Ray D. Hahn | |
Birth Date: | 19 November 1897 |
Birth Place: | Clay Center, Kansas, U.S. |
Death Place: | Lindsborg, Kansas, U.S. |
Player Sport1: | Football |
Player Years2: | 1920–1922 |
Player Team2: | Kansas State |
Player Sport3: | Basketball |
Player Years4: | 1921–1923 |
Player Team4: | Kansas State |
Player Positions: | Guard (football) |
Coach Sport1: | Football |
Coach Years2: | 1923 |
Coach Team2: | Norton HS (KS) |
Coach Years3: | 1924–1927 |
Coach Team3: | Downers Grove HS (IL) |
Coach Years4: | 1928 |
Coach Team4: | Chadron Normal (assistant) |
Coach Years5: | 1929–1934 |
Coach Team5: | South Dakota Mines |
Coach Years6: | 1938–1942 |
Coach Team6: | Bethany (KS) |
Coach Years7: | 1943–1945 |
Coach Team7: | Leavenworth HS (KS) |
Coach Years8: | 1946–1956 |
Coach Team8: | Bethany (KS) |
Coach Sport9: | Basketball |
Coach Years10: | 1928–1929 |
Coach Team10: | Chadron Normal |
Coach Years11: | 1930–1935 |
Coach Team11: | South Dakota Mines |
Coach Years12: | ? |
Coach Team12: | Bethany (KS) |
Admin Years1: | 1938–1966 |
Admin Team1: | Bethany (KS) |
Overall Record: | 70–104–4 (college football) 40–49 (college basketball, excluding Bethany (KS)) |
Championships: | Football 1 KCAC (1946) Basketball 1 KCAC regular season (1941) |
Awards: | Grantland Rice All-American team Kansas Sports Hall of Fame NAIA Hall of Fame |
Ray Dreyer Hahn (November 19, 1897 – November 8, 1989) was an American football and basketball player and coach and college athletics administrator. He served as the head football coach at the South Dakota School of Mines—now known as South Dakota School of Mines and Technology—from 1929 to 1934 and Bethany College in Lindsborg, Kansas from 1938 to 1942 and again from 1946 to 1956, compiling a career college football coaching record of 70–104–4.
Hahn was born on, November 19, 1897 in Clay Center, Kansas. He served in the United States Army during World War I.[1]
Hahn attended Kansas State Agricultural College—now known as Kansas State University— in Manhattan, Kansas. There he participated in football, basketball, and track. He was the captain of the 1922 Kansas State Wildcats football team and was named to the Grantland Rice All-American team as a lineman.[2]
Hahn began his coaching career at Norton High School in Norton County, Kansas in 1923.[3] The next year he moved on to Downers Grove High School in Downers Grove, Illinois.[4] In 1928, he was appointed head basketball coach at Chadron Normal College—now known as Chadron State College—in Chadron, Nebraska and assistant coach in football and track under Arthur R. Stark.[5]
Hahn was the head football coach at the South Dakota School of Mines—now known as South Dakota School of Mines and Technology—from 1929 to 1934, compiling a record of 15–27.[6]
Hahn returned to coaching after a two-year absence when he was hired in 1938 as the athletic director and coach of all sports at Bethany College in Lindsborg, Kansas.[7] He served as the head football coach at Bethany for 19 seasons between 1938 and 1956, compiling a record of 55–77–4.[8] He took a leave of absence from 1943 to 1946 during World War II to coach and teach at Leavenworth High School in Leavenworth, Kansas.[9] Hahn stepped down as Bethany's head football coach in 1957 and was replaced by Hal Collins.[10] He remained Bethany's athletics director until 1966, when he was succeeded by Keith Rasmussen, the school's head football and track coach. Hahn continued as Bethany's head tennis and golf coach and as a professor of physical education.[11]
The Bethany College gymnasium was named the Hahn Physical Education Building in his honor. Hahn was inducted into the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics of Fame in 1966, an organization he helped to start as the National Association of Intercollegiate Basketball, the predecessor to the NAIA.
Hahn was married to Mildred M. Drebing on December 23, 1924, in Topeka, Kansas.[1] He died on November 8, 1989, at Lindsborg Community Hospital.[12]