Bernard Trafford Explained

Bernard Trafford
Birth Date:2 July 1871
Birth Place:Dartmouth, Massachusetts, US
Death Place:Milton, Massachusetts
Birthname:Bernard Walton Trafford
Occupation:Banker
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Bernard Trafford
School:Harvard Crimson
Birth Date:2 July 1871
Birth Place:Dartmouth, Massachusetts
Highschool:Fall River, Exeter (1888)
Currentposition:Fullback
Pastschools:
Class:1893
Highlights:
  • National championship (1890)
  • NCAA points leader (1891)

Bernard Walton Trafford (July 2, 1871  - January 3, 1942) was an American banker and college football and baseball player.

Personal life

Trafford was born July 2, 1871, in Dartmouth, Massachusetts to William Bradford and Rachel Mott Davis Trafford. He attended high school in Fall River, Massachusetts and graduated from Phillips Exeter Academy in 1889. He graduated Harvard in 1893.

He married Leonora Brooks Borden of Fall River on June 5, 1901. She died in 1936. Upon Trafford's death in 1942, he was survived by four daughters, a son, and eight grandchildren.

Football career

Trafford was a prominent fullback for the Harvard Crimson football team from 1889 to 1892,[1] captain of the 1891 and 1892 teams.[2] [3] [4] [5] He kicked five field goals in a game against Cornell in 1890, a season in which Harvard was national champion.[6] Trafford scored 64 points in a game against Wesleyan in 1891,[7] [8] and led the nation in scoring that year with 270 points.[7] His teammate Everett Lake led the nation in touchdowns the same season. Trafford was captain of the first team to employ the flying wedge blocking scheme.[9] Trafford helped coach the 1893 team.[10] After college, he was employed at the Bell Telephone System, then as a banker in Boston.[11]

Banking career

Trafford served as vice president of the First National Bank of Boston from 1912 to 1923, then became president in March 1928 upon the death of Clifton H. Dwinnell. He served as vice chairman of the board from 1929 to 1935, and chairman from 1935 until his retirement.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Foot Ball Captain.. thecrimson.com.
  2. News: B. W. Trafford For Captain. Boston Post. January 16, 1891. 2. November 1, 2015. Newspapers.com.
  3. Web site: The Harvard Monthly. google.com. 1891.
  4. Web site: Media Center: Harvard Crimson Football - All-Time Football Captains. Harvard. 2015-10-31. 2018-06-15. https://web.archive.org/web/20180615032448/https://www.gocrimson.com/sports/fball/history/Football_Captains_Media_Center. dead.
  5. News: Harvard Football Men. September 17, 1892. Boston Evening Transcript.
  6. Web site: Georgia vs. Tulane. digitallibrary.tulane.edu. 2 March 2024.
  7. Web site: Progression of Player Game-Season-Career Statistical Leaders from the Pre-1937 era of College Football . secsportsfan.com. 2 March 2024.
  8. News: Depth a major problem for declining Eastern powers. September 28, 1990. Times Daily.
  9. Web site: St. Nicholas. google.com. 1915 . Dodge . Mary Mapes .
  10. Web site: B. W. Trafford Coach.. thecrimson.com.
  11. Web site: Harvard College Class of 1893 Secretary's Fifth Report. google.com. 1895.