Joseph Wentworth Explained

Joseph Wentworth
Birth Date:29 January 1877
Birth Place:Sandwich, New Hampshire, U.S.
Death Place:Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
Alma Mater:Dartmouth
Harvard Law School
Player Positions:Quarterback
Player Sport1:Football
Player Years2:1896–1899
Player Team2:Dartmouth
Player Sport3:Baseball
Player Years4:1899-1900
Player Team4:Dartmouth
Coach Sport1:Football
Coach Years2:1900–1901
Coach Team2:Kenyon
Coach Years3:1902–1906
Coach Team3:Case
Overall Record:46–15–3
Championships:4 OAC (1902–1905)

Joseph "Little Joe" Wentworth (January 29, 1877 – April 7, 1944) was an American college football player, coach, and lawyer.

Wentworth was born January 29, 1877, in Sandwich, New Hampshire, to Paul and Ellen Tilton (Dunklee) Wentworth. Wentworth attended the Holderness School from 1890 to 1896 and Phillips Academy Andover from 1893 to 1896. For his undergraduate career, he attended Dartmouth College, graduating in 1900. He was a member of the Sphinx, a Dartmouth secret society, and Alpha Delta Phi fraternity. Wentworth graduated from Harvard Law School in 1903, and spent most of his professional career with the law firm Choate, Hall & Stewart in Boston.

Playing career

As a collegiate athlete, he played football at Dartmouth as a quarterback. He captained the freshmen team in 1896 and played varsity from 1897 to 1899. Wentworth captained the varsity team his final season in 1899.[1] He was a member of the varsity baseball team during his junior and senior years playing centerfield.[2] [3]

Coaching career

Wentworth began his career coaching for Kenyon from 1900 to 1901.[4]

When hired in 1902 by Case School of Applied Science in Cleveland, Coach Wentworth was the highest paid football coach in the nation at $3,000.[5]

Upon its formation in 1902, Wentworth won the first four titles of the Ohio Athletic Conference with Case School of Applied Science. During this four year stretch, he achieved a dominating league record of 18–1–1, including beating archrival Western Reserve by a combined 132–0.[6]

In 1906, college football's rules changed allowing for the forward pass. After coaching one season under the new rules, Coach Wentworth decided to resign, saying he would go back to Boston and practice law rather than learn football all over again.[7]

Professional career and later years

After graduating Harvard Law School, Wentworth became a member of the Massachusetts bar in 1903 and was associated with the firm Choate, Hall & Stewart of Boston, before officially becoming a member of the firm in 1909.[8]

Notes and References

  1. The Wearers of Green. October 20, 1989. p. 36. http://www.dartmouthsports.com/pdf9/2637230.pdf?DB_OEM_ID=11600
  2. Web site: 25th Annual Excursion of the Sandwich Historical Society .
  3. Web site: The Case Tech 30 September 1903 — Case Western Reserve University.
  4. Web site: May 1900 . Kenyon Collegian - May 1900 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230903172549/https://digital.kenyon.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2381&context=collegian . September 3, 2023 . Kenyon College.
  5. Book: Case Western Reserve: A History of the University 1826-1976 . Cramer, C. H. . The World Publishing Company. . 1976 . 172 .
  6. Web site: Joe "Little Joe" Wentworth.
  7. Book: Case Western Reserve: A History of the University 1826-1976 . Cramer, C. H. . The World Publishing Company. . 1976 . 371 .
  8. Book: One Thousand New Hampshire Notables: Brief Biographical Sketches of New Hampshire Men and Women, Native or Resident, Prominent in Public, Professional, Business, Educational, Fraternal or Benevolent Work. 1919. Rumford printing Company.