Banner image            Home    What's New    Articles    Images    Subjects    Corrections    Advanced Search    Timeline    Maps    Multimedia    About
The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History

FOOTBALL - The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History

FOOTBALL. The first organized football game in Cleveland was reportedly played in 1887, when a CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL team defeated a group of freshmen from Case School of Applied Science. Newspapers provided general coverage of eastern college football, but locally the game remained a little-known sport until 1890, when graduates of eastern colleges living and working in Cleveland shared their knowledge of football rules and strategies with local men and boys. Several important games in 1890 promoted and popularized football locally. These games included the first high school game in the city's history (25 Oct., Univ. School 20, Central 0); a series of games between UNIVERSITY SCHOOL, Central, Case, and Adelbert College; and a charity game that attracted 1,500-3,000 spectators to National League Park to watch the Crescent football club of New York defeat a team from Cleveland. By 1895 a number of schools and athletic clubs in the area had 1 or more football teams, and by 1900 local newspapers were giving extensive coverage to the daily practices of high school and college teams. But problems emerged during the early years as the sport remained informal and rough. Players formed football clubs with little regard for eligibility rules or game schedules; arranging games through the newspapers was a common practice at various levels into the 1900s. Another problem was "ringers" who played for money.

High school administrators soon moved to gain control over the sport at their institutions. In Nov. 1904, the Athletic Senate, made up of school administrators, adopted new eligibility rules and academic standards to govern athletics in the elementary and high schools. In 1936 the high school Senate expanded participation to include PAROCHIAL EDUCATION (CATHOLIC) and additional public schools and reorganized itself into East and West divisions to improve competitiveness and help schools maintain self-supporting athletic programs. Organizations such as the Senate and the Ohio High School Athletic Assn., formed in 1907, brought order to the sport but did little to support the individual school's football program; as late as 1940, the financial management of local high school football programs rested with the faculty manager, coach, or principal in each school, and only 4 of the 17 Senate teams had their own playing fields. At Western Reserve College, an athletic association composed of students and interested alumni and faculty controlled the sport until 1919, and at Case until 1947. Case reigned as the state's football powerhouse between 1902-11 under the strong guidance of athletic association president FRANK VAN HORN†. In the early 1900s, critics raised serious objections to the violent nature of football. Safety became a major issue, leading football boosters to adopt several new rules designed to minimize the importance of plays such as the flying wedge, which emphasized strength and force. By 1912 a more modern, version of the game had developed, with legalized passing, 4 downs to make 10 yards in order to retain possession of the ball, and touchdowns worth 6 points. Locally, the chaotic scheduling of the 1890s had become more ordered: high schools, colleges, and athletic clubs no longer played one another--there were separate leagues for each. As early as 1903, an amateur football league also had been organized with divisions in various weight classes and teams composed of former high school and college players.

As the 1920s approached, football in Cleveland shifted from an athlete-centered sport to one increasingly controlled by others and geared more toward the spectator. By 1915 for example, team names in the amateur league had changed from the Madison Athletic Club, the Kickoffs, and the Archwood Bible Club to names such as Bartlett Drugs, Favorite Knits, and Langgreths Tailors, as businesses and industries sponsored amateur teams to advertise their products. Football also could be used to enhance the reputation of educational institutions, to build strong characters in young players, to turn a profit in professional football, and to rally pride around the performance of a team, whether at the ethnic, neighborhood, or city level. Fans developed their own meanings for the game and its stars. Star quarterback BENJAMIN (BENNY) FRIEDMAN†, became a symbol of Jewish pride and ability to excel in manly sports as well as other areas of American life. Various ethnic and racial groups had their own symbols and sources of pride on the gridiron, both individuals--such as Ted Green, the black star at Case in 1902 and 1903 and then at Reserve while in law school in 1905, and Bill Willis and Marion Motley, who helped break the color barrier in pro football with the Browns in 1946--and entire teams, such as the Mohawks, an all-Italian team that claimed the city championship from 1914-18. The players might play simply for the enjoyment of the game, but fans and others invested the gridiron struggles with their own meanings.

In elementary and high schools, sports were used as tools to enhance the moral development of children; football became a way to teach boys self-discipline and character and a way to save potential juvenile delinquents. Moral rhetoric over football in the high schools gave way to the values of the marketplace for the Big 4 of Case, Western Reserve, JOHN CARROLL UNIVERSITY, and BALDWIN-WALLACE COLLEGE, where a strong football program was seen as good for business, attracting publicity, new students, and financial contributions to the schools. Local college football was extremely popular between 1920-45. But by 1950, local college football was in serious trouble. The increasing commercialization of big-time college football made it much more difficult for the small, private schools in the Cleveland area to compete for talent and finance their programs. The NCAA decision in 1952 to allow colleges to award full scholarships, solely on the basis of athletic ability further increased the pressures on local schools, where football attendance was on the decline and the athletic programs were losing money. In Dec. 1954 the presidents of small colleges in the region formed the Presidents' Athletic Conference, which banned athletic scholarships and sought to create an atmosphere conducive to competitive athletics on a regional basis without great expense. Although the conference went through several reorganizations, local college football has remained less spectator-oriented since 1955.

Marketplace values and football also came together in the development of professional football in Cleveland. The pro game flourished in surrounding northeastern Ohio towns after 1903, but no pro team developed in Cleveland until 1916, when the Cleveland Indians were organized by Gene Watson "Peggy" Parratt and sports promoter Herman Schleman. Parratt, a baseball and football star at Case, introduced professional football in Cleveland when his team defeated the Carlisle Indians at LEAGUE PARK 8 Oct. 1916. However a successful season on the field (8-3-1) did not bring the financial success the team's organizers had hoped. In 1919 the CLEVELAND TIGERS (sometimes Indians) played in the last year of the so-called Ohio League, and the following year, on 17 Sept. 1920, the owners of professional football teams met in the showroom of Ralph Hay's Hupmobile Agency in Canton to found the American Professional Football Assn., which became the National Football League (NFL). Representing the Cleveland franchise were STANLEY B. "Stan" COFALL†, vice-president of the new league, and James M. "Jimmie" O'Donnell, who had owned the 1919 team. But the pro game had difficulty establishing itself against the college game in Cleveland (see the CLEVELAND BULLDOGS and the CLEVELAND PANTHERS of Red Grange's short-lived American Football League).

Despite the lack of a popular pro team, football was integrated into the social life of the community during the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s because of the uses people found for the sport. During the Depression, civic leaders inaugurated the Plain Dealer ARTHUR B. "MICKEY" MCBRIDE† and led by head coach PAUL E. BROWN†. An innovative and highly successful coach at the high school, college, and professional levels, Brown emphasized character, intelligence, and speed and developed many of the coaching procedures that revolutionized and rationalized the game. The war had disrupted college football, and Brown, as coach of a new team entering the new All-American Football Conference, was able to nearly handpick his team from the best players he had seen during his coaching career. Inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1967, Brown was joined in that shrine by 6 of his initial pro recruits: quarterback Otto Graham, inducted in 1965;, fullback Marion Motley, 1968; offensive tackle and placekicker Lou Groza, 1974; pass receiver Dante Lavelli, 1975; defensive middle guard Bill Willis, 1977 (College Hall of Fame, 1971); and center Frank Gatski, 1985. Brown brought 3 other future Hall of Famers to the Browns: record-setting running back Jim Brown, inducted in 1973; defensive end LEN FORD†, 1976; and offensive tackle Mike McCormack, 1984. Former Cleveland Ram BOB WATERFIELD† was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1965, and wide receiver Paul Warfield was enshrined in 1983. Two other Cleveland Browns players inducted into the Hall of Fame were Leroy Kelly and Bobby Mitchell. Paul Brown's tenure as Browns coach ended in 1963, when he was fired by owner Arthur B. "Art" Modell, a young advertising executive and former television producer from New York. Modell parlayed his franchise into power and status in the community. He bought the team in 1961 and soon became a leading force among NFL owners, serving as league president 1967-70 and piloting the league through its merger with the American Football League and subsequent reorganization.

After 1960 Cleveland football was affected by economic considerations and general social changes. At the high school level, recurrent violence at the Charity Football Game in the 1960s contributed to a decline in attendance and a change in the site of the game. Beginning in 1968, the parochial schools withdrew from the Senate for economic reasons, and after the school desegregation order, the Senate was reorganized in the fall of 1979 from East and West divisions, suggestive of the racial divisions within the city, into North and South divisions. In 1981 civic and business leaders expressed concern about the future of interscholastic sports in the financially troubled public schools. That pro football is a business and also shares in the general ills of society became painfully apparent to fans as a result of players' strikes and revelations in 1982 and 1983 that several Browns players had drug problems. The move of the Browns to Baltimore, announced in late 1995, made the business side of the sport crystal clear. Such events went far toward debunking the myth of the necessarily virtuous athlete, yet many coaches and administrators believed that football remained one way to instill in boys and young men character and the important values in life. Players in high schools and such leagues as the Northern Ohio Touch Football League continued to play for pure enjoyment and dreams of gridiron glory.

Kenneth W. Rose

Rockefeller Archive Center

Last Modified: 16 Jul 1997 02:06:01 PM

Related Article(s)
This site maintained by Case Western Reserve University