H. V. Porter

H. V. Porter

H. V. Porter (October 2, 1891-October 27, 1975), born Henry Van Arsdale Porter, was an athletic administrator, inventor, and coach. He served at the top of his profession for almost 30 years and was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1960. Yet in spite of all his practical contributions, his lasting legacy to the world of sport was the result of a simple essay he wrote in 1939 entitled “March Madness.”

Biography

Porter was born in Manito, Illinois and grew up on a farm near Washington. After attending the Illinois State Normal University, he taught at high schools in Mount Zion, Keithsburg, and Delavan. From 1919 to 1928 he served as principal of Athens High School. Here he also achieved success as a basketball coach, with his team finishing second in the state in 1924.

In 1928, Porter was hired as assistant manager of the Illinois High School Association, where his career blossomed. Among his first orders of business were to organize a department to license and train officials in football, basketball, and baseball, and to serve as editor of a new monthly magazine, the "Illinois High School Athlete." He also set about developing new state tournament series in tennis, golf, swimming, and wrestling.

Porter's boss at the Illinois High School Association, Charles W. Whitten, was also the general manager of the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS), and he actively involved his assistant in national matters. Within a short time, Porter was a member of several influential committees. As a member of the National Basketball Committee, Porter helped develop the fan-shaped backboard that was used at the high school level from the 1930s through the 1990s and the molded basketball that, free of the laces that made dribbling difficult, revolutionized the game. Porter also spearheaded the effort to write basketball and football rule books specifically for high school competition.

As editor of the IHSA's magazine Porter showed a particular flair for prose and verse. Nearly every edition contained a new Porter composition. In 1939, near the end of his tenure at the Association, he penned an affectionate essay about fans of the state's high school basketball tournament, which during the 1930s had grown into a statewide cultural icon. "When the March madness is on him," Porter wrote, "midnight jaunts of a hundred miles on successive nights make him even more alert the next day."

Soon afterward Porter left the IHSA to become the executive secretary of the National Federation of State High School Associations, but in 1942 he had time to make one last literary contribution to the IHSA's magazine. That piece, a poem entitled "Basketball Ides of March," ends with the final stanza:

With war nerves tense, the final defense Is the courage, strength and will In a million lives where freedom thrives And liberty lingers still. Now eagles fly and heroes die Beneath some foreign arch Let their sons tread where hate is dead In a happy Madness of March.
Porter retired from the NFHS in 1958 and moved to St. Petersburg, Florida, where he died in 1975.

External links

* [http://www.marchmadness.org/history.htm History of March Madness]
* [http://www.hoophall.com/halloffamers/bhof-henry-porter.html Basketball Hall of Fame]

Additional Reading

* Porter, H. V. "H. V.'s Athletic Anthology: Highlights of Gridiron, Track, and Court in Verse and Prose" (n.p.: 1939).
* Whitten, Charles W. "Interscholastics: A Discussion of Interscholastic Contests" (Chicago, 1950).


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