Ira Pierce Explained

Ira Pierce
Birth Date:September 1874
Birth Place:Delaware, U.S.
Death Place:Barksdale, Wisconsin, U.S.
Alma Mater:University of Delaware
Coach Sport1:Baseball
Coach Years2:1895
Coach Team2:Delaware
Coach Sport3:Football
Coach Years4:1896
Coach Team4:Delaware
Overall Record:0–6 (football)

Ira Liston Pierce (September 1874 – July 16, 1906) was an American chemist and college sports coach. He served as the head baseball coach of the University of Delaware in 1895 and as football coach in 1896.

Pierce was born in September 1874 and grew up in Wilmington, Delaware.[1] He attended Wilmington High School, and after graduating from there, attended the University of Delaware.[2] He graduated from the University of Delaware with a master's degree in science, and later served as a chemistry instructor at the school.[3] [2] After retiring from there, he became a chemist in Gibbstown, New Jersey.[2]

While at the University of Delaware, he also coached their baseball team in 1895,[4] and their football team in 1896, going winless in six games in football.[5]

Pierce was killed in an explosion at the Atlantic Dynamite Company, where he worked as a superintendent, on July 16, 1906.[6] His funeral was held on July 20.[7]

Head coaching record

Football

Notes and References

  1. Ancestry.com. 1900 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.
  2. News: Wilmington Man Killed. The Morning News. Newspapers.com. July 17, 1906.
  3. News: Delaware College. Every Evening. Newspapers.com. June 21, 1899.
  4. News: Newark. Delaware Gazette and State Journal. Newspapers.com. January 24, 1895.
  5. Web site: Ira L. Pierce Records by Year . . . https://web.archive.org/web/20150516135216/http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/coaching/alltime_coach_year_by_year.php?coachid=1868 . 16 May 2015 . dead.
  6. News: Ira Pierce, Delawarean Killed By Dynamite. The Evening Journal. Newspapers.com. July 16, 1906.
  7. News: 'Twas Too Hot For Operator. The Evening Journal. Newspapers.com. July 21, 1906.