1904 College Football All-Southern Team American all-star college football team
Henry D. Phillips .
The 1904 College Football All-Southern Team consists of American football players selected to the College Football All-Southern Teams selected by various organizations for the 1904 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season .
In Dan McGugin and Mike Donahue 's first year as head coach, Vanderbilt and Auburn shared the SIAA championship, challenging John Heisman 's eminence in the South.
Composite eleven
Lob Brown .
The composite eleven included:
Jones Beene , end for Tennessee. He once coached the Chattanooga Mocs [ 1] and was also the first coach of the Tennessee Wesleyan Bulldogs .[ 2]
Innis Brown , guard for Vanderbilt. He was also a Rhodes Scholar . Brown was later a referee who often commented on the sport, picking the Constitution' s All-Southern team in 1912.
Lob Brown , tackle for Georgia Tech. Some publications claim he was Tech's first All-Southern player,[ 3] while others claim Jesse Thrash .[ 4]
Honus Craig , halfback for Vanderbilt. Dan McGugin once called him the South's greatest athlete and Vanderbilt's greatest halfback.[ 5]
Puss Derrick , tackle for Clemson. He was captain-elect, "and he has learned to run the ball" wrote former coach Heisman.
Humphrey Foy , fullback for Auburn, the undefeated school's lone selection in Mike Donahue 's first year. He was injured the year prior.
Ed Hamilton , end for Vanderbilt. He coached Vanderbilt basketball in 1903–1904 and 1908–1909.
Henry D. Phillips , guard for Sewanee, unanimous selection. Sportswriter Fuzzy Woodruff called him "the greatest football player who ever sank cleated shoes into a chalk line south of the Mason-Dixon line ."
John Scarbrough , quarterback for Sewanee, unanimous selection. On the dedication of Harris Stadium , one writer noted "The University of the South has numbered among its athletes some of the greatest. Anyone who played against giant Henry Phillips in 1901-1903 felt that he was nothing less than the best as guard and fullback. Anyone who ever saw a punt from the foot of J. W. Scarbrough."[ 6]
Willard Steele , halfback for Cumberland, made All-Southern in his first year on the varsity. He was a physician who specialized in diseases of the eye, ear, nose, and throat.[ 7]
Stein Stone , center for Vanderbilt. He was selected for the Associated Press Southeast Area All-Time football team 1869-1919 era.[ 8]
Composite overview
Henry D. Phillips and John Scarbrough were both unanimous selections.
All-Southerns of 1904
Ends
Jones Beene , Tennessee (C, H-1, WRT-1, NB, WJE, EC)
Ed Hamilton , Vanderbilt (C, H-2 [as fb], WRT-2 [as fb], NB, WJE, EC)
Billy Wilson , Georgia Tech (C, H-1, WRT-1)
Newman Townsend , North Carolina (JLD, WK, WSK)
Arthur Wilson, North Carolina A & M (WK, WSK)
Owsley Manier , Vanderbilt (H-2, WRT-2)
Arthur Sullivan, Georgia (H-2, WRT-2)
Tackles
Puss Derrick .
Lob Brown , Georgia Tech (C, H-1, WRT-1, EC)
Puss Derrick , Clemson (C, H-1, WRT-1, EC)
Irish Graham , Vanderbilt (C, H-2, WRT-2, NB, WJE)
Walter Council , Virginia (JLD, WK, WSK)
Matt Mahoney, Georgetown (JLD, WK [as g], WSK [as g])
Oliver Gardner , North Carolina A & M (WK, WSK)
Hillsman Taylor , Vanderbilt (C, NB)
Ephraim Kirby-Smith , Sewanee, (C, WJE)
Bill Streit , Auburn (H-2, WRT-2)
Guards
Henry Phillips †, Sewanee (C, H-1, WRT-1, JLD, NB, WJE, EC)
Innis Brown , Vanderbilt (C, H-1, WRT-1, NB, WJE, EC)
Branch Johnson , Virginia (JLD, WK, WSK)
Harvey Sartain, Alabama (H-2, WRT-2)
Braswell, Auburn (H-2)
William Pitt Moon, Auburn (WRT-2)
Centers
Stein Stone .
Stein Stone (C, H-1, WRT-1, JLD, EC)
George Watkins , Sewanee (C)
C. E. Elgin, Nashville (C, NB, WJE)
Roach Stewart , North Carolina (WK, WSK)
Red Smith , Cumberland (H-2, WRT-2)
Quarterbacks
John Scarbrough †, Sewanee (C, H-1, WRT-1, NB, WJE, EC)
John Pollard , Virginia (JLD, WK, WSK)
Frank Kyle , Vanderbilt (H-2, WRT-2)
Halfbacks
Honus Craig .
Honus Craig , Vanderbilt (C, H-1, WRT-1, NB, WJE, JLD, EC)
Willard Steele , Cumberland (C, H-1, WRT-1, GR, EC)
Dan Blake , Vanderbilt (C, GR, WJE, NB)
Hunter Carpenter , North Carolina (College Football Hall of Fame) (JLD [as fb], WK, WSK)
Hub Hart , Georgetown (JLD [as e], WK, WSK)
Ick Bryan, Vanderbilt (C)
René A. Messa , LSU (C)
Biddle, Nashville (C)
Don Robinson , Texas (C)
Gene Oliver , South Carolina (C)
Hammond Johnson , Virginia (JLD)
Auxford Burks , Alabama (H-2, WRT-2)
Fullbacks
Humphrey Foy , Auburn (C, H-2 [as hb], WRT-1, WJE, EC)
Joe Holland , Clemson (C, H-1, WRT-2)
Sam Y. Parker , Tennessee (C, NB)
LeRoy Abernethy , North Carolina A&M (WK, WSK)
Key
Bold = Composite selection
† = Unanimous selection
C = received votes for a composite selection put together by John de Saulles using the teams of Grantland Rice , W. R. Tichenor , Heisman, and others.[ 9]
H = selected by John Heisman , coach at Georgia Institute of Technology . He had a first and second team.[ 10]
WRT = selected by W. R. Tichenor in the Atlanta News .[ 10]
GR = selected by Grantland Rice in the Atlanta Journal .
NB = selected by former Tennessee player Nash Buckingham in the Memphis Commercial Appeal .[ 11]
WJE = selected by William J. Ewing in the Nashville American .[ 12]
JLD = selected by John de Saulles .[ 9] [ 13]
EC = selected by Edwin Camp, in Illustrated Sporting News .[ 14]
WK = selected by Willis Keinholz , head coach at the North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanical Arts .[ 15]
WSK = selected by W. S. Kimberly.[ 16] [ 17]
References
^ B. B. Branton (November 8, 2008). "Mocs Big Football Win Over UT Was 50 Years Ago" .
^ Bill Akins (2007). "Keeping the Faith: A History of Tennessee Wesleyan College 1857-2007" . Tennessee Wesleyan College: 108.
^ "Georgia Tech Football Team of 1904" . Archived from the original on October 10, 2016.
^ "2011 Georgia Tech Football Media Guide" .
^ " "Honus" Craig, All-Southern Right Halfback---He Talks" . Abilene Daily Reporter . April 25, 1909. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved March 8, 2015 – via University of North Texas .
^ "Stadium Has Harris Name" (PDF) . The Sewanee Purple . November 6, 1957.
^ Tennessee, The Volunteer State 1769-1923 . Vol. 4. 1923. pp. 454– 455.
^ "U-T Greats On All-Time Southeast Team" . Kingsport Post . July 31, 1969.
^ a b "Football in the South" . The Official National Collegiate Athletic Association Football Guide : 161. 1904.
^ a b J. W. Heisman (December 4, 1904). "Coach Heisman Names All Southern Team" . The Atlanta Constitution . p. 5. Retrieved March 5, 2015 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Some Past All-Southerns" . Atlanta Georgian . December 9, 1907. p. 12. Retrieved March 5, 2015 – via Digital Library of Georgia .
^ Wm. J. Ewing, Jr. (November 30, 1904). "All-Southern Foot Ball Team, 1904" . Nashville American . p. 7. Retrieved October 8, 2016 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "De Saulles' Choice for the All-Southern" . The State . July 28, 1905.
^ "On Gridiron In South" . The Washington Post . December 25, 1904. p. 7. Retrieved March 10, 2015 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "An All-Southern Football Team" . The Cavalier Daily . December 14, 1904. Retrieved March 5, 2015 – via Google news .
^ "For All Southern Football Team" . The Morning Post . December 11, 1904. p. 5. Retrieved March 10, 2015 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "The All-Southern Eleven" . The Charlotte Observer . December 25, 1904. p. 11. Retrieved March 3, 2015 – via Newspapers.com .
Backfield Line † = Unanimous selection