1904 College Football All-America Team
The 1904 College Football All-America team is composed of various organizations that chose College Football All-America Teams that season. The organizations that chose the teams included Collier's Weekly selected by Walter Camp.
1904 College Football All-America Team |
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College Football All-America Team |
1904 college football season |
1902 1903 ← → 1905 1906 |
All-Americans of 1904
Ends
- Tom Shevlin, Yale (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; CW-1; NYS-1; NYT; NYH; PR; NYET; PNA; PI)
- Frederick A. Speik, Chicago (CW-1)
- Ralph Glaze, Dartmouth (WC-3; CW-2; NYH; NYET)
- Garfield Weede, Penn (WC-2; NYS-1; PNA-1)
- Chester T. Neal, Yale (NYS-2; NYT; PI)
- Thomas W. Hammond, Army (NYS-2; PR)
- Alexander Garfield Gillespie, Army (WC-2)
- Claude Rothgeb, Illinois (WC-3; FL)
- Russ, Brown (CW-2)
- James Bush, Wisconsin (FL)
Tackles
- James Hogan, Yale (WC-1; CW-1; NYS-1; NYH; PR; NYET; PNA-1; PI; FL)
- James Cooney, Princeton (WC-1; CW-1; NYS-1; NYT; NYH; PR; NYET; PI)
- Joe Curtis, Michigan (WC-2; FL)
- James R. Bloomer, Yale (CW-2; NYS-2; NYT; PNA-1; FL [sub])
- Tom Thorp, Columbia (WC-2; CW-2; NYS-2)
- Thomas Alexander Butkiewicz, Penn (WC-3)
- Thomas B. Doe, Army (WC-3)
Guards
- Frank Piekarski, Penn (WC-1; CW-1; NYS-1; NYT; NYH; PR; NYET; PNA-1; PI)
- Joseph Gilman, Dartmouth (WC-2; CW-1)
- Ralph Kinney, Yale (WC-1; CW-2 NYS-2; NYT; PNA-1)
- Roswell Tripp, Yale (WC-2; CW-2 NYS-1; NYH; NYET; PI)
- Short, Princeton (WC-3; NYS-2; PR)
- Walton W. Thorp, Minnesota (WC-3; FL)
- Charles A. Fairweather, Illinois (FL)
Centers
- Arthur Tipton, Army (WC-1; CW-1; NYS-1; NYH; PR)
- Clint Roraback, Yale (WC-2; NYS-2; NYT; NYET; PNA-1; PI)
- Robert Grant Torrey, Penn (WC-3; CW-2)
- John M. Haselwood, Illinois (FL)
Quarterbacks
- Vince Stevenson, Penn (WC-1; NYS-2; NYT; PR; PNA-1; PI)
- Foster Rockwell, Yale (WC-2; CW-1; NYS-1; NYH; NYET)
- Sigmund Harris, Minnesota (WC-3)
- Dillwyn Parrish Starr, Harvard (CW-2)
Halfbacks
- Daniel Hurley, Harvard (WC-1; CW-1; NYS-1; NYT; PR; PNA-1; PI)
- Willie Heston, Michigan (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; NYET; FL)
- Lydig Hoyt, Yale (WC-3; CW-2 [fb]; NYS-1; NYH; PR)
- Jack Owsley, Yale (NYS-2)
- Marshall Reynolds, Penn (WC-2; NYS-2; NYT; PNA-1)
- W. E. Metzenthin, Columbia (NYH)
- Jack Hubbard, Amherst (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-2; CW-2)
- James Vaughn, Dartmouth (WC-3)
- W. C. Leavenworth, Yale (PI)
- Frederick A. Prince, Army (CW-2)
- Walter L. Foulke, Princeton (FL [sub])
Fullbacks
- Walter Eckersall, Chicago (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1 [e]; CW-1; FL [qb])
- Andy Smith, Penn (WC-1; NYS-1; NYH; NYET; PNA-1; PI; FL [hb])
- Henry Torney, Army (CW-1 [hb]; NYT; NYET)
- Philip O. Mills, Harvard (WC-2; NYS-2; PR)[1]
- John R. Bender, Nebraska (WC-3)
- Mark Catlin Sr., Chicago (FL)
Key
NCAA recognized selectors for 1904
- WC = Collier's Weekly as selected by Walter Camp[2][3]
- CW = Caspar Whitney for Outing magazine[4]
Other selectors
- NYS = New York Sun[5]
- NYT = New York Tribune[5][6]
- NYH = New York Herald[5][6]
- PR = New York Press[5]
- NYET = New York Evening Telegram[7]
- PNA = Philadelphia North American[8]
- PI = Philadelphia Inquirer[8]
- FL = Fred Lowenthal, coach of the University of Illinois[6]
Bold = Consensus All-American[9]
- 1 – First-team selection
- 2 – Second-team selection
- 3 – Third-team selection
References
- https://www.gocrimson.com/sports/fball/history/Football_All-Americans_Media_Center
- "Camp's Idea Of Football Stars: Yale Coach Puts Two Western Men in His Selection". The Daily Review (Decatur, IL). 1904-12-28.
- "Camp's 1904 All America Football Team". Capital Times. 1904-11-24.
- Caspar Whitney (Jan 1905). "The Sportsman's View-Point" (PDF). Outing.
- "Western Stars Are Not Named: No Eastern Paper Gives Westerner Place on All-Americans". Atlanta Constitution. 1904-12-05.
- "Some All-American Football Elevens". The Pittsburgh Press. 1904-11-29.
- "In the Sporting World". Oshkosh Daily Northwestern. 1904-12-03.
- "Football Critics Picking All-American Aggregations". Colorado Springs Weekly Gazette. 1904-12-15.
- "Football Award Winners" (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2016. p. 6. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
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