached Georgia Tech for the longest tenure of his career, 16years.


Baseball and basketball

At Georgia Tech, Heisman coached Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets baseball, baseball and Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's basketball, basketball in addition to football. The 1906 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets baseball team, 1906 Georgia Tech baseball team was his best, posting a 23–3 record. Star players in 1906 included captain and outfielder L. W. Robert Jr., Chip Robert, shortstop Tommy McMillan (baseball), Tommy McMillan, and pitchers Ed Lafitte and Craig Day. In 1907, Lafitte posted 19 strikeouts in 10 innings against rival Georgia Bulldogs baseball, Georgia. In 1908, Heisman was also Georgia Tech's first basketball coach. For many years after his death, from 1938 to 1956, Georgia Tech played basketball in the Heisman Gym. In 1904, Heisman was an official in an Atlanta indoor baseball league. In 1908, Heisman became the president of the Atlanta Crackers. The Cracker Club they called it. minor league baseball team. The Atlanta Crackers captured the 1909 Southern Association title. Heisman also became the athletic director of the Atlanta Athletic Club in 1908, its golf course having been built in 1904.


Football

Heisman never had a losing season coaching Georgia Tech football, including three undefeated campaigns and a 32-game undefeated streak. At some time during his tenure at Georgia Tech, he started the practice of posting downs and yardage on the scoreboard.


=1904–1914: The first decade at Georgia Tech

= Heisman's 1904 Georgia Tech football team, first football season at Georgia Tech was an 8–1–1 record, the first winning season for Georgia Tech since 1893 Georgia Tech football team, 1893 (the 1901 Georgia Tech football team, 1901 team was blacklisted). One source relates: "The real feature of the season was the marvelous advance made by the Georgia School of Technology." Georgia Tech posted victories over 1904 Georgia Bulldogs football team, Georgia, 1904 Tennessee Volunteers football team, Tennessee, 1904 Florida State College football team, Florida State, 1904 University of Florida Blue and White football team, University of Florida (at Lake City), and 1904 Cumberland Bulldogs football team, Cumberland, and a tie with Heisman's previous employer, 1904 Clemson Tigers football team, Clemson. The team suffered just one loss, to 1904 Auburn Tigers football team, Auburn. Tackle Lob Brown and halfback Billy Wilson (running back), Billy Wilson were selected All-Southern. The same season, Dan McGugin was hired by 1904 Vanderbilt Commodores football team, Vanderbilt and Mike Donahue by Auburn. Vanderbilt and Auburn would dominate the SIAA until 1916, when Heisman won his first official title with Georgia Tech. The 1905 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, 1905 Georgia Tech team, the first to be called "Yellow Jackets", went 6–0–1 and Heisman gained a reputation as a coaching "wizard". Heisman also drew much acclaim as a sportswriter, and was regularly published in the sports section of the ''Atlanta Constitution'', and later in Collier's Weekly.


Rule changes

After the bloody 1905 college football season, 1905 football season—the ''Chicago Tribune'' reported 18 players had been killed and 159 seriously injured, United States President Theodore Roosevelt intervened and demanded the rules be reformed to make the sport safer. The rules committee then legalized the forward pass, for which Heisman was instrumental, enlisting the support of Henry L. Williams and committee members John C. Bell (lawyer), John Bell and Paul Dashiell. Heisman believed that a forward pass would improve the game by allowing a more open style of play, thus discouraging mass attack tactics and the flying wedge formation. The rule changes came in 1906, three years after Heisman began actively lobbying for that decision. Before the 1910 college football season, 1910 season, Heisman convinced the rules committee to change football from a game of two halves to four quarters, again for safety. Despite lobbying for these rule changes, Heisman's teams from 1906 to 1914 continued to post winning records, but with multiple losses each season, including a loss to Auburn each season but 1906.


1906–1909: Start of the jump shift

The 1906 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, 1906 Georgia Tech team beat 1906 Auburn Tigers football team, Auburn for the first time, and in a loss to 1906 Sewanee Tigers football team, Sewanee first used Heisman's jump shift offense, which became known as the Heisman shift. In the jump shift, all but the center may Shift (gridiron football), shift into various formations, with a jump before the snap. A play started with only the center on the line of scrimmage. The offensive backfield, backfield would be in a vertical line, as if in an I-formation with an extra halfback, or a giant T. After the shift, a split second elapsed, and then the ball was snapped. In one common instance of the jump shift, the line shifted to put the center between guard and tackle. The three running back, backs nearest the line of scrimmage would shift all to one side, and the center snapped it to the tailback. The 1907 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, 1907 team played its games at Ponce de Leon Park, where the Atlanta Crackers also played. The team went 4–4, and suffered Heisman's worst loss at Georgia Tech, 54–0 to 1907 Vanderbilt Commodores football team, Vanderbilt. J. R. Davis, "Twenty Percent" Davis, considered 20% of the team's worth, was selected All-Southern. Chip Robert was captain of the 1908 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, 1908 team, which went 6–3, including a 44–0 blowout loss to 1908 Auburn Tigers football team, Auburn in which Lew Hardage returned a kickoff 108 yards for a touchdown. Davis again was All-Southern. Georgia attacked Georgia Tech's recruitment tactics in football. Georgia alumni incited an SIAA investigation, claiming that Georgia Tech had created a fraudulent scholarship fund. The SIAA ruled in favor of Georgia Tech, but the 1908 game was canceled that season due to bad blood between the rivals. Davis was captain of the 1909 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, 1909 team, which won seven games, but was shutout by SIAA champion 1909 Sewanee Tigers football team, Sewanee and 1909 Auburn Tigers football team, Auburn.


1910–1914: Relying on the jump shift

Heisman's 1910 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, 1910 team went 5–3, and relied on the jump shift for the first time. Hall of Famer Bob McWhorter played for the Georgia Bulldogs from 1910 to 1913, and for those seasons Georgia Tech lost to Georgia and Auburn. In 1910, Georgia Tech was also beaten by SIAA champion 1910 Vanderbilt Commodores football team, Vanderbilt 22–0. Though Vanderbilt was held scoreless in the first half, Ray Morrison starred in the second half and Bradley Walker's officiating was criticized throughout. Tackle Pat Patterson (American football), Pat Patterson was selected All-Southern. The 1911 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, 1911 team featured future head coach William Alexander (coach), William Alexander as a reserve quarterback. Pat Patterson was team captain and selected All-Southern. The team played 1911 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Alabama to a scoreless tie, after which Heisman said he had never seen a player "so thoroughly imbued with the true spirit of football as Hargrove Van de Graaff." The 1912 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, 1912 team opened the season by playing the Army's 11th Cavalry regiment to a scoreless tie. The team also lost to 1912 Sewanee Tigers football team, Sewanee, and quarterback Alf McDonald (American football), Alf McDonald was selected All-Southern. The team moved to Grant Field from Ponce de Leon Park by 1913 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, 1913, and lost its first game there to 1913 Georgia Bulldogs football team, Georgia 14–0. The season's toughest win came against 1913 Florida Gators football team, Florida, 13–3, after Florida was up 3–0 at the half. Heisman said his opponents played the best football he had seen a Florida squad play. The independent 1914 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, 1914 team was captained by halfback Kendall J. Fielder, Wooch Fielder and went 6–2. The team beat Mercer Bears football, Mercer 105–0 and the next week had a 13–0 upset loss to 1914 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Alabama. End Jim Senter and halfback J. S. Patton were selected All-Southern.


=Four straight SIAA championships

= During the span of 1915 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, 1915 to 1918 Georgia Tech Golden Tornado football team, 1918, Georgia Tech posted a 30–1–2 record, outscored opponents 1611–93, and claimed four straight SIAA titles.


1915

The 1915 team went 7–0–1 and claimed a shared SIAA title with 1915 Vanderbilt Commodores football team, Vanderbilt, despite being officially independent. The tie came against rival 1915 Georgia Bulldogs football team, Georgia, in inches of mud. Georgia center John G. Henderson headed a group of three men, one behind the other, with his hands upon the shoulders of the one in front, to counter Heisman's jump shift. Halfback Everett Strupper joined the team in 1915 and was partially Hearing loss, deaf. He called the signals instead of the quarterback. When Strupper tried out for the team, he noticed that the quarterback shouted the signals every time he was to carry the ball. Realizing that the loud signals would be a tip-off to the opposition, Strupper told Heisman: "Coach, those loud signals are absolutely unnecessary. You see when sickness in my kid days brought on this deafness my folks gave me the best instructors obtainable to teach me Lip reading, lip-reading." Heisman recalled how Strupper overcame his deafness: "He couldn't hear anything but a regular shout, but he could read your lips like a flash. No lad who ever stepped on a football field had keener eyes than Everett had. The enemy found this out the minute he began looking for openings through which to run the ball." Fielder and guard Bob Lang made the composite All-Southern team, and Senter, quarterback Froggie Morrison, and Strupper were selected All-Southern by some writer. The team was immediately dubbed the greatest in Georgia Tech's history up to that point. However, the team continued to improve over the next two seasons. Sportswriter Morgan Blake called Strupper, "probably the greatest running half-back the South has known."


1916

The 1916 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, 1916 team went 8–0–1, captured the team's first official SIAA title, and was the first to vault Georgia Tech football to national prominence. According to one writer, it "seemed to personify Heisman" by playing hard in every game on both offense and defense. Strupper, Lang, fullback Tommy Spence, tackle Walker Carpenter, and center Pup Phillips were all selected All-Southern. Only one newspaper in all of the South was said to have neglected to have Strupper on its All-Southern team. Phillips was the first Georgia Tech center selected All-Southern, and made Walter Camp's third-team All-American. Spence got Camp's honorable mention. Without throwing a single forward pass, Georgia Tech defeated the Cumberland Bulldogs football, Cumberland College Bulldogs, 1916 Cumberland vs. Georgia Tech football game, 222–0, in the most one-sided college football game ever played. Strupper led the scoring with six touchdowns. Sportswriter Grantland Rice wrote, "Cumberland's greatest individual play of the game occurred when fullback George E. Allen, Allen circled right end for a 6-yard loss." Up 126–0 at halftime, Heisman reportedly told his players, "You're doing all right, team, we're ahead, but you just can't tell what those Cumberland players have up their sleeves. They may spring a surprise. Be alert, men! Hit 'em clean, but hit 'em hard!" However, even Heisman relented, and shortened the quarters in the second half to 12 minutes each instead of 15. Heisman's running up the score against his outmanned opponent was motivated by revenge against Cumberland's baseball team, for running up the score against Georgia Tech 22–0 with a team primarily composed of professional Nashville Vols players, and against the sportswriters who he felt were too focused on numbers, such as those who picked Vanderbilt as champion the previous season.


1917

In 1917, the backfield of Joe Guyon, Albert Hill (American football), Al Hill, Judy Harlan, and Strupper helped propel Heisman to his finest success. Georgia Tech posted a 9–0 record and a national championship, the first for a Southern team. For many years, it was considered the finest team the South ever produced. Sportswriter Frank G. Menke selected Strupper and team captain Carpenter for his All-America team; the first two players from the Deep South ever selected first-team All-American. Joe Guyon was a Chippewa Native Americans in the United States, Indian, who had transferred from Carlisle Indian Industrial School, Carlisle, and whose brother Charles "Wahoo" Guyon was Heisman's assistant coach on the team. Judy Harlan said about Guyon, "Once in a while the Indian would come out in Joe, such as the nights Heisman gave us a white football and had us working out under the lights. That's when Guyon would give out the blood-curdling war whoops." His first carry for Georgia Tech was a 75-yard touchdown against 1917 Wake Forest Demon Deacons football team, Wake Forest. The 1917 Georgia Tech team outscored opponents 491–17 and beat 1917 Penn Quakers football team, Penn 41–0. Historian Bernie McCarty called it "Strupper's finest hour, coming through against powerful Penn in the contest that shocked the Northeastern United States, East." Pop Warner's undefeated 1917 Pittsburgh Panthers football team, Pittsburgh team beat Penn just 14–6. Georgia Tech's 83–0 victory over 1917 Vanderbilt Commodores football team, Vanderbilt is the worst loss in Vanderbilt history, and the 63–0 defeat of 1917 Washington and Lee Generals football team, Washington and Lee was the worst loss in W&L history at the time. In the 48–0 defeat of 1917 Tulane Olive and Blue football team, Tulane, each of the four members of the backfield eclipsed 100 yards rushing, and Guyon also passed for two touchdowns. 1917 Auburn Tigers football team, Auburn, the SIAA's second place team, was beaten 68–7.


1918

University faculty succeeded in preventing a postseason national championship game with Pittsburgh. In the next season of 1918, after losing several players to World War I, Georgia Tech lost a lopsided game to 1918 Pittsburgh Panthers football team, Pittsburgh 32–0. Sportswriter Francis J. Powers wrote: Heisman cut back on his expanded duties in 1918, and only coached football between September 1 and December 15. Georgia Tech went 6–1 and eclipsed 100 points three different times. Buck Flowers, a small back in his first year on the team, had transferred from 1917 Davidson Wildcats football team, Davidson a year before, where he had starred in a game against Georgia Tech. Flowers had grown to weigh 150 pounds and was a backup until Heisman discovered his ability as an open-field runner on Punt (gridiron football)#Return, punt returns. Also in 1918, center Bum Day became the first player from the South selected for Walter Camp's first-team All-America, historically loaded with college players from Big Three (colleges), Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and other northeastern colleges. Flowers and tackle Bill Fincher made Camp's second team. Guyon made Menke's first team All-America as a tackle.


=1919

= The 1919 Georgia Tech Golden Tornado football team, 1919 team was beaten by 1919 Pittsburgh Panthers football team, Pittsburgh and 1919 Washington and Lee Generals football team, Washington and Lee, and in the final game 1919 Auburn Tigers football team, Auburn gave Georgia Tech its first loss to an SIAA school in 5 years (since 1914 Auburn Tigers football team, Auburn in 1914). Flowers, Harlan, Fincher, Phillips, Dummy Lebey, Albert Staton, Al Staton, and Shorty Guill were All-Southern. Heisman left Atlanta after the season, and William Alexander was hired as his successor.


Penn and Washington & Jefferson

Heisman went back to Penn for three seasons from 1920 to 1922. Most notable perhaps is the 1922 Alabama vs. Penn football game, 9–7 loss to 1922 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Alabama in 1922, the Crimson Tide's first major intersectional victory. In 1923, Heisman coached the Washington & Jefferson Presidents football, Washington and Jefferson Presidents, which beat the previously undefeated 1923 West Virginia Mountaineers football team, West Virginia Mountaineers.


Rice

Following the season at Washington and Jefferson College, Heisman ended his coaching career with four seasons at Rice University, Rice. In 1924, after being selected by the Committee on Outdoor Sports, he took over the job as Rice University's first full-time head Rice Owls football, football coach and athletic director, succeeding Phillip Arbuckle. His teams saw little success, and he earned more than any faculty member. Rice was his last coaching job before he retired in 1927 to lead the Downtown Athletic Club in Manhattan, New York. In 1935, the Downtown Athletic Club began awarding a Downtown Athletic Club trophy for the best football player east of the Mississippi River.


Personal life

Heisman met his first wife, an actress, while he was participating in theater during his time at Clemson. Evelyn McCollum Cox, whose stage name was Evelyn Barksdale, was a widow with a single child, a 12-year-old boy named Carlisle. They married during the 1903 season, on October 24, 1903, a day after Heisman's 34th birthday. While in Atlanta, Heisman also shared the house with the family poodle named Woo. He would feed the dog ice cream. In 1918, Heisman and his wife divorced, and to prevent any social embarrassment to his former wife, who chose to remain in the city, he left Atlanta after the 1919 football season. Carlisle and Heisman would remain close. Heisman met Edith Maora Cole, a student at Buchtel College, where he was coaching football during the 1893 and 1894 seasons. The two were close, but decided not to marry due to Edith's problems with tuberculosis. When they met again in 1924, Heisman was living in Washington, Pennsylvania, and coaching at Washington and Jefferson College. This time, they did decide to marry, doing it that same year, right before Heisman left Pennsylvania to take his last head coaching job at Rice University in Texas.


Heisman as an actor

Heisman considered himself an actor as well as coach, and was a part of several acting troupes in the offseason. He was known for delivering grand theatrical speeches to inspire his players, and some considered him to be an eccentric and melodramatic. He was described as exhibiting "the temperament, panache, and audacity of the showman." His 1897 Auburn team finished $700 in debt. To raise money for next season, Heisman created the Alabama Polytechnic Institute (Auburn) Dramatic Club to stage and act as the main character in the comic play ''David Garrick'' by Thomas William Robertson. George Petrie (American football), George Petrie described the play as "decidedly the most successful event of its kind ever seen in Auburn". A local newspaper, ''The Opelika Post'', reviewed Heisman's performance:
He was naturalness itself, and there was not a single place in which he overdid his part. His changes from drunk to sober and back again in the drunken scene were skillfully done, and the humor of many of his speeches caused a roar of laughter. He acted not like an amateur, but like the skilled professional that he is.
During his time at Auburn, Heisman also took on more serious roles, and was considered as a refined elocutionist when performing Shakespearean plays or reciting his monologues. The next year, the API Dramatic Club performed ''A Scrap of Paper'' by Victorien Sardou. In May 1898, Heisman appeared in ''Diplomacy (play), Diplomacy'', an English adaptation of ''Dora'' by Sardou, with the Mordaunt-Block Stock Company at the Herald Square Theatre, Herald Square Theater on Theater District, Manhattan, Broadway. Later that summer, he performed in ''The Ragged Regiment'' by Robert Neilson Stephens at the Herald Square Theater and ''Caste'' at the Columbus Theater in Harlem. In 1899, he was in the Macdonald Stock Company, which performed at Crump's Park in Macon, Georgia, including the role of Dentatus in ''Virginius (play), Virginius'' by James Sheridan Knowles. When the Macdonald Stock Company took a hiatus in June 1899, Heisman joined the Thanouser-Hatch Company of Atlanta. He performed in at least two plays for this company, in ''Brother John'' by Martha Morton at the Grand Theater in Atlanta, playing the role of Captain Van Sprague. At the end of Auburn's 1899 season, a public conflict developed between Heisman and umpire W. L. Taylor. Heisman wrote to the ''Birmingham Post-Herald, Birmingham Age-Herald'' complaining about Taylor's officiating in general and specifically his cancellation of an Auburn touchdown because the scoring play began before the starting whistle following a Time-out (sport), time out. In his published reply, Taylor critiqued Heisman as someone with "histrionic gifts," making "lurid appeals," and seeking "peanut gallery applause" for "heroically acted character parts" in some "cheap theater." Heisman responded to that characterization as "The heinous crime I shall neither attempt to palliate nor deny" and that what Taylor said could be a "studied insult to the whole art of acting." In 1900, Heisman joined the Spooner Dramatic Company of Tampa, Florida. On return from Key West, Heisman got very seasick. By 1901, Heisman joined the Dixie Stock Company, which performed several plays in the Dukate Theater at Biloxi, Mississippi. There, he received his first major romantic lead, Armand in ''La Dame aux Camélias, Camille''. In 1902, he managed Crump's Park Stock Company. He started the Heisman Dramatic Stock Company while at Clemson in 1903, which spent much of the summer performing at Riverside Park in Asheville, North Carolina. By 1904, Heisman operated the Heisman Stock Company. It performed at the Casino Theater at Pickett Springs Resort in Montgomery, Alabama. Their first performance was William Gillette's ''Because She Loved Him So''. The next summer opened with a performance at the Grand Opera House in Augusta, Georgia. In 1906 and 1907, Heisman again performed in Crump's Park in Macon, as well as the Thunderbolt Casino in Savannah, Georgia, Savannah. In 1906, he purchased an Thomas Edison, Edison Kinetoscope, kinetograph for his audiences. By 1908, Heisman managed Heisman Theatrical Enterprises.


Death and legacy

Heisman died of pneumonia on October 3, 1936, in New York City. Three days later, his body was taken by train to his wife's hometown of Rhinelander, Wisconsin, where he was buried in GraveD, Lot11, Block3 of the city-owned Forest Home Cemetery. When Heisman died, he was preparing to write a history of football.


Legacy

Heisman was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 1954, a member of the second class of inductees. Heisman was an innovator and "master strategist". He developed one of the first shifts. He was a proponent of the legalization of the forward pass. He had both his guards pull to lead an end run and had his center snap the ball. He invented the hidden ball play, and originated the "hike" or "hep" shouted by the quarterback to start each play. He led the effort to cut the game from halves to quarters. He is credited with the idea of listing downs and yardage on the scoreboard, and of putting his quarterback at Safety (American football position), safety on defense. On December 10, 1936, just 2 months after Heisman's death on October 3, the Downtown Athletic Club trophy was renamed the Heisman Trophy, Heisman Memorial Trophy, and is now given to the player voted as the season's most outstanding collegiate football player. Voters for this award consist primarily of media representatives, who are allocated by regions across the country to filter out possible regional bias, and former recipients. Following the bankruptcy of the Downtown Athletic Club in 2002, the award is now given out by the Heisman Trust. Georgia Tech's basketball team played in Heisman Gym which was named in his honor when it opened in 1938. Located behind the north stands of Grant Field, the gym was the home of Tech basketball until 1956, when the team moved into Alexander Memorial Coliseum. The facility also had a pool, which was used by the Tech swim team, and an Auditorium. After the basketball team left, the gym was used for swimming until 1977, and as an auditorium until the Ferst Center For The Arts opened in 1992. The gym was demolished in 1995. Heisman Street on Clemson's campus is named in his honor. Heisman Drive, located directly south of Jordan–Hare Stadium on the Auburn University campus, is named in his honor, as well. A bust of him is also in Jordan–Hare Stadium. A wooden statue of Heisman was placed at the Rhinelander–Oneida County Airport. A bronze statue of him was placed on Akron's campus, and one is located directly north of Bobby Dodd Stadium on the main campus of the Georgia Institute of Technology. Heisman has also been the subject of a musical theater, musical.


Coaching tree

Heisman's coaching tree includes: #William Alexander: played for Georgia Tech (1911–1912), head coach for Georgia Tech (1920–1944) #Tom Davies: assistant for Penn (1922), head coach for Geneva (1923), Allegheny (1924–1925), Western Reserve (1941–1947). #Frank Dobson (American football), Frank Dobson: assistant for Georgia Tech (1907), head coach for Georgia (1909), Clemson (1910–1912), Richmond (1913–1917; 1919–1933), South Carolina (1918), and Maryland (1936–1939). #C. K. Fauver, played for Oberlin (1892–1895), head coach for Miami (OH) (1895), Oberlin (1896). #Bill Fincher: played for Georgia Tech (1916–1920), head coach for William & Mary Tribe football, William & Mary (1921), assistant for Georgia Tech (1925–1931) #Jack Forsythe: played for Clemson (1901–1903), head coach for 1904 Florida State College football team, Florida State College (1904), Florida Gators football, Florida (1906) #Joe Guyon: played for Georgia Tech (1916–1917), head coach for Union College (1919; 1923–1927) #Jerry Gwin: played for Auburn (1899), head coach for Mississippi A&M (1902). #M. S. Harvey, Mike Harvey: played for Auburn (1899–1900), head coach for Alabama (1901), Auburn (1902), and Mississippi (1903–1904). #Daniel S. Martin: played for Auburn (1898–1901), head coach for Mississippi (1902) and Mississippi A&M (1903–1906). #Jonathan K. Miller: played for Penn (1920–1922), head coach for Franklin & Marshall (1928–1930). #John Penton, played for Auburn (1897): head coach for Clemson (1898). #Pup Phillips: played for Georgia Tech (1916–1917; 1919), head coach for University School for Boys (1923) #Hope Sadler: played for Clemson (1902–1903), head coach for University School for Boys (1904). #Vedder Sitton: played for Clemson (1901–1903), head baseball coach for Clemson (1915–1916). #Walter H. Watkins, Billy Watkins, who replaced Heisman at Auburn (1900), "an old pupil of Heisman's". #Carl S. Williams: played for Oberlin (1891–1892) and Penn (1893–1895), head coach for Penn (1902–1907).Nicholas Gutowski
"Penn Football in the 1800s, Varsity team history, Movement Towards Change and Authority Response: 1901, November 12th - 25th,"
(University of Pennsylvania archives)


Head coaching record


Football

† While officially independent, Georgia Tech claimed an SIAA title in 1915.


Baseball


Basketball


Notes


References


Bibliography

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External links

*
John Heisman
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