Zipp Newman | |
Birth Name: | Henry Hardin Newman |
Birth Date: | May 24, 1894 |
Birth Place: | Smith Mills, Kentucky, U.S. |
Death Place: | Birmingham, Alabama, U.S. |
Occupation: | Sportswriter |
Henry Hardin "Zipp" Newman (May 24, 1894 - March 3, 1977) was an early 20th-century American sportswriter. In 1919 he became the South's youngest sports editor at the Birmingham News and was to become the Dean of Southern sports writers.[1] For 44 years he was the official scorer for baseball's "AA" Southern League. Newman was a correspondent for The Sporting News for many years, and became first associated with the Birmingham News in 1912. He started restricting his duties in 1959 when he became sports editor emeritus, but continued to write his column.[2] Newman was elected to the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in 1975, and started the institution as its first executive secretary.[3]
Newman once said, "Football is a religion in the Southland, played by the boys and relived daily by their families."[4] When Travis Tidwell led Auburn defeated Alabama in 1949, Newman wrote "There has never been a sweeter Auburn victory in all the 58 years of football on the Plains than the Tigers 14-13 win over Alabama."[5]
"Zipp" was born on May 24, 1894, in Smith Mills, Kentucky[6] to Henry Haynes Newman and Henriette Beauregard Haynes. He came to Birmingham, Alabama, at a young age. He attended Powell Elementary School, Central High School, and Birmingham-Southern College.