Front row, left to right: George Darling, John Light, Wilbur Hill Second row, left to right: Fred Hill, George McPherson, J.L. Crandall Back row, left to right: Bruce Stevens, Chas. DeKay, Professor Dewey, Alex Flum [?], Frank Hesler, W. Darling See: Morris Tribune [Sun?], 26 Sep 1894. Photograph loaned to SCHS (L87.9.1) by Jeanne Peterson for copying. She did not recognize it when returned, to she returned it to museum.
Front Row Left-Right: (4th) Edmund Franklin, (7th) Herman Froelich, Second Row Left-Right: Paul Callaghan, ____, Hiram Lloyd. See Mankatonian, January 18 Un99 Vol X, No. 7, p. 13, c. 2
Contributing Institution:
University Archives and Southern Minnesota Historical Center, Memorial Library, Minnesota State University, Mankato
The Duluth Boat Club organized in 1886, with a facility at the foot of Fifth Avenue West and the waterfront that included a football team prior to the familiar Minnesota Point buildings of 1906.
Contributing Institution:
University of Minnesota Duluth, Kathryn A. Martin Library, Northeast Minnesota Historical Collections
Winona Normal School football team of 1896. This was the ""championship"" team which scored 135 points during the season while allowing opponents to score only 12. Other teams defeated included the University of Minnesota and Carleton College.
Contributing Institution:
Winona State University, Darrell W. Krueger Library
Group portrait of the 1898 Football Team. See Mankatonian, March 1899, Vol. X, No. 9, p. 3. Left to Right: Seated, second from left: Paul Callaghan. Standing - far left: Hiram Lloyd. Man in top hat: Harry J. Orsborn, Assistant instructor in Geography and Math.
Contributing Institution:
University Archives and Southern Minnesota Historical Center, Memorial Library, Minnesota State University, Mankato
Back Row from Left to Right: Roy Mick; Lydon Brandenburg; Elton Pherum; Henry Asseln; Joe Shellman; Elton Ward. Middle Row: Frank Frankoviz; George Barnard; Roy Curtiss; Jim Colehour; Ed McFadden; Arthur Johnson. Front Row: Frank Adams; Horace Rawson; Walter Frankberg.
Football players are rolled into a huge snowball by members of the opposite team pushing toward the goalpost. A "sectional view," or cross-cut, of the snowball appears in the upper left-hand corner.