- Charley Bowser
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Charley Bowser Sport(s) Football Biographical details Born November 29, 1898 Place of birth Ligonier, Pennsylvania Died July 30, 1989 (aged 90) Place of death Royal Oak, Michigan Playing career 1922 Pittsburgh Position(s) End, back, tackle, center Coaching career (HC unless noted) 1923?
1924–1926
1927–1929
1930–1934
1935–1937
1939–1942Grove City (asst.)
Grove City
Pittsburgh (asst.)
Bowdoin
Pittsburgh (asst.)
PittsburghHead coaching record Overall 14–20–1 Statistics College Football Data Warehouse Charles W. Bowser (November 29, 1898 – July 30, 1989)[1] was an American football coach. He served as the head coach of the University of Pittsburgh from 1939 to 1942 and amassed a combined record of 14–20–1.[2]
Contents
Early life
Bowser was born in Ligonier, Pennsylvania and attended Johnstown High School, where he played football. He left high school as a senior, in April 1918, in order to enlist in the Army. From May 1918 to April 1919, he served overseas in the Ambulance Corps.[3]
In 1919, Bowser enrolled at the University of Pittsburgh. That season, he played on the freshman football team under freshman coach Andy Kerr. The following year, he joined the varsity team under head coach Pop Warner, and played at end, quarterback, tackle, and center.[3] Bowser earned a varsity letter in 1922.[4] He studied business administration and was a member of the Beta Gamma Sigma and Omicron Delta Kappa honor societies.[3]
Coaching career
Upon graduation from Pittsburgh, Bowser served as an assistant at Grove City College under Guy "Chalky" Williamson. After the 1923 season, Williamson left for the Pittsburgh football staff, and Bowser took over as Grove City head coach. The Grove City Crimson went 3–5–1 in his first season, but improved in the next two years. In 1925, they posted a 7–1 record, with the sole loss coming against West Virginia. The next season, Grove City finished with a perfect 7–0 mark, including a 3–0 victory against Bo McMillin's Geneva College which defeated Harvard.[3]
In 1927, Bowser returned to Pittsburgh, to aid head coach Jock Sutherland as the ends, backs, and centers mentor. In 1930, Bowser took over as the head coach of Bowdoin College, a post he held through 1934. He was replaced by Adam Walsh, former captain of the "Four Horsemen" at Notre Dame. Bowser then became assistant at Pitt again in 1935, and in 1937, he was promoted to the chief assistant position.[3]
After that season, he left the coaching ranks to work as an insurance agent in Pittsburgh.[5] In 1939, Bowser returned to Pittsburgh as its head coach, and served in that position through the 1942 season. He resigned his post in January 1943 to take a commission in the United States Navy during World War II.[6] He was replaced by T formation innovator Clark Shaughnessy.[6]
References
- ^ Ex-Pitt Coach Bowser Passes Away, Beaver County Times, July 30, 1989.
- ^ Charles W. Bowser, College Football Data Warehouse, retrieved August 17, 2010.
- ^ a b c d e New Panther Coach Has Varied Career in Athletics, The Pittsburgh Press, March 21, 1939.
- ^ 2010 Pitt Football Media Guide (PDF), p. 178, University of Pittsburgh, 2010.
- ^ Bowser Hopes Shaughnessy Has Winner, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, January 26, 1943.
External links
Bowdoin Polar Bears head football coaches Unknown (1889–1890) • Pearl T. Haskell (1891) • Frank N. Whittier (1892–1893) • Warren R. Smith (1894) • William C. Mackie (1895) • William Hoag (1896) • Prescott Warren (1897) • William M. Richards (1898) • Fred Crolius (1899) • James G. Lathrop (1900) • Unknown (1901) • John O'Connor (1902–1903) • Roscoe P. McClave (1904–1909) • Frank Bergin (1910–1912) • Thomas McCann (1913–1914) • Thomas Campbell (1915) • Albert J. Weatherhead, Jr. (1916) • Unknown (1917) • John J. Magee (1918) • Roger A. Greene (1919–1920) • Frederick V. Ostergren (1921–1924) • John M. Cates (1925–1926) • Malcolm E. Morrell (1927–1929) • Charley Bowser (1930–1934) • George D. Shay (1935–1942) • No team (1943–1945) • Adam Walsh (1947–1958) • C. Nelson Corey (1959–1964) • Peter Kostacopoulos (1965–1967) • James S. Lentz (1968–1983) • Howard S. Vandersea (1984–1999) • David C. Caputi (2000–)
Pittsburgh Panthers head football coaches No coach (1890–1892) • Anson Harrold (1893) • No coach (1894) • J. P. Linn (1895) • George W. Hoskins (1896) • Thomas Trenchard (1897) • Frederick A. Robinson (1898–1899) • Roy Jackson (1900) • Wilbur Hockensmith (1901) • Fred Crolius (1902) • Arthur Mosse (1903–1905) • Edgar Wingard (1906) • John A. Moorehead (1907–1908) • Joseph H. Thompson (1909–1912) • Joseph Duff (1913–1914) • Pop Warner (1915–1923) • Jock Sutherland (1924–1938) • Charley Bowser (1939–1942) • Clark Shaughnessy (1943–1945) • Wes Fesler (1946) • Mike Milligan (1947–1949) • Len Casanova (1950) • Tom Hamilton (1951) • Red Dawson (1952–1954) • Tom Hamilton (1954) • John Michelosen (1955–1965) • David Hart (1966–1968) • Carl DePasqua (1969–1972) • Johnny Majors (1973–1976) • Jackie Sherrill (1977–1981) • Foge Fazio (1982–1985) • Mike Gottfried (1986–1989) • Paul Hackett (1989–1992) • Sal Sunseri # (1992) • Johnny Majors (1993–1996) • Walt Harris (1997–2004) • Dave Wannstedt (2005–2010) • Phil Bennett # (2010) • Todd Graham (2011– )
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.Categories:- 1890s births
- American military personnel of World War I
- American military personnel of World War II
- United States Navy officers
- American insurance businesspeople
- Pittsburgh Panthers football coaches
- Pittsburgh Panthers football players
- United States Army soldiers
- Bowdoin Polar Bears football coaches
- Grove City Wolverines football coaches
- 1989 deaths
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