Arnold Horween Explained

Arnold Horween
Birth Date:7 July 1898
Birth Place:Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Death Place:Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Position1:Fullback, halfback, quarterback
Height Ft:5
Height In:11.5
Weight Lb:206
College:Harvard
High School:Francis W. Parker
Coaching Years1:1923–1924
Coaching Team1:Chicago Cardinals
Coaching Years2:1926–1930
Coaching Team2:Harvard
Playing Years1:1921
Playing Team1:Racine Cardinals
Playing Years2:1921–1924
Playing Team2:Chicago Cardinals
Career Highlights:
Databasefootball:HORWEARN01
Coachpfr:HorwAr0
Module:
Embed:yes
Allegiance: United States
Branch: U.S. Navy
Serviceyears:1917–19
Rank: Lieutenant
Battles:World War I

Arnold Horween (originally Arnold Horwitz; also known as A. McMahon; July 7, 1898 – August 5, 1985) was an American college and professional American football player and coach. He played and coached both for Harvard University and in the National Football League (NFL).

Horween played left halfback, right halfback, fullback, and center for the unbeaten Harvard Crimson football teams of 1919, which won the 1920 Rose Bowl, and 1920. He was voted an All-American.

Horween also played four seasons in the NFL, as a fullback, halfback, and blocking back (quarterback) for the Racine Cardinals and the Chicago Cardinals. He was a player-coach for the Cardinals. Later, he was Harvard's head football coach, from 1925 to 1930.

His brother Ralph Horween was also an All-American football player for Harvard, and also played and coached in the NFL for the Cardinals. They were the last Jewish brothers to play in the NFL until Geoff Schwartz and Mitchell Schwartz, in the 2000s. After retiring from football, Horween and his brother inherited and ran the family leather tannery business, Horween Leather Company.

Early and personal life

Horween's parents, Isidore and Rose (Rabinoff), immigrated to Chicago from Ukraine in the Russian Empire in 1892.[1] [2] [3] During his youth the family changed its name to Horween from its original name, which was either Horwitz or Horowitz.[4] [5] [6] [7]

Horween was Jewish, and was born in Chicago, Illinois.[7] [8] He was the brother of Ralph Horween, who was two years older.[9] They were the last Jewish brothers to play in the NFL until offensive tackles Geoff Schwartz and Mitchell Schwartz in the 2000s.[10] [11]

He played high school football at center and fullback for four years at Francis W. Parker School. He was captain of the football team in his senior year.[12]

Horween was 5' 11.5" (1.82 m), and weighed 206 pounds (93 kg).[13] [14] In 1928, he married Marion Eisendrath, daughter of leather tycoon William Eisendrath.[15]

College and Navy career

Horween followed his older brother to Harvard University, where they played together on the Harvard Crimson football team, in 1916.[9] In his freshman year, he played both football (as a fullback) and baseball (as a pitcher), and was a member of the track team as a shotputter.[13] [12] [9]

The next year, he enlisted in the United States Navy during World War I, in April 1917.[9] [16] [17] He was promoted to ensign in October 1917, eventually reaching the rank of lieutenant. He served on a destroyer in the Atlantic and was discharged in 1919, when he returned to Harvard.[9]

Horween played left halfback, right halfback, fullback, and center for the Harvard Crimson, and was a First-team All-American, from 1919 to 1920.[12] [18] [19] [20] In both 1919 and 1920 Harvard was undefeated (9–0–1 and 8–0–1, respectively).[19] [21] In 1919, Donald Grant Herring ranked him the Second-team fullback on the Princeton-Yale-Harvard composite team.[22]

Horween was unanimously elected the Harvard Crimson's first Jewish captain in 1920.[13] [12] [8] [18] [19] That year, he kicked a 42yd field goal against Yale in a 9–0 victory, and a 37yd field goal against the Centre Colonels.[9] He was part of the unbeaten 1919 team that won the 1920 Rose Bowl against the Oregon, 7–6, as he kicked the extra point that decided the game, and Harvard relied in part on his running game.[21] [23] [24] It remains the only bowl game appearance in Harvard history.[25]

The New York Times wrote: "The way he smashed through the line was considerable... there were even some protests that this dark-haired, sturdily built Crimson fullback was a little too rough."[21]

In 1920 he was chosen Walter Camp third-team All-American and selected by a number of newspapers to the All-America first-team.[21] He graduated from Harvard in 1921.[26]

NFL career

Horween played fullback, tailback, and blocking back (quarterback) in the National Football League for four years, in 32 games, for the Racine Cardinals (in the American Professional Football Association, the predecessor to the NFL) in 1921 and the Chicago Cardinals (as the Cardinals changed their name) from 1922 to 1924.[14] [21] [27] He was a player–coach for the Cardinals from 1923 to 1924.[21]

In 1922–23, Horween appeared in all 11 games and scored 4 rushing touchdowns as the Cardinals were 8–3–0. In 1923–24, the team was 8–4–0.[21] On October 7, 1923, he and his brother both scored in the same game, as he kicked two extra points and his brother ran for a touchdown as the Cardinals beat the Rochester Jeffersons 60–0 at Normal Park in Chicago.[28] On November 12, 1922, he made a long pass to Paddy Driscoll for the game's only touchdown, in a 7–0 victory over the Akron Pros.[29] On December 2, 1923, he kicked a 35yd field goal and his brother ran for a touchdown as the Cardinals beat the Oorang Indians, 22–19.[28]

His brother Ralph Horween also played for the Chicago Cardinals. Horween and his brother played for the Cardinals under the alias McMahon (he played as A. McMahon) to protect their family's social status.[5] [7] [29] He kept that name until 1923.[7] [29]

Coaching career at Harvard

Horween returned to Harvard as the school's head football coach from 1925 to 1930, compiling a record of 21–17–3.[7] The New York Sun reported:

The boys are for him unreservedly. It is no, secret, however, that Horween's appointment didn't please the Beacon Street - Park Avenue element among the grads. The clique that supported the old regime would prefer to see a Cabot or a Wendell, we use the names as symbols, in the saddle...[21]

Charlie Devens, who later played baseball for the New York Yankees, played football under Horween at Harvard. He recalled that anti-Semitic posters aimed at Coach Horween were displayed at a game in Ann Arbor, Michigan.[30]

Horween married Marion Eisendrath in November 1928. The couple had a long engagement, as they had agreed to postpone the wedding until the Harvard football team defeated Yale. The requisite victory took place on Saturday, November 24, and the wedding on the following Thursday.[31] He resigned following the 1930 season.[21]

Horween Leather Company

After retiring from football, Horween returned to Chicago in 1930, and he and his brother inherited the family leather tannery business, Horween Leather Company, which had been founded by their father in Chicago in 1905.[32] [33] He operated the business, a successful company that supplied (and still supplies) the leather for Wilson's NFL official football, from 1949–84.[3] [14] [25] [33] [34] [35] [36]

In 1945, he coached the football team of his former high school, Francis Parker.[37]

In 1952, he was vice president of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.[38] He also served as a trustee of the Chicago Symphony, and on the Harvard University board of overseers.[14]

Head coaching record

College

See also

Notes and References

  1. Raphael . Sven . Horween Leather Company Chicago . Gentleman's Gazette . March 21, 2012 . March 27, 2013.
  2. Book: Who's who in American Jewry . 3. Julius Schwartz . Solomon Aaron Kaye . John Simons . Jewish Biographical Bureau . 1933. March 23, 2013.
  3. Book: The Sentinel's history of Chicago Jewry, 1911–1961 . 1961 . Sentinel Publishing Co. Chicago . March 22, 2013.
  4. Book: 18M . Charles H. Joseph . The Jewish Criterion . 1926 . March 25, 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131213071629/http://pjn.library.cmu.edu/books/CALL1/CRI_1926_067_021_04021926/vol0/part0/copy0/ocr/txt/0008.txt . December 13, 2013 . dead .
  5. Web site: Ralph Horween . profootballresearchers.org . March 25, 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20101218205508/http://profootballresearchers.org/Coffin_Corner/18-06-680.pdf . December 18, 2010 .
  6. Book: The Jew in sports . Stanley Bernard Frank . The Miles Publishing Company . 1936 . March 22, 2013.
  7. Book: For Pride, Profit, and Patriarchy: Football and the Incorporation of American Cultural Values. Gerald R. Gems . Scarecrow Press . 2000 . 9780810836853. March 22, 2013.
  8. Book: King Football: Sport and Spectacle in the Golden Age of Radio and Newsreels, Movies and Magazines, the Weekly & the Daily Press . Michael Oriard . Univ of North Carolina Press. 2004. 9780807855454 . March 23, 2013.
  9. Book: Encyclopedia of Jews in Sports . registration . Ralph Horween. . Bernard Postal . Jesse Silver . Roy Silver . Bloch Pub. Co. . 1965 . March 22, 2013.
  10. Web site: Schwartzes first Jewish brothers in NFL since 1923 . Gregg Rosenthal. NFL.com . June 19, 2012 . March 15, 2013.
  11. News: Barnathan . Lee . Browns pick Schwartz in NFL draft . Jewish Journal . May 2, 2012 . March 15, 2013.
  12. Book: Arnold Horween Elected . Harvard Alumni Bulletin . September 25, 1919 . March 23, 2013.
  13. Book: Harvard Wins from Oregon 7 to 6 . Our Paper – Massachusetts Reformatory (Concord, Mass.) . January 3, 1920 . March 23, 2013.
  14. Book: NFL Head Coaches: A Biographical Dictionary, 1920–2011. John Maxymuk. McFarland. 2012. 9780786465576. March 22, 2013.
  15. News: Miss Eisendrath Bride of Horween . https://archive.today/20130411180556/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/boston/access/1998019652.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:AI&type=historic&date=Nov+30,+1928&author=&pub=Daily+Boston+Globe+(1928-1960)&desc=MISS+EISENDRATH+BRIDE+OF+HORWEEN&pqatl=google . dead . April 11, 2013 . Boston Globe . November 30, 1928 . March 23, 2013.
  16. Book: Harvard's Military Record in the World War . 478 . Ralph Horween. . Frederick Sumner Mead. Harvard Alumni Association . 1921. March 23, 2013.
  17. Book: Sports and the American Jew . Steven A. Riess. Syracuse University Press. 1998 . 9780815627548. March 23, 2013.
  18. Book: Passing Game: Benny Friedman and the Transformation of Football . registration . 353 . Ralph Horween. . Murray Greenberg . PublicAffairs . 2008. March 22, 2013.
  19. Book: The Gipper: George Gipp, Knute Rockne, and the Dramatic Rise of Notre Dame Football . Jack Cavanaugh . Skyhorse Publishing . 2010 . 9781616081102 . March 23, 2013.
  20. Book: Co-operation . Boston Elevated Railway Company, Metropolitan Transit Authority . 1950. March 22, 2013.
  21. Web site: Horween, Arnold . Jews In Sports @ Virtual Museum . March 3, 2013 . February 5, 2016 .
  22. Football; Princeton 10, Harvard 10 . Donald Grant Herring . Princeton Alumni Weekly . 1919. March 21, 2013.
  23. Book: Football: The Ivy League Origins of an American Obsession . Mark F. Bernstein . University of Pennsylvania Press. 2001 . 0812236270 . March 21, 2013.
  24. Book: The New York Times Biographical Service . New York Times & Arno Press. 1997. March 22, 2013.
  25. News: A League First: Former Player Turns 100 . New York Times . August 4, 1996 . March 23, 2013.
  26. x . Harvard Magazine. 1997 . 100 . March 22, 2013.
  27. News: Richard Goldstein . Ralph Horween, 100, the Oldest Ex-N.F.L. Player . New York Times . May 29, 1997 . March 19, 2013.
  28. Book: Wechsler, Bob . Day by Day in Jewish Sports History . KTAV Publishing House . 2008. 281, 337.
  29. Book: Dr. Eddie Anderson, Hall of Fame College Football Coach: A Biography . Kevin Carroll . McFarland. 2007. 9780786430079 . March 22, 2013.
  30. Book: Yankees Century: 100 Years of New York Yankees Baseball . 469. Dick Johnson. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. 2002 . 0618085270. March 23, 2013.
  31. News: Horween May Quit Harvard Coaching Job; Holds Confab with Bingham; Arnold to Marry on Thursday. The Pittsburgh Press . November 26, 1928. February 5, 2016.
  32. News: Ex-Harvard Grid Coach Dies at 87 . The Lewiston Journal . August 7, 1985 . March 25, 2013.
  33. News: Ralph Horween . Chicago Tribune . May 28, 1997 . March 24, 2013.
  34. Web site: Horween Leather Company . March 21, 2012 . Gentleman's Gazette . March 22, 2012.
  35. Web site: About « Horween Leather Company . Horween.com . March 23, 2013.
  36. News: Deaths; Ralph Horween . Toledo Blade . May 27, 1997 . March 24, 2013.
  37. Web site: Barbara Rolek . Horween's leather bound by tradition . Chicago Tribune . October 27, 2003 . April 19, 2013.
  38. Book: Chicago Symphony Orchestra; Program notes . 1952. March 23, 2013. Orchestra . Chicago Symphony .