Jesse Hawley (football)

Jesse Hawley (football)

Jesse B. Hawley (died 1948) was a college football coach at the University of Iowa and Dartmouth College. He was the tenth head coach in Iowa football history and led Dartmouth to the national championship in 1925.

Iowa Coaching Career

Jesse Hawley was hired by the University of Iowa as its tenth head football coach in 1910. Iowa had not won the conference title in a decade, and Hawkeye fans were hoping Hawley could turn Iowa's fortunes around. School officials also hired Nelson Kellogg in 1910 to be Iowa's athletic director. Supervision of intercollegiate athletics at Iowa had, since 1900, also been the responsibility of the head coach. Hawley, however, could focus solely on coaching the football team.

Hawley's Hawkeyes had a 5-2 record in 1910. The most notable game that season was a loss to Missouri. Before traveling to Columbia for the game, Hawley was warned not to take Archie Alexander, Iowa's talented black tackle, along for the game. Fearing troubles similar to what Carleton Holbrook, Iowa's first black football player, encountered in a game against Missouri in 1896, Hawley agreed to leave Alexander behind. When the Iowa team arrived in Columbia, a mob of local townspeople met the team to ensure that Alexander was not with them. In view of the racial incidents as well as the unsportsmanlike treatment Hawkeye players received during the game, Hawley vowed that Iowa would never again play Missouri in football as long as he was the coach. It has been longer than that. The two neighboring state universities have not met since 1910. [ Stadium Stories: Iowa Hawkeyes, by Buck Turnbull, Page 71 (ISBN 0-7627-3819-7) ]

A 1-3 start was cause for concern in 1911, but Iowa finished the year strong and had a solid 4-3 record in 1912. The biggest win of the 1912 season was a 20-7 victory over Iowa State, the last Iowa State team to win a conference title. It was also the final loss in the coaching career of Clyde Williams, a former Iowa football star.

Hawley was poised to field his best Iowa team in 1913. The 1913 Hawkeyes had a 5-2 record and easily led the nation in scoring. Only a loss to Chicago kept Iowa from the Western Conference title. However, Iowa responded the following week with a 78-6 victory over Northwestern, the team that cost Iowa a share of the Western Conference title in 1910. Iowa's 78 points is the most ever surrendered by a Wildcat team, and the 72 point loss is the second largest defeat in Northwestern school history. The Hawkeyes also defeated Cornell College 76-0 and Indiana 60-0. Iowa's 45-7 win over Iowa State was the most lopsided in series history at the time and was Iowa's first Homecoming win. [ 75 Years With The Fighting Hawkeyes, by Bert McCrane & Dick Lamb, Page 52 (ASIN: B0007E01F8) ]

Iowa defeated Northern Iowa, 95-0, to open the 1914 season under Hawley. It is the largest margin of victory in Iowa history and easily Northern Iowa's biggest loss. However, many fans were critical of Iowa's win, stating that winning 95-0 did little to prepare Iowa for the rest of the season. They may have been correct; Iowa lost consecutive conference games by 7-0 scores to knock the Hawkeyes from the conference race yet again. [ Hawkeye Legends, Lists, & Lore, by Mike Finn & Chad Leistikow (ISBN 1-57167-178-1) ]

Iowa started 3-0 in 1915, but Iowa lost the final four games of the season, and criticism of Coach Hawley mounted. Specifically, eleven of the best players in the Western Conference were Iowans playing for other member schools. Undefeated Minnesota started four Iowans, Chicago and Northwestern each started three, and the star of the 1915 Wisconsin team was an Iowan as well. Five Iowans earned all-conference honors in 1915, and only one actually played for Iowa. In addition, Hawley only coached and lived in Iowa City during the season, and many Hawkeye fans felt the program needed a "full-time" coach. As a result, Hawley resigned after the 1915 season.

Jesse Hawley had a 24-18 record at Iowa. He was a quiet, reserved coach who believed in fundamentals and attention to detail. He was also a brilliant offensive coach who guided Iowa football to some of the most lopsided wins in school history. [ 75 Years With The Fighting Hawkeyes, by Bert McCrane & Dick Lamb, Pages 55-56 (ASIN: B0007E01F8) ]

Dartmouth Coaching Career

When Hawley resigned at Iowa, he stated that he wanted to spend more time with his investment business. He was a successful investor and businessman before he arrived at Iowa. Hawley, a Dartmouth graduate, returned to Hanover and continued his business after leaving Iowa in 1915.

In 1923, Dartmouth needed a head coach, and Hawley was the man for the job. Hawley coached Dartmouth for six years. Successful in private enterprise, he volunteered his services and coached his alma mater for free.

Under Hawley, Dartmouth went 22 games without a loss from 1923-26. Hawley reached the pinnacle of success in 1925, when he led Dartmouth to an undefeated 8-0 season, for which Dartmouth claims the national championship. Other than two national titles claimed by Princeton in the 1930s under Fritz Crisler, the 1925 Dartmouth national title is the last claimed by an Ivy League school. [ [http://athletics.dartmouth.edu/sports/m-footbl/tradition.html A Championship Tradition] ]

Head coaching record

CFB Yearly Record Subhead
name = Iowa Hawkeyes
startyear = 1910
conf = Big Ten Conference
endyear = 1915
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1910
name = Iowa
overall = 5-2
conference = 1-1
confstanding = 4th
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1911
name = Iowa
overall = 3-4
conference = 2-2
confstanding = 5th
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1912
name = Iowa
overall = 4-3
conference = 1-3
confstanding = 7th
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1913
name = Iowa
overall = 5-2
conference = 2-1
confstanding = T-2nd
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1914
name = Iowa
overall = 4-3
conference = 1-2
confstanding = 7th
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1915
name = Iowa
overall = 3-4
conference = 1-2
confstanding = 7th
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 =
CFB Yearly Record Subtotal
name = Iowa
overall = 24-18
confrecord = 8-11
CFB Yearly Record Subhead
name = Dartmouth Big Green
startyear = 1923
conf = Independent
endyear = 1928
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1923
name = Dartmouth
overall = 8-1
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1924
name = Dartmouth
overall = 7-0-1
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship = national
year = 1925
name = Dartmouth
overall = 8-0
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1926
name = Dartmouth
overall = 4-4
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1927
name = Dartmouth
overall = 7-1
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1928
name = Dartmouth
overall = 5-4
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 =
CFB Yearly Record Subtotal
name = Dartmouth
overall = 39-10-1
confrecord =
CFB Yearly Record End
overall = 63-28-1 (.690)
bcs =
poll = two
polltype =

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Jesse Hawley (American football) — Jesse Hawley Hawley at Dartmouth, c. 1908 Sport(s) Football Biographical details Born March 25, 1887(1887 03 25) …   Wikipedia

  • Jesse Hawley — may refer to: Jesse Hawley (merchant) (fl. early 19th century), American entrepreneur activist Jesse Hawley (American football) (1887–1946), American football coach This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same personal name.… …   Wikipedia

  • Hawley — may refer to:People* Abiah Hawley (1690 1716), Trumbull, grandmother of Abigail Wolcott wife to Chief Justice Oliver Ellsworth, a framer of the U.S. Constitution * Alan R. Hawley * Brian Hawley (actor), an actor who played an ape in… …   Wikipedia

  • History of Iowa Hawkeyes football — 19th century – Origins of Iowa football = Football was first played as a club sport at Iowa in 1872, with intramural games against other colleges played as early as 1882. But it was in 1889 that the University of Iowa first officially recognized… …   Wikipedia

  • Dartmouth Big Green football — Dartmouth Big Green First season 1881 …   Wikipedia

  • Howard Jones (football coach) — Howard Harding Jones (August 23 1885 July 27 1941) was an American college football coach at Syracuse (1908), Yale (1909, 1913), Ohio State (1910), Iowa (1916 23), Duke (1924), and Southern California (1925 40).BackgroundBorn in Excello, Ohio… …   Wikipedia

  • College football national championships in NCAA Division I FBS — National championships in NCAA Division I FBS Current System BCS (since 1998) National Championship Trophies AFCA (since 1986), AP (since 1936), MacArthur (since 1959), Grantland Rice (since 1954) Longest Continuous Selector …   Wikipedia

  • Eddie Anderson (American football coach) — Eddie Anderson Sport(s) Football, basketball Biographical details Born November 11, 1900(19 …   Wikipedia

  • Championnat NCAA De Football Américain — NCAA Division I A national football bowl subdivision Création 1869 Organisateur( …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Championnat NCAA de football americain — Championnat NCAA de football américain NCAA Division I A national football bowl subdivision Création 1869 Organisateur( …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”