Carter Barron Explained

Birth Date:30 January 1905
Birth Place:Clarkesville, Georgia
Death Place:Washington, D. C.
Occupation:Motion picture executive
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Carter Barron
School:Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets
Class:Graduate
Pastschools:Georgia Tech (1924 - 1926)
Currentposition:Halfback
Highlights:

Carter Tate Barron (January 30, 1905  - November 16, 1950) was a college football player and motion picture executive.

College football

Carter Barron was one of a trio of football playing brothers for Bill Alexander's Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football teams, younger than Red Barron and older than Pat Barron.[1] Carter was selected an All-Southern halfback in 1926.[2] A knee injury ultimately ended his football career. Carter also played on the baseball, basketball, and lacrosse teams.[3]

Motion picture executive

In 1942, he was named Washington representative of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios.[4]

Amphitheatre

The Carter Barron Amphitheatre is located in Rock Creek Park of Washington, D. C. The plan was expanded upon by Barron as Vice-Chairman for the Sesquicentennial Commission in 1947 as a way to memorialize the 150th Anniversary of Washington, D. C. as the nation's capital.[5]

Personal life

Politically a Democrat, Barron was a personal friend of presidents Harry Truman[3] and Franklin D. Roosevelt.[6]

Two of Carter Barron's nieces, Jo Barron Atchison and Alae Risse Lietch, began attending Georgia Tech games when they were young in the 1930s because of tickets sent by Carter Barron. Atchison and Lietch in 2017, were featured in an article in the Atlanta Journal Constitution about their long standing attendance to Tech Football games started by Carter Barron.[7]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Barron, Carter T., 1905-1950.
  2. News: Alabama Places 4 Men On Newspaper All-Southern Team. The Kingsport Times. November 28, 1926.
  3. Nationally Mourned Death Of Carter Barron, Distinguished Alumnus, Recent Georgia Tech Homecoming Reunion. Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine. 29. 2. 1950.
  4. Book: Call, Steve. Selling Air Power: Military Aviation and American Popular Culture After World War II. 1 March 2009. Texas A&M University Press. 9781603441001. Google Books.
  5. Web site: Carter Barron History.
  6. Web site: Carter T. Barron.
  7. News: Georgia Tech's 104-year-old fan to be at Saturday's game. Sugiura. Ken. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. English. 2020-04-12.