Ed Tutwiler Explained

Ed Tutwiler
Birth Date:13 September 1880
Birth Place:Balcony Falls, Virginia, U.S.
Death Place:Montgomery, Alabama, U.S.
Player Years1:1897–1898
Player Team1:Alabama
Player Years2:1900–1901
Player Team2:Virginia
Player Positions:Quarterback
Coach Years1:1902
Coach Team1:Central University
Awards:All-Southern (1901)

Edward Magruder "Tut" Tutwiler Jr. (September 13, 1880 – September 3, 1932) was a college football player and coach. He played quarterback for the Alabama Crimson Tide of the University of Alabama and the Virginia Cavaliers of the University of Virginia.

Early years

Edward M. Tutwiler, Jr was born on September 13, 1880, in Balcony Falls, Virginia, to Maj. Edward Magruder Tutwiler, a wealthy Birmingham philanthropist, and Mary Fendley Jeffray. His father served in the American Civil War, participating in the Battle of New Market as one of the VMI cadets.

College

University of Alabama

Tutwiler was from Birmingham, Alabama, at the time of his enrolling at the University of Alabama. He transferred from Alabama to Virginia. One account reads "Ed Tutwiler is one of the greatest stars that football in the south ever produced. He was a graduate of the University in the class of '98, and afterwards went to the University of Virginia. He was considered the pluckiest quarterback in the south, and was noted for head work and generalship."[1]

University of Virginia

1901

Tutwiler was selected All-Southern in 1901.[2] Fuzzy Woodruff gave Virginia the mythical southern championship regardless of conference affiliation for 1901.[3]

Death

Tutwiler was found dead in pajamas in the bedroom of his Montgomery, Alabama, home on September 3, 1932, with a wound in his right temple. A pistol lay near by; the family noted the apparent suicide had been preceded by a recent despondence because of ill health.[4]

Notes and References

  1. News: Graduates Come To Varsity's Aid. The Tuscaloosa News. November 17, 1910.
  2. Southern Intercollegiate Football. Outing. 1902. 726. 37.
  3. Web site: Champions of the South regardless of conference affiliation.
  4. Tutwiler's Associated Press Obituary, 1932