Teamname: | Carlisle Indians |
Location: | Carlisle, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Ncaadivision: | Division I |
Conference: | Independent |
Firstyear: | 1893 |
Lastyear: | 1917 |
Atwins: | 173 |
Atlosses: | 92 |
Atties: | 13 |
Natltitles: | 0 |
Conftitles: | 0 |
Divtitles: | 0 |
Heismans: | 0 |
Color1: | Red |
Color1hex: | 990000 |
Color2: | White |
Color2hex: | FFFFFF |
Color3: | Gold |
Color3hex: | CFB53B |
Rivalries: | Dickinson Red Devils Harvard Crimson |
The Carlisle Indians football team represented the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in intercollegiate football competition. The program was active from 1893 until 1917, when it was discontinued. During the program's 25 years, the Indians compiled a 167–88–13 record and 0.647 winning percentage, which makes it the most successful defunct major college football program. During the early 20th century, Carlisle was a national football powerhouse, and regularly competed against other major programs such as the Ivy League schools. Several notable players and coaches were associated with the team, including Pop Warner and Jim Thorpe.
See also: List of Carlisle Indians football seasons. The Carlisle Indian Industrial School was founded in 1879 by an American cavalry officer, Richard Henry Pratt, in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Its purpose was to facilitate the assimilation of the Native American population into mainstream American society.[1]
In 1893, the Indians played their first season recognized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association.[2] The Indians were consistently outsized by the teams they scheduled, and they in turn relied on speed and guile to remain competitive. Carlisle's playbook gave rise to many trick plays and other innovations that are now commonplace in American football. The overhand spiral throw and hand-off fake are both credited to Carlisle.[1] Other trick plays innovated by the Carlisle Indians cannot be used because the NCAA instituted rules specifically prohibiting them after Carlisle used them.
In 1903, an Indian team coached by Pop Warner first employed its infamous "hidden-ball play" against heavily favored Harvard. Warner, as coach at Cornell, had already used it against Penn State in 1897, but it had not achieved much notice. Carlisle led Harvard at halftime, and hoping to keep the game's momentum, Warner elected to try the play on the ensuing kickoff. Harvard executed the kick, and the Indians formed a circle around the returner. With the aid of a specially altered jersey, the ball was placed up the back of the returner. The Indians broke the huddle and spread out in different directions. Each player feigned carrying the ball, except Dillon, the man with the ball up the back of his jersey. The ruse confused the Crimson players, and they scrambled to find the ball carrier. Dillon, with both his hands free, was ignored by the searching Harvard players, and he ran untouched into the end zone. With the score, Carlisle extended its lead to 11–0, but Harvard came back and eventually won 12–11. Nevertheless, the close match, and trick play, resulted in national attention.[1] [3] Warner had learned the trick from John Heisman while facing Auburn in 1895 during his tenure as coach of the Georgia Bulldogs.[4]
In 1907, Jim Thorpe, undersized even for the Indians, persuaded Warner to allow him to try out for the team. Thorpe immediately impressed his coach and secured a starting position on the team.[5] On October 26, 1907, Jim Thorpe and Carlisle trounced a powerful University of Pennsylvania team, 26–6, before an overflow crowd of 20,000 at Franklin Field.[6] After graduating from Carlisle, he went on to stardom in numerous athletic endeavors, including as an Olympic athlete and professional player in football, baseball, and basketball.[7]
In 1911, the Indians posted an 11–1 record, which included one of the greatest upsets in college football history. Against Harvard, Thorpe scored all of the Indians' points in a shocking upset over the period powerhouse, 18–15. The only loss for Carlisle came at the hands of Syracuse the following week, 12–11.[8]
On November 9, 1912, Carlisle was to meet the U.S. Military Academy in a game at West Point, New York, between two of the top teams in the country. Pop Warner spoke to his team: "Your fathers and your grandfathers," Warner began, "are the ones who fought their fathers. These men playing against you today are soldiers. They are the Long Knives. You are Indians. Tonight, we will know if you are warriors." That dramatic evening Carlisle routed Army 27–6. That game, played just 22 years after the last Army battle with the Lakota/Sioux at the Wounded Knee, featured not only Jim Thorpe, but nine future generals including a linebacker named Dwight D. Eisenhower.[9] "It was an exquisitely apt piece of national theater: a contest between Indians and soldiers."[10]
The Indians' last season of play was 1917. The school folded at the end of the 1917–18 school year. Many of the Indians' players eventually ended up in the National Football League and at other professional football teams during the 1920s.
style= | Year | style= | Captain |
---|---|---|---|
1893 | – | ||
1894 | – | ||
1895 | Bemus Pierce | ||
1896 | Bemus Pierce | ||
1897 | Bemus Pierce | ||
1898 | Frank Hudson | ||
1899 | Martin Wheelock | ||
1900 | Edward Rogers | ||
1901 | Martin Wheelock | ||
1902 | - | ||
1903 | Jimmy Johnson | ||
1904 | - | ||
1905 | – | ||
1906 | Albert Exendine | ||
1907 | Antonio Lubo | ||
1908 | Emil Hauser (aka Waseuka) | ||
1909 | Joe Libby | ||
1910 | Pete Hauser | ||
1911 | Sampson Bird | ||
1912 | Jim Thorpe | ||
1913 | Gus Welch | ||
1914 | Pete Calac | ||
1915 | - | ||
1916 | George May [11] | ||
1917 | - |
Coach Warner was once asked by a reporter of the Carlisle Herald to name an all-time team.[12] It includes:
Line
Backfield