Charles B. Hoyt

Charles B. Hoyt
Charles B. Hoyt

Charles B. Hoyt, cropped from 1928 Michigan football team photograph
Born c. 1896
Greenfield, Iowa
Citizenship United States
Years active 1913-1946
Known for Track athlete and coach

Charles B. Hoyt (born c. 1896, date of death unknown) was track athlete and coach.

Contents

Champion sprinter

A native of Greenfield, Iowa,[1] Hoyt won three straight 100 and 220 yard dashes in the Iowa state meet from 1911–1913 and won seven career gold medals.[2] As a high school student in 1912, Hoyt was offered a place on the U.S. Olympic team but turned down the chance.[3] He ran a nation’s best of 9.8 in 1913—the same year the Amateur Athletic Union called him "America’s best sprinter."[2] His 9.8 time was equaled by Bill Carter of Chicago in 1914 but was not bettered until 1932 when Foy Draper of California ran 9.6.[2] After graduating early from high school, Hoyt enrolled at Grinnell College where he set a world record in the 220-yard dash on a curved track at the 1916 Drake Relays.[4] He won intercollegiate championships in both the 100-yard and 220-yard runs,[5] but lost the opportunity to compete in the Olympics when the 1916 Summer Olympics was cancelled due to World War I. He graduated from Grinnell College in 1917 and served in the United States Navy during World War I.[5]

Track coach

Grinnell College and Sioux City High School

After his service in the Navy, Hoyt coached track at Grinnell College where he trained Morgan Taylor, the first Olympic champion from Iowa.[3] He next became the athletic director at Sioux City (Central) High School.[5][6]

University of Michigan

He was hired by the University of Michigan in 1923 as the assistant track coach and trainer of the football team.[5] In 1930, he became Michigan's head track coach. In his ten years as Michigan's head coach (1930–1939), Hoyt's Michigan track teams won 14 of a possible 20 Big Ten Conference indoor and outdoor titles, including six straight indoor championships from 1934-1939.[5][7] With Hoyt as head coach, Michigan was 40-6-0 in dual meets.[7] His Michigan athletes also won five individual NCAA championships and 63 individual Big Ten championships (27 indoor and 33 outdoor).[7] The athletes Hoyt coached at Michigan include:

  • Philip Northrup - a three-time NCAA champion and four-time All-American, in the javelin throw and pole vault, (1925–27). Northrup was inducted to the University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Fame in 2007.[8][9][10]
  • Eddie Tolan - set the world record in the 100-yard dash and won Olympic gold medals at the 1932 Summer Olympics in the 100-meter and 200-meter runs.[11][12]
  • Sam Stoller - one of two Jews on the American track team at the 1936 Berlin Olympics; controversy sparked when he was pulled from the 4 x 100 meter relay event
  • William Watson - won 12 individual Big Ten Conference championships, including three consecutive championships (1937–1939) in the long jump, discus and shot put; first African-American to win the AAU decathlon championship in 1940
  • Elmer Gedeon - tied a world record in the high hurdles in 1938; shot down and killed while piloting a B-26 bomber on a mission over France in April 1944.
  • Willis Ward - collegiate champion in the high jump, long jump, 100-yard dash, and 400-yard dash; finished second in voting for AP Big Ten Athlete of the Year in 1933; second African-American to letter in football at Michigan.
  • Bob Osgood - set a world record in the 120-yard high hurdles in May 1937; won Big Ten Conference championship in the event in both 1936 and 1937.

Yale University

In 1939, he was hired by Yale University as the school's track coach and trainer of its football team.[1] He remained track coach at Yale until 1946 when he was replaced by Robert Giegengack.[13]

Later life and honors

After leaving Yale, Hoyt lived in Woolstock, Iowa where he operated large farm holdings.[4][6] In 1948, Hoyt was selected as the referee for the 48th annual Western Conference track and field meet.[6] He was inducted into the Helms Foundation Track Hall of Fame in 1949 and the Iowa Sports Hall of Fame in 1955.[4]

See also

  • List of Michigan Wolverines football trainers

References

  1. ^ a b "Charles Hoyt Named as Yale Track Coach". Mason City Globe-Gazette (AP wire service story). 1939-03-10. 
  2. ^ a b c "Track & Field Timeline & Overview". Iowa High School Athletic Association. http://www.iahsaa.org/Track/Archives/tr_timeline_overview.pdf. 
  3. ^ a b "Up and Down the Main Stem". Des Moine Register. 1956-10-18. 
  4. ^ a b c "Grinnell Blanket for Hoyt". Des Moines Register. 1966-05-23. 
  5. ^ a b c d e Bruce Madej, Rob Toonkel, Mike Pearson, Greg Kinney (1997). Michigan: Champions of the West, p. 77. Sports Publishing LLC. ISBN 1-57167-115-3. 
  6. ^ a b c "Hoyt Named Referee of Big Nine Track Meet Here". Wisconsin State Journal. 1948-05-21. 
  7. ^ a b c "U of M Men's Track and Field". University of Michigan, Bentley Historical Library. http://bentley.umich.edu/athdept/trackmen/trackmen.htm. 
  8. ^ http://www.michtrack.org/lists/HS%20Boys%201923.pdf
  9. ^ http://www.mgoblue.com/track-field-m/article.aspx?id=60320
  10. ^ http://www.mgoblue.com/track-field-m/article.aspx?id=59470
  11. ^ Patricia Zacharias and Vivian M Baulch (2002-02-02). "Michigan Athletes have made Olympic history". The Detroit News. http://apps.detnews.com/apps/history/index.php?id=148&CFID=22343980&CFTOKEN=67607296. 
  12. ^ "Breaks Helped Tolan to Enter Olympic Games: 'Fastest Human Alive' Gets Breaks at Right Time To Reach Olympics". The Charleroix Mail. 1932-08-23.  ("There is no track in Detroit sufficiently good enough for sprinting and daily trips had to be made to Ann Harbor [sic]. There, too, he could work under Charles Hoyt and Steve Farrell, U. of M. coaches.")
  13. ^ "Named Track Coach". Lima News. 1946-12-02. 

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