Charles Whelan | |
Birth Date: | 3 April 1877 |
Birth Place: | Weymouth, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Death Place: | Cohasset, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Alma Mater: | Dartmouth College Tufts School of Medicine |
Player Years1: | 1899–1900 |
Player Team1: | Dartmouth |
Player Positions: | Fullback |
Coach Years1: | 1903–1907 |
Coach Team1: | Tufts |
Coach Years2: | 1910 |
Coach Team2: | Dartmouth (assistant) |
Coach Years3: | 1912–1917 |
Coach Team3: | Tufts |
Coach Years4: | 1919 |
Coach Team4: | Tufts |
Coach Years5: | 1921–1925 |
Coach Team5: | Boston University |
Overall Record: | 54–68–7 |
Charles "Doc" Whelan (April 3, 1877 – May 29, 1945)[1] was an American football player and coach and physician. He served as the head football coach at Tufts College—now Tufts University—for three stints (1903–1907, 1912–1917, and 1919) and at Boston University from 1921 to 1925, compiling a career college football record of 54–68–7. Whelan also coached track at Harvard University. He died after a brief illness in 1945.[2]
Whelan was born on April 3, 1877, in Weymouth, Massachusetts. He graduated from Weymouth High School in 1896 and entered Dartmouth College that fall. He left after one year to work in Boston, but returned a year later and graduated in 1901. While at Dartmouth, Whelan played fullback on the school's football team and specialized in the broad jump and the shotput on the track team.[3]
Whelan worked his way through the Tufts School of Medicine by serving as coach of the school's football team and as the athletic director at the Volkmann School. After graduating, Whelan left athletics to work as a physician, but returned to football in 1910 as an assistant coach at Dartmouth.[4] He returned to Tufts in 1912 and remained with the school until 1920 when he became supervisor of the Harvard Crimson track team and a professor of hygiene at Harvard College (he missed the 1918 season due to military service).[5] [6] His tenure at Harvard was short-lived as he submitted his resignation less than three months after taking the job to return to medicine.[7] His final coaching position was at Boston University, where he served as head football coach from 1921 to 1925.[8]
Whelan was a pioneer in radiology. He was the chief radiologist at Quincy City Hospital and was the head of the x-ray at the New York Port of Embarkation Hospital during World War I. He was also a consultant at Carney Hospital and the New England Hospital for Women and Children.[9]