L. Jay Caldwell
Biographical details | |
---|---|
Born | (1871-06-19)June 19, 1871 Ephratah, New York, U.S. |
Died | 1950 (aged 78–79) Shrewsbury, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Alma mater | Colgate University (1897) Harvard University |
Playing career | |
c. 1891–1896 | Colgate |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1893, 1895 | Colgate |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 7–2–2 |
L. Jay Caldwell (June 19, 1871 – 1950) was an American college football player and coach. He was the fourth head football coach at Colgate University and he held that position for two seasons, first in 1893 and then returning for 1895. His overall coaching record at Colgate was 7–2–2.[1]
Caldwell was born in Ephratah, New York in 1871.[2] He married May Thorne on July 20, 1904, in Jamaica, New York. Caldwell later taught mathematics at a high school in Amsterdam, New York. In 1913, he was teaching at an Orange, New Jersey high school. By the 1940 United States Census, Caldwell and his wife were retired and living in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts. He died there in 1950.
Racial integration
Caldwell coached the university's first African-American football player in 1895. No records were kept of the player's name, but a photograph (left) does exist.[3]
Head coaching record
Year | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Bowl/playoffs | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Colgate (Independent) (1893) | |||||||||
1893 | Colgate | 3–0–2 | |||||||
Colgate (Independent) (1895) | |||||||||
1895 | Colgate | 4–2 | |||||||
Colgate: | 7–2–2 | ||||||||
Total: | 7–2–2 |
References
External links
- L. Jay Caldwell at Find a Grave
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- Samuel Colgate Jr. (1890–1891)
- Preston Smith (1892)
- L. Jay Caldwell (1893)
- Spencer Ford (1894)
- L. Jay Caldwell (1895)
- Joseph Colnon (1896)
- Charles B. Mason (1897–1898)
- Joseph Stannard (1899)
- Joseph A. Short (1900)
- Charles B. Mason (1901)
- Frank "Buck" O'Neill (1902)
- Bob Hatch (1903)
- Frank "Buck" O'Neill (1904–1905)
- Bill Warner (1906–1907)
- Edwin Sweetland (1908)
- R. M. Brown (1909)
- Laurence Bankart (1910)
- Jack E. Ingersoll (1911)
- Dutch Sommer (1912)
- Laurence Bankart (1913–1916)
- Harry McDevitt (1917)
- No team (1918)
- Ellery Huntington Jr. (1919–1921)
- Dick Harlow (1922–1925)
- George Hauser (1926–1927)
- Earl Abell (1928)
- Andrew Kerr (1929–1946)
- Paul Bixler (1947–1951)
- Hal Lahar (1952–1956)
- Fred Rice (1957–1958)
- Alva Kelley (1959–1961)
- Hal Lahar (1962–1967)
- Neil Wheelwright (1968–1975)
- Frederick Dunlap (1976–1987)
- Michael Foley (1988–1992)
- Ed Sweeney (1993–1995)
- Dick Biddle (1996–2013)
- Dan Hunt (2014–2020)
- Stan Dakosty (2021– )
# denotes interim head coach
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