Showing posts with label Athletes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Athletes. Show all posts

Monday, July 3, 2023

Bases Loaded - Where To Find All Of The Little League Statues In Williamsport

 
It's hard to miss the 13 statues commemorating Little League, around Market Square in Williamsport.  But did you know that there are 6 additional statues located around town?  There's a shortstop near the transit center, A center fielder at the hospital, a left fielder at Penn College, and a right fielder at Bowman Field.  And lets not forget the pitcher...

Here's a look at each of the statues, what they represent, and a possible route to see them all, along with the site of the first game, and of course, Original Field (where you'll also find the pitcher)

Sunday, July 2, 2023

The Williamsport Athletic Field, on Cherry Street

On July 4, 1890, the Athletic Park Association held a dedication ceremony for Athletic Park , on Cherry Street. [Today, the Cochran School is built on those grounds.] 

It was common years ago, to combine grand openings and dedications with the 4th of July holiday.   For this event, there were baseball games, bicycle races on the race track circling the field, music and  of course, a fireworks display.

Saturday, April 1, 2023

Was A Milton Boy One Of The First Inventors Of The Football Helmet?

 
George "Rose" "Deerfoot" Barclay, with his "head harness" in 1895

George Barclay is widely attributed as the "inventor of the football helmet", in many books, articles, and websites covering the history of football.  Unfortunately,  the evidence is not completely on their side.  He was however, almost certainly one of the first to wear the gear that would eventually evolved into the helmet we see today.  

Friday, February 10, 2023

Watsontown High School Football

Watsontown Football, 1900
"Watsontown players had their colors lowered on Saturday, in two games with Milton teams.  The senior team went to Milton and fell down to their old rivals by a score of 10 to 0.  The High School team of Milton played the junior team at this place and succeeded in defeating our boys by a score of 10 to 6.  Of court there is the usual amount of kicking about unfair treatment, but it is hoped that both clubs and rooters ae satisfied now and will nurse their troubles until next season."  - November 1900

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1924
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1926
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September 1926 - Fred Crawford had his nose broken in the Milton-Watsontown football game at Milton.

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1927
===================1927 Watsontown Football
  • Front, L-R: Bob Mack, Albert Gauger, Foster Huffman, Irvin Berger, Carrol Mack, Robert Raup. 
  • Second Row: Roy Dieffenbach, Harold Willet, Daniel Aunkst, William Cronrath, Bob Bryson. 
  • Third Row: Jim Montgomery, Dick Klapp, P. Dickerman, Louis Hester, Charles Royer, Albert Wright. 
  • Back Row: William Schooley, Harry Prowant, Harold Martin, George McNath, Cloyd Hartranft, Coach Kenneth Preisler.



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1928
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In 1928, there was no team, due to lack of interest.    Which makes the above 1928 photo a little confusing..  but I think the above photo is the 1927-28 team?

Soccer was played on the field at Watsontown Park for a number of years, before football returned.

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1947
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1947 - Watsontown vs Trevorton at Watsontown

"According to reports today from Watsontown, the entire community Is on edge for the Huskies' first game. A street parade was held this afternoon and hundreds of students and townspeople marched through the community, led by the school band. 

The Bricktown Huskies, under the tutelage of Coaches Jimmy Cotner and Bob Hontz, are a veteran outfit, diet Makin or Myron Hoffman will begin at left end, with Bill Taylor at the right terminal post. Watsontown tackles will probably be Gene Hartranft and Leroy Everitt. Fred Wesner and Harold Crawford will pair off at guards. Bert Wert- man will be at center. An all-veteran backfield will include Allen Leech, left-handed pass-ser who will be at the quarterback Slot. Paul Harmon and Dick Bryson, both seniors, will begin at the halfback positions, and Raymond Nuss or Gene Hoffman will be fullback." 

At the game against Trevorton, Watsontown Park  the Band

1947 - Watsontown vs Trevorton at Watsontown

"According to reports today from Watsontown, the entire community Is on edge for the Huskies' first game. A street parade was held this afternoon and hundreds of students and townspeople marched through the community, led by the school band. 

The Bricktown Huskies, under the tutelage of Coaches Jimmy Cotner and Bob Hontz, are a veteran outfit, diet Makin or Myron Hoffman will begin at left end, with Bill Taylor at the right terminal post. Watsontown tackles will probably be Gene Hartranft and Leroy Everitt. Fred Wesner and Harold Crawford will pair off at guards. Bert Wert- man will be at center. An all-veteran backfield will include Allen Leech, left-handed pass-ser who will be at the quarterback Slot. Paul Harmon and Dick Bryson, both seniors, will begin at the halfback positions, and Raymond Nuss or Gene Hoffman will be fullback." 


Watsontown Beats Zerbe Team 26-0
Red Devil's Bow Before Heavy Huskies
In Lid-Prying Game of 1947 Campaign

"Weakness against a slick passing attack executed by a well-drilled and heavy high school football team was fatal Saturday, to Trevorton High School Red Devils, who lost to the Huskies by a 26-0 score in a game played in the brick manufacturing community.

Watsontown tallied a touchdown in every period. and added a point after the first and final score. Every touchdown was directly or indirectly the result of a forward pass from the team's star left halfback. Harman. Watsontown ran up a total nine first downs, seven of them a result of passes, and the other two by scrimmage.

Trevorton tallied two first downs by scrimmage. Watsontown kicked off to Trevorton, but the Red Devils were forced to kick back after failing to gain. After scoring four yards on two plays, Bryson ran around right end for 26 yards, placing the ball Trevorton's four -yard line. Leech fumbled on Trevorton's one-yard strip, and Fred Snyder recovered. After two successive fumbles, both recovered by Trevorton players.

Thew punted to Harman, who carried the ball to Trevorton's 11. Nuss gained a yard through the line, then a pass Harman to Taylor was good for several yards. Harman ran around right end for the touchdown. Nuss added the extra point on a drop kick. After an exchange of punts Trevorton took the ball on its own 32- yard line as the first period ended.

The Red Devils carried the ball the 49, where a 15-yard penalty was inflicted for holding. Thew punted to Watsontown at the Watsontown's 49, but the receiver fumbled and punted to the Watsontown 30-yard Trevorton recovered. Thew, again line. Bryson lost eight yards in an attempt to run off left tackle. Harman gained 10 yards around left end, a pass from Harman to Taylor was good for 16 yards, and a second pass, Harman to Hoffman, piaced the ball on Trevorton's three-yard line.

Harman skirted right end for the second touchdown, but the play was called back when both teams were offside. On the next play Harman passed to Taylor for the score. Nuss' attempt to drop kick the extra point failed. Watsontown failed to dent Trevorton's line at the start of the second half, and again started to use passes. Several minutes after the half opened, and after Trevorton punted out of danger, Harman made two passes to Taylor which were good for more than 50 yards and a touchdown.

Nuss again failed to make the extra point on a drop kick. Trevorton carried the ball into Watsontown territory in the final frame, but lacked the punch to advance further than the 35 yard marker. Thew punted to Watsontown at the Watsontown 37, from which point the Huskies started another aerial march which led to the fourth touchdown. A pass Harman to Taylor from Trevorton's 38-vard line produced the fourth score. Nuss added the extra point on a drop kick.

The Red Devils' line played a real defensive game by not allowing one first down through the forward wall. Offensively the line appeared weak as did the backfield. *Coach Frank Vottero said today that he would drill his boys strenuously this week on execution of plays and a defense against forward passes, in order to be ready for Saturday's tough assignment against Northumberland High School"



Orange & Blue - December 19, 1947:
"Watsontown wins West Branch Championship"
Watsontown shares the honor with Canton to be the first team to win the newly organized "West Branch Championship."  The Huskies won seven games, losing one to Canton in the early part of the season.
Canton had to share the honor with Watsontown when Mifflinburg beat Canton for the last game of the season.  Watsontown can all thank Mifflinburg for that favor.
Both Canton and Watsontown will receive trophies which will be given by Harder's Sporting Goods Store.  The same store will give gold footballs to all the members of both teams.

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1948
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1948

Home games for Watsontown were played at the Watsontown Park, through the early 1950s.

In April of 1959, "most of the roadblocks have been cleared" for the new athletic plant at the Warrior Run High School near Turbotville.   The Susquehanna Valley School Authority had completed plans to secure bids for a new athletic field, to include a grid iron baseball diamon, girls althletic field, softball diamond, and other facilities.
The 1959 news article said "Maybe DHS and Warrior Run can get together to set up pig skin relations.  It would be a 7-11 natural, both in rivalry and paying customers."
The Defenders played home games on Saturday Nights on Milton's field.  

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The New Field At Warrior Run
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An early photo of Warrior Runs Football Field - 1960s?
The "new grid field" was ready for the opening football game in September 1961.

Warrior Run's High School colors came from a combination of Watsontown and Turrbotvilles school colors.  Watsontown's Blue, combined with Turbotvilles Gray.  


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Unknown Year - but several of these players played on the 1927  team.
Front row: Berger, William Crawford, Mack, Cronrath, Sterner, Harold Martin, Gauger
Back row: Baker, Daniel Aunkst, Cloyd Hartranft,  Foster Huffman

1927 (from the 1928 yearbook)

1930 Team
  • First Row: Stuart Adams, Floyd Baker, Ned Wagner, Hughes Waltman, Woods Kramer, Payl Wagner, John Walker
  • Second Row: Lee Haas, Nelson Wertman, John McIntyre, William Sterner, Hayes Sterner, Ned Wright, Fred Dickerman
  • Third Row: Elmer Ungard, Woods Diffenbach, Sam Cronrath, Wilson Aunkst, George Hartranft, Paul Cronrath, Emerson Biddle.
The 1946 Team

The 1952 Team

1954 Program
Lewisburg Vs Watsontown, at Bucknell Stadium

The 1957 Team

Unknown Year









Thursday, February 9, 2023

The 1935 Team Of Destiny - Milton Football

Milton's 1935 Team of Destiny
(Names of all the players in the photo are listed below)

In the 1935 Football Season, Milton outscored its opponents 148-33, completely  shutting out six opponents.  Two of the team players went on to play for the 1943 Steagles.  At least  7 played in college, and 3 went on to play professionally.  One had been drafted by the Yankees before playing professional football.  Tom Miller is in the hall of fame for his management role with the Greenbay Packers.  Harold Hinkle went on to create the recreation program for the Allenwood Prison Camp.  Bo Johnson is in the Guiness Book Of World Records for returning  his own kick-off back for a touchdown.   Many of the  team served in World War II, between high school and their later accomplishments.  They truly were a Team Of Destiny.  

Friday, October 28, 2022

When Babe Ruth Came To Williamsport

 
From left to right: Dutch Ruether, Babe Ruth, Jack Scott, Jack Tee and Harry Hesse
 (Oil City, PA 10/27/1923 - the day after the group visited Williamsport)

Sunday, August 14, 2022

When A Shamokin Boy Left The Coal Mines For The Baseball Hall Of Fame

 

"There was nothing strange in those days about a twelve-year-old Polish kid working in the mines for 72 hours a week at a nickel an hour", he later recalled. "What was strange is that I ever got out of there".  Stanley Coveleski left the Shamokin coal mines to play baseball, and was elected into the Baseball Hall Of Fame, February 2nd, 1969.

Monday, May 23, 2022

When A Boy From Montgomery Pitched For The Major Leagues

 
 Byron Wardsworth Yarrison, known as "Rube", was a professional baseball player in the 1920s.

Born March 9th 1896, the son of Martin & Ada Yarrison of Montgomery Pa, 
Yarrison was a pitcher for Philadelphia Athletics, and  the Brooklyn Robins. 

Yarrison in a uniform with an A on the Hat.  (Philadelphia Athletics?)

Monday, September 6, 2021

Fatmen Vs Leanmen - The Charity Baseball Game in Selinsgrove

 
Fatmen Vs Leanmen, Selinsgrove 1898

"Fatmen and Leanmen assembled following their charity (town band) baseball game on the Susq Univ diamond (pre-Warner). The "Fats" captained by Charles Erdley bested the Kid Kessler led "Leans" by a score of 28 to 13, on September 23, 1898. The men wearing the stars are presumed to be the game's umpires."

Sunday, August 1, 2021

The First Little League World Series, Williamsport 1947

 
The first Little League  tournament was held in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, August 21, 1947. The Little League program was created by Carl E. Stotz,, in 1939 in Williamsport, Pa.

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

When The Tightrope Walkers Came To Williamsport

A Tightrope Walker on West Third Street, Williamsport PA

When I came across this photo on an auction site, I assumed it would be easy to find out more about it.  It was labeled "Tight Rope Walker, W. 3rd Williamsport".  Look close - that's not a smudge at the top, but rather a tight-rope walker, between the buildings.

How hard can it be to track that down, surely tight rope walkers were a rarity in Williamsport?

Uhm, no, actually they were not.  Not at all. It was actually rather rare for there to be an event in the 1880s through early 1900s, without a tight rope walker in attendance.  And in addition to those scheduled performances, during this time, amateur tight rope walkers would travel the country and just show up in a town, performing for donations.


The Peg Legged Rope Walker, 1876

In 1876,  Prof. Daniel De Houne, (The Corsica Rope Walker) gave a performance at the east end of Market Square, in Williamsport. The professor was a soldier in the late war, and gave a leg in defense of his country. Using his gymnastic skills and his experience as a child in a German circus, he learned to walk the slack wire and tight rope, aided by a notch cut into the bottom of his wooden peg leg. 

De Houne was actually Joseph Berg, but he went by the name De Houne for almost all of his performances.  In 1884, De Houne fell from a rope he was crossing in Corsica Texas.  Knowing his injuries were severe, he asked for a rabbi, As Corsicana had no rabbi, the owner of a downtown grocery store, Bernard Simon, came to him and the man painfully whispered prayers with him in Hebrew.  He would not reveal his identity or history to Mr. Simon.  The only thing he supposedly said, also in perfect Hebrew, was to ask that he be “buried with my people.” Three days later, his remaining leg was amputated, and a week later he died, with his identity unknown.  His grave stone in Corsica read simply, "Rope Walker".  (It was years later, when newspapers were digitized, that his identity was discerned)


The Annual Turn Verein Picnic, 1890

At the annual Williamsport Turn Verein picnic, at Union Park held in  August of 1890 "Joseph Losch will walk the tight rope, and he wants it to be fully understood that those interfering with the supports of the ropes while he is abroad of it will make a terrible mistake, as he proposes to carry with him, during the performance, in lieu of a balancing pole, two 42-caliber revolvers, one in each hand."

Turnverein Societies were German-American gymnastic clubs, known as Turners.  They promoted German culture, physical culture, liberal politics, and supported the Union war effort during the civil war. Their picnics and events by 1890 sound like carnivals, but the group came from a series of political upheavals, and the original German Turnen movement in the United States was brought here by political refugees. Like all ethnic groups escaping to America, they faced hostility from those who did not approve of the high rate of immigration into the country.  Turners were physically attacked on several occasions, and were taught to take up self defense in the forms of shooting "and other military exercises".  Self defense in the form of fencing was part of the Turners culture, and became a large part of their yearly picnics. 1

The 1890 picnic in Williamsport was to include the following exercises:
Turning, Climbing a slippery pole, tug of war, a jumping match, sack race, wheelbarrow race, and a baseball game. In addition to Losch's tightrope walk, John Hadler "will swing a fifty six pound weight, and after it has reached the requisite propelling force he will hurl it over the top of the grove into an adjoining field" George Zercher was to perform upon a trapeze, and George Neuschafer was to climb the tallest tree in the park. Additional feats were also mentioned, with much hyperbole and jesting.




1904 Home For The Friendless Fete
In 1904, Williamsport's Home For The Friendless hosted a Fete.
The line up of entertainment appears to be very similar to that of the Dime Museums, as if included Lady Samson, The $10,000 Beauty, the Snake Charmer, A Tattooed man, and, or course, a tight rope walker.

The 1911 Y.W.C.A. Dime Museum
In the early 1900s, Dime Museums were all the rage.  
 "Dime museums, a nineteenth century urban American phenomena, were large-scale venues dedicated to the exposition of human curiosities, or 'freak shows,' under the guise of being an educational bourgeois form of entertainment."

In Williamsport, The Y.W.C.A. held a Dime Museum in February of 1911.  
There was to be a glass eater, a strong woman (who could balance a piano on one finger), the Wild Woman From Boreo (a hairy woman, who was to be chained and guarded "for your protection"), a $10,000 Beauty, a fortune teller, an organ grinder with a gorilla, a snake charmer, a pair of Siamese twins, and, of course,
"A tight-rope walker who will walk a tight rope in a way never before witnessed"

1914 Fall Merchants Display Week
In September of 1914, Williamsport was observing their annual merchants Fall Display Week. During this week the windows of many stores were unveiled, to "show the skills of the decorators, making wonderful displays of their merchandise"
A tight rope walked performed every day during the week, making trips from the highest points of one building to another.  
On Tuesday, in addition to the tight rope walker, Mons Hammon jumped from the top of the first National Bank into the street below, using a parachute.


More About Tight Rope Walking Across The Country
Tightrope walking was extremely popular in the 1800s.  Every Funambulist wanted to walk across Niagara Falls, and The Great Blondin (Jean Francois Gravelet) was the first to do so, in 1859.  He paused half way across, pulled up a beer on a rope from the Maid Of the Mist, sat down and drank it, then continued across.

The stunts only got larger and larger, riding a bicycle across, cooking an omelet in the middle, going across on stilts, and even carrying his manager across on his back.
In 1860, The Great Farini (William Leonard Hunt) crossed the falls with a washing machine strapped to him.  He stopped in the middle, washed several handkerchiefs, and then finished walking across to hand the handkerchiefs out to his admirers.

Hot Air Balloons were popular around this same time, and most of the early balloonists were first tight rope walkers. Ivy Baldwin was an experienced daredevil balloonist.  He walked a tightrope across the Eldorado Canyon numerous times, including on his 88th birthday. 2

Tight Rope Walking still happens today, it's just not nearly as common.  Nick Wallanda, a 7th generation circus performer, has walked across the Grand Canyon, Niagara Fall, and Manhattan - all on wire rope made in Williamsport Pa.  The Wire Rope Company in Williamsport began in 1886, and although the name has changed a few times, they are still making wire rope in the same town.

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For More Local Stories & History Of Williamsport

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Sunday, February 16, 2020

When A Lewisburg Boy Played For The Yankees

Strictly speaking, Walter Blair was not a Lewisburg boy -  but he came to Lewisburg as a Bucknell student.  Later he  returned to Lewisburg as a coach, and he made his home here, after playing for the Yankees.