John William Heisman

Home > ... > People > Sports and Games > Sports: Biographies > ...

John William Heisman

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

John William Heisman , 1869-1936, American football coach, b. Cleveland. He studied and played football at Brown (1887-89) and the Univ. of Pennsylvania (1890-91). He coached football for 36 years from 1892-1927, most memorably at Auburn (1895-99), Georgia Tech (1904-19), and Rice (1924-27). At Georgia Tech his teams played 33 games without a defeat, and his squad was victorious in the record setting 222-0 victory over Cumberland in 1916. From 1927 until his death, Heisman was athletic director of the Downtown Athletic Club in New York City. The trophy presented annually since 1935 by that club to the most outstanding college football player in the nation was named (1936) in his memory.

Hide all research tools
Print this article Print all entries for this topic Cite this article Link to this article
Link to this article

CloseClose

Create a link to this page

Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:

<a href="http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/.aspx#1E1-Heisman" title="Facts and information about John William Heisman">John William Heisman</a>

Add this article to Del.icio.usBookmark this article on DiigoShare this article on FacebookSubmit this article to RedditGive this article a thumbs-up on StumbleUpon
Show all research tools

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"John William Heisman." The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. 27 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"John William Heisman." The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. (November 27, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-Heisman.html

"John William Heisman." The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Retrieved November 27, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-Heisman.html

Learn more about citation styles

Heisman, John William

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2005 | Copyright 2005 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

John William Heisman

John William Heisman (18691936) was the football coach at Georgia Technical University (Georgia Tech) from 1904 until 1919. His teams played 33 games without a defeat including its record-setting win of 222-0 over Cumberland College in 1916. His career in college football lasted 36 years and marked some of the most significant changes in the sport's history.

Born to College Football

John William Heisman was born Johann Wilhelm Heisman, on October 23, 1869, at 183 Bridge Avenue in Cleveland, Ohio, two weeks to the day before the first official intercollegiate football game was played on November 6, between Rutgers and Princeton, both in New Jersey. His parents were Johann "Michael" Heisman and Sarah Lehr Heisman, both German immigrants to America not long before Heisman's birth. The senior Heisman was actually the son of the Baron von Bogart, German nobility, who lost his inheritance and his family when he decided to marry for love instead of title. Heisman's mother's grandfather, the Mater of Knauge, had been an aide to Napoleon, but was not titled. The two young lovers married and took the bride's maiden name of Heisman. By the age of seven, Heisman moved with his family to Titusville, Pennsylvania, at the center of oil country, where his father would practice his trade as a cooper, or barrel maker. The business supplied barrels to such notables as John D. Rockefeller for his Standard Oil company and prospered quickly to approximately 35 employees. In 1890, the senior Heisman sold out his business and returned to Cleveland. Heisman grew up in a comfortable home, beginning his own love affair with the game of football as a player for Titusville High School.

Heisman first enrolled at Brown University in 1887, where he was active in athletics, especially baseball and football though the school had dropped intercollegiate play until 1889 so his play was limited to a club team within the university. By the time Brown was playing intercollegiately again, Heisman had already transferred to the University of Pennsylvania with the intention of getting a law degree. Throughout the completion of his law studies Heisman continued to play football for the school in that era when transfer restrictions did not exist. In a profile of Heisman included in John T. Brady's book, The Heisman, a Symbol of Excellence, writer Gene Griessman wrote an autobiographical chapter on Heisman. He discussed the events surrounding the decision that would change the course of Heisman's life. "There was a Penn player named Pop Thayer, whom Heisman claimed could punt a football 75 yards. Once, when Penn was playing Rutgers in Madison Square Garden, Thayer kicked a ball so high it broke a chandelier in the Garden's arched roof. A later event at the Garden changed Heisman's career forever. According to his widow, during Penn's game with Princeton, which also was played in the Garden, the galvanic lighting system somehow injured Heisman's eyes. The team's physician, Edward Jackson, told Heisman that he needed to rest his eyes for two years." With that pronouncement, Heisman returned to Ohio in 1892 and accepted the job as Oberlin College's first football coach instead of beginning the practice of law.

Began an Illustrious Career

Oberlin was located just about 20 miles southwest of Cleveland, and was already well-known for its academic excellence, especially in the liberal arts. In addition to joining the football staff, Heisman enrolled in a postgraduate course in art and also played on the football teama practice, noted Griessman, that was legal at the time. The first team emerged undefeated that season and allowed only 30 points to its own 262 points. In an article for Campus Life, of Georgia Tech, Pat Edwards wrote in the fall of 1997, that during those early coaching years in Ohio, something else happened that was worth noting. "With John's career change to coaching, John's father made up for missing his son's high school and college games by attending the game between Oberlin and Western in 1892. At that game the elder Heisman, coming first to see what his son would give up a law practice for, and alter to support a team he saw as an underdog, began to pace up and down the Western sidelines offering $100 bills as bets in favor of Oberlin," noted Edwards. "The elder Heisman made money that day; Oberlin beat Western 388."

In a review of Nat Brandt's book, When Oberlin Was King of the Gridiron: The Heisman Years, Kevin Kern of the University of Akron noted that it was the author's claim that at Oberlin Heisman began to "revolutionize American football more than almost anyone else in those early years. Heisman's basic innovations and contributions to the college sport (and some that would be translated to the professional play of the game), included displaying downs and yards on the scoreboard, using both guards as blockers for the runner, drawing up a pre-set series of plays to start a game, sending signals in from the sideline, the long count, snapping the ball directly to the quarterback, and, even being the first to use the word "hike" in calling the plays. One move known as the "hidden-ball trick" was later declared illegal. In feats that would be impossible to fathom by mid-twentieth century, Oberlin would beat future power-houses such as Ohio State and Illinois. In 1892, Oberlin defeated Ohio State twice under Heisman's leadership both times keeping Ohio State scoreless. Other than a year Heisman spent at Buchtel College (later known as the University of Akron) in 189394, during which season the Akron team managed to beat Ohio State 126, he stayed with Oberlin until 1895. The coach received no regular salary for his job there but received between $400 and $500 when a hat was passed to collect money for him. At Akron, his salary was $750, though the faculty of that college was not very supportive of the sport.

According to Griessman, the attitude of the Akron faculty might have been influenced by the significant differences of the football game then compared to the way the game would come to be known by the end of the twentieth century. Citing those differences, he noted that, "When a team got the ball, it would form a wedge to shield the man carrying the ball and come galloping down the center of the field. Tackling was not allowed below the knees. No forward passes were allowed, substitutions were rare, and if a man was taken out, he could not return to the game. Serous injuries were more common, and the number of deaths was increasing at a troubling rate, as more and more men took up the sport. However, Buchtel was required to play football to qualify for membership in the Ohio Intercollegiate Athletic Association, so the football team was more or less tolerated as a necessary evil."

Heisman left Oberlin for Auburn University, then known as Alabama Polytechnic Institute, where he stayed for five years. Though Heisman followed three previous football coaches at Auburn, he became the school's first full-time head coach. His record during that time was one of 12 wins, 4 losses, and 2 ties. In 1971 Auburn became the only school where Heisman had coached to have any players win the Heisman Trophy: Pat Sullivan won it in 1971 and Bo Jackson, in 1985.

Heisman was coaching at Auburn when he observed what would come to be known as a "forward pass" for the first time. Technically, the play was illegal. During a game between Georgia and North Carolina in 1895, as Griessman described it, "Toward the end of the game, North Carolina, with its back to the goal, was forced to punt. The fullback retreated until the crossbar of his goal was just above his head. Georgia rushed him mercilessly, and in desperation, he lobbed the ball forward to one of his teammates, who caught it and ran for a touchdown." Though Georgia's coach, Pop Warner, disagreed with the decision, the referee held fast to the opinion that the fullback could have fumbled the ball, allowing the touchdown to count. Heisman realized almost immediately that such a pass could open up the field during a game, and wrote to Walter Camp who was then the chair of the rules committee, petitioning him to make it legal. After years of campaigning, and due to the rise of public opinion against football due to the compounding of serious injuries and death, Camp and his committee finally relented. In 1906 the forward pass was confirmed as a legal play in the game of football. In his later years writing for Collier's, a popular American magazine, especially during the 1920s and 1930s, Heisman recalled that with the change that one play brought, "American football had come over the line which divides the modern game from the old. Whether it was my contribution to football or Camp's is, perhaps, immaterial. Football had been saved from itself."

Auburn's team lost only once during the 1896 season, and that was to Georgia, the team that Heisman would eventually lead after he left Auburn. When the rematch on Thanksgiving Day 1897 had to be canceled due to the death of one of Georgia's key players, Auburn had to cancel the rest of the season due to the grave financial losses suffered from that one change. The next year's team was small but worthy with an average weight of 148 pounds. Still, the team racked up a season of two wins against Georgia Tech and Georgia and a loss to North Carolina. Heisman maintained throughout his life that his stay at Auburn was highlighted by never having a team there he "did not love," quoted Griessman, nor with whom he had any quarrels. He remained friends with all of his players.

From Auburn, Heisman went to Texas briefly to raise tomatoes, investing nearly all of his money. When Walter Riggs, the Clemson University professor, and later its president, founded the school's first football team in 1895, he also served as head coach for the team in 1896 and in 1899. Riggs had played under Heisman at Auburn and urged him out of the tomato fields back into football at Clemson. When he coached at Clemson for the 1901 through 1904 seasons, Heisman enjoyed a 19-3-2 record. His 1900 team had a 60 season, the first undefeated season in its history. His players tended to be light but full of speed. His plays were written to make the best of that fact. Griessman noted "he would throw five men into a sweep ahead of the man with the ball, a play subsequently copied widely, but Heisman seem to have originated." One of his best-known tactics was that of using a player in one position for more than simply that one position.

Heisman continued to enjoy dabbling in the theater during his Clemson days and while doing so met his first wife, a widow named Evelyn McCollum Cox who was an actress in a summer stock company. She had one son, Carlisle, who would stay close to Heisman long after his mother and the coach were to divorce. Heisman and Cox married in 1903 when Carlisle was 12. Georgia Tech, whose team Clemson had defeated by 730 in the last game of the season, offered Heisman the position as head coach beginning with the 1904 season. The day after the offer had officially expired, he accepted the post at a salary of $2,250 per year, plus 30 percent of net receipts to coach its athletic teams. Heisman and his new family moved to Atlanta where he would coach the best games of his career and stay through 17 football seasons. It was Heisman's 1916 team that entered the Guinness Book of World Records, as it beat the once-powerful southern team of Cumberland College with a score of 2220. By 1918 Heisman and his wife had mutually agreed to a divorce, and he decided that he wanted to prevent any social embarrassment by letting Evelyn choose where she wanted to live, and then he would choose another. When she decided to stay in Atlanta Heisman accepted a job as the head coach at his alma mater, the University of Pennsylvania.

Heisman stayed there for three seasons. He followed that with positions at Washington and Jefferson College in Washington, Pennsylvania, known at the time to be a serious football contender, having played in the Tournament of Roses game in 1921. When he refused to remove a black player for a scheduled game with Washington and Lee College in Virginia, that team backed out of the game. In 1924, he was married a second time, this time to Edith Maora Cole, who had been a student at Buchtel College while Heisman coached at the school. They had been sweethearts but decided not to marry due to Edith's bout with tuberculosis. They met again during the years following his divorce and married. Shortly after that, Heisman took what would be his last coaching position with Rice University in Houston, Texas. His agreement was to be in residence during spring training and for the football season, making him available for a sporting goods business in which he was involved in New York City. He was granted a five-year contract and a salary of $9,000a cut for him from Washington and Jefferson, but $1,500 higher than the highest paid faculty member. But with the two initial seasons bringing disappointing results, Heisman resigned after a third even more disastrous season. Heisman left college football coaching behind him and headed back to New York.

Final Years

Heisman became the man chosen by a recruiting committee to become the first athletic director of New York's Downtown Athletic Club (DAC), a name that would become synonymous with athletic excellence, particularly in football. In 1933 Heisman helped to organized the first Touchdown Club of New York and, in 1935, inaugurated the first Downtown Athletic Club trophy for the best college football player east of the Mississippi. On December 10, 1936, just over two months after his death on October 3, 1936, in New York City, the trophy was re-named the "Heisman Memorial Trophy," in his honor.

During the years following his coaching career, while at DAC, Heisman wrote and published a book, The Principles of Football, wrote magazine columns for various popular magazines, and was at work on another book at the time of his death. Heisman was buried in Rhinelander, Wisconsin, his wife's hometown.

Books

Brady, John T., The Heisman, A Symbol of Excellence, Atheneum, 1984.

Periodicals

New York Times, October 4, 1936.

Online

"A Brief History of the Heisman Memorial Trophy," Heisman.com website, http://www.heisman.com (January 22, 2004).

Carney, Jim, "Heisman Trophy namesake coached at Buchtel College," Ohio.com website, http://www.ohio.com (January 22, 2004).

"College Football History," College Football History website, http://www.collegefootballhistory.com (January 22, 2004).

"Creating the Big Game, John W. Heisman and the Invention of American Football," Greenwood Publishing Group website, http://info.greenwood.com (January 22, 2004).

"Heisman, John W., Football," HickokSports.com website, http://www.hickoksports.com (January 22, 2004).

"Heisman Led Jackets to Victory," Campus Life, Georgia Tech website, http://cyberbuzz.gatech.edu (January 22, 2004).

"John Heisman," College Football Hall of Fame website, http://www.collegefootball.org (January 22, 2004).

"John Heisman," Find a Grave website, http://www.findagrave.com (January 22, 2004).

"John Heisman at Auburn," Rocky Mountain Auburn Club website, http://www.coloradotigers.com (January 22, 2004).

"John Heisman, Profile," Fans only, Clemson University, http://www.fansonly.com (January 22, 2004).

"John William Heisman, Sports, Biographies," AllRefer.com reference website, http://reference.allrefer.com (January 22, 2004).

Pees, Samuel T., "John Heisman, Football Coach," Oil History website, http://www.oilhistory.com (January 22, 2004).

"Principles of Football," Hill Street Press website, http://www.hillstreetpress.com (January 22, 2004).

"When Oberlin was King of the Gridiron: The Heisman Years," book review, Northeast Ohio Journal of History (University of Akron, OH) website, http://www2.uakron.edu/nojh (January 22, 2004).

Hide all research tools
Print this article Print all entries for this topic Cite this article Link to this article
Link to this article

CloseClose

Create a link to this page

Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:

<a href="http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/.aspx#1G2-3435000087" title="Facts and information about John William Heisman">John William Heisman</a>

Add this article to Del.icio.usBookmark this article on DiigoShare this article on FacebookSubmit this article to RedditGive this article a thumbs-up on StumbleUpon
Show all research tools

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Heisman, John William." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. 27 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Heisman, John William." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. (November 27, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3435000087.html

"Heisman, John William." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2005. Retrieved November 27, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3435000087.html

Learn more about citation styles

Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article Missing the game.(self-esteem and work ethic)(Brief Article)(Column)
Magazine article from: The Christian Century; 4/18/2001
Free Article Churchill High School.(Schools)
Newspaper article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR); 6/2/2003
Free Article Cooper, Holtz, Aikman head Hall of Fame class
News Wire article from: AP Online; 7/18/2009

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, and more

Heisman Trophy Gets Permanent Home
News Wire article from: AP Online; 4/13/2005; ; 499 words ; ...2005 Dateline: NEW YORK The Heisman Trophy, homeless since the...s a good match," said William Dockery, president of the Heisman Trophy Trust. "We've been...Downtown athletic director John Heisman, first was awarded in 1935...
Heisman and its winners.(SPORTS)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times; 9/26/2004; 700+ words ; ...sports fan recognizes the Heisman, awarded annually since...sense of the reach of the Heisman." It is ironic, therefore...named. Legendary coach John Heisman became athletic director...Nevertheless, a member named William Prince pushed the idea...
Planned NYC Museum to House Heisman Trophy
News Wire article from: AP Online; 4/13/2005; ; 500 words ; ...2005 Dateline: NEW YORK The Heisman Trophy, homeless since the...s a good match," said William Dockery, president of the Heisman Trophy Trust. "We've been...Downtown athletic director John Heisman, first was awarded in 1935...
Heisman hype: we're back again to tout the contenders for college football's biggest award, starting with Tennessee QB Casey Clausen.
Magazine article from: Football Digest; 10/1/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...frivolity that is; the Heisman Trophy race, let us...halfback, won the inaugural Heisman Trophy in 1935. Back...changed ill 1936 to the John W. Heisman Memorial Trophy, in...this is his taunt) William Shakespeare of Notre...
HEISMAN HYPE SELDOM TRANSLATES LATER IN NFL.(Sports)(Column)
Newspaper article from: Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO); 12/12/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...Eliscu, and all the Heisman sentiment that followed...only Staubach won the Heisman. Soon-to-be Hall of Famer John Elway, for example...The trouble with the Heisman is there are no real...life-size poster of William Perry. Originally...
HEISMAN: IT'S A GRAVE BUSINESS.(Sports)
Newspaper article from: Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Seattle, WA); 12/10/1999; 548 words ; ...Dayne, it would just be a normal Heisman Trophy year,'' Winquist said...simple marker, which reads ``John William Heisman 1869-1936.'' ``My dad always...Marshall's Chad Pennington. John Heisman coached Georgia Tech to...
Heisman's home being tackled by money troubles Downtown Athletic Club in bankruptcy court
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 4/18/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...doesn't involve the Heisman Trophy," said Richard...partner in 18 West. "The Heisman Trophy stays with them...The club's director, William J. Dockery, says nothing...honor is at stake. The Heisman Trophy, named for the...director, former coach John Heisman, has been awarded...
Spin the black circle ; MU using View-Master to push Daniel for Heisman.
Newspaper article from: Columbia Daily Tribune; 9/12/2008; ; 700+ words ; When it comes to Heisman Trophy campaigns, the...promoting candidates," said John Bianco, Texas' assistant...Square. Nor did he send Heisman voters a bobblehead doll...Chase Daniel: Play the Heisman race straight or go gimmicky...candidates, like safety William Moore and receiver Jeremy...
CULPEPPER'S HEISMAN HOPES NOT LACKING FOR DIRECTION.(Sports)
Newspaper article from: Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO); 9/20/1998; 700+ words ; ...assignment. Culpepper, a Heisman Trophy candidate, was...Culpepper's run for the Heisman. It has thrust UCF into...Said Culpepper: ``John has made my life so much...Marini, Culpepper's Heisman campaign began when he...Central Florida. By William Maslin / Associated Press...
Running to Heisman glory
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 10/10/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...10-2008 Running to Heisman glory -- 'The Express...Fleder. Produced by John Davis. Written by Charles...Morgenthau. Edited by William Steinkamp and Padraic...American to win the Heisman Trophy, in 1961. Davis...season Davis won the Heisman), the movie shows him...
Click to see an enlarged picture
John William Heisman. Other (Public Domain)

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Popular on Newser:

Web Goes Wild for Risqué Bride

(11/26/2009 5:08:01 PM)

Shaq Foots Bill for Shaniya's Funeral

(11/26/2009 4:20:01 PM)

Gabby Katie Ruins New Moon for Fans

(11/26/2009 7:30:00 PM)

Banish Men From Childbirth: Doc

(11/26/2009 8:41:05 PM)

NYC Man Jumps to His Death—In Front of Kids

(11/26/2009 2:33:01 PM)