Kit DeCamps
Christie Jean Baptiste "Kit" DeCamps (1878 – 24 August 1951) was a war veteran, civil engineer and college football player who played for the Virginia Tech Hokies football team of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute.
DeCamps c. 1899 | |
Virginia Tech Hokies | |
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Position | Quarterback |
Career history | |
College | Virginia Tech (1899–1901) |
Personal information | |
Born: | 1878 Greenville, South Carolina |
Died: | August 24, 1951 |
Career highlights and awards | |
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Early life
DeCamps was born in 1878 in Greenville, South Carolina, the son of Ghislain Modeste Decamps (1834-1896) and Mary E. Hahn (1854-1947).[1][2][3]
Football career
DeCamps was a prominent quarterback for the Virginia Tech Hokies football team of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute.[4] He was considered very fast.[5] He also spent three years at Furman University and a year at Richmond College.[6]
Military career
He was once a quartermaster sergeant of Company B, second South Carolina regiment.[12] DeCamps served in the Spanish–American War.[13]
Family
On 27 Nov 1907 DeCamps married Lois Catherine Sykes (1881-1924), daughter of Tiberius Constantine Sykes and Alice E. Luke, in Portsmouth, Virginia.[3] They had three children.[14]
- Captain William Luke deCamps (July 6, 1911 - May 12, 1991), served in the 111th Field Artillery battalion of the 29th Infantry Division during Operation Overlord.[15]
- Lois Sykes Decamps (1912–1991), married the diplomat George H. Steuart on May 28, 1938 in Wallacetown Virginia.
- Charles Decamps (1914-1991), who served in Italy during WW2
Kit DeCamps died on 24 August 1951.[16]
References
- Ghislain Modeste Decamps at Findagrave Retrieved 18 July 2018
- Mary E. Hahn at findagrave Retrieved 18 July 2018
- Family Search Retrieved 6 May 2015
- "Virginia Tech Football - All Century Team". Virginia Tech Magazine. 14 (3). 1992.
- "Blacksburg Eleven". The Times. October 7, 1900.
- Chi Psi (1902). The Sixth Decennial Catalogue. p. 345.
- "Coaches, Captains, Records" (PDF). p. 258.
- Walter Camp (1902). Spalding's Football Guide. p. 104.
- "Bugle" (PDF). 1936. p. 373.
- ""All Southern" Eleven". The State. February 7, 1902.
- Oscar P. Schmidt. "Football in the Southern Colleges". The Official National Collegiate Athletic Association Football Guide: 129.
- The Purple and Gold. Chi Psi Fraternity. 1898. p. 152.
- "Christie J. B. Decamps".
- Lois Catherine Sykes at WikiTree Retrieved 20 July 2018
- DDay Overlord.com Retrieved May 2015
- DeCamps family bible, unpublished
External links
- Kit DeCamps at WikiTree Retrieved 17 July 2018
- Kit DeCamps in Spanish–American War Retrieved 13 February 2019
- Kit CeCamps in the 1901 Edition of The Bugle Retrieved 3 August 2019