- Arthur B. McBride
Arthur B. "Mickey" McBride (
20 March 1888 -10 November 1972 ) was the founder of theCleveland Browns professional football team. McBride was a wealthy businessman who made a fortune investing in and operating real estate holdings in Chicago, Cleveland and Florida, in taxicab companies in Cleveland, Akron and Canton, Ohio, in a printing company, and in a horse-racing news wire syndicate, before taking an interest in the fledgling sport of professional football.McBride became a rabid football fan in 1940 after taking in a college football game at the University of Notre Dame where McBride's son was a student. After
Dan Reeves rejected his 1942 offer to buy theNFL 'sCleveland Rams , in 1944 McBride purchased the Cleveland franchise inArch Ward 's newly createdAll-America Football Conference . [cite book
author=William Levy
chapter=
title=Return to Glory: The Story of the Cleveland Browns
editor=
publisher=The World Publishing Co.
id=LCCN 65023356
year=1965| pages=pp.39-47] McBride aggressively promoted his new team and spared no expense. He hiredPaul Brown when Brown was still coaching at the Great Lakes Naval Training Station during World War II, paying Brown $20,000 per year plus 15% of the profits, plus $1,000 per month until the end of the war.McBride contributed to the lexicon of football with the term "
taxi squad ." Browns' players who were not on the active roster, due to injury or other reason, were temporarily put on the McBride's payroll as taxi drivers.McBride left the football side of the team to Brown and handled the business end himself. Under Coach Brown, McBride's Browns were a great success. After the AAFC's demise McBride's Browns, the
San Francisco 49ers and the original Baltimore Colts joined the NFL in 1950. McBride sold his controlling interest in the team in June 1953 for $600,000 to a group headed by David Jones which included Ellis Ryan, an insurance man and former president of theCleveland Indians , Saul Silberman, owner of Randall Park Racetrack (now known asThistledown ) and Homer Marshman, the attorney who'd founded the Cleveland Rams. The price tag was twice as large as that brought by any other pro football team up until that time. [Levy, op cit, p. 117-118.]Aside from football, some believed McBride's horse racing syndicate venture was not entirely above-board. In January 1951, McBride testified in nationally televised hearings before the Senate Crime Investigating Committee, which questioned his Continental Press Service, a nationwide distributor of horse racing news, about his alleged ties to organized crime and participation in illegal gambling. McBride denied the connections, claimed he never broke the law, and was never charged with any crime. Congress later passed legislation making such wire services illegal. [Levy, op cit, p. 103.]
McBride was married to the former Mary Jane Kane. They had 3 children: Arthur B., Jr., Edward, and Jane. McBride died in Cleveland and was buried in Cleveland's Holy Cross Cemetery.
References
External links
* [http://ech.case.edu/ech-cgi/article.pl?id=MABM Encyclopedia of Cleveland History]
* [http://images.ulib.csuohio.edu/cdm4/item_viewer.php?CISOROOT=/irish&CISOPTR=219&REC=20.pl?id=MABM Cleveland Memory Photo Collection]
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