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Chigger Browne

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chigger Brown
Biographical details
Born(1888-08-03)August 3, 1888
Memphis, Tennessee
DiedMarch 2, 1955(1955-03-02) (aged 66)
Stockton, California
Alma materSewanee:The University of the South
Playing career
1908–1910Sewanee
Position(s)Quarterback
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Track and field:
1926–1927Florida
Football:
1928Florida (intramurals)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
SIAA championship (1909)
Awards
All-Southern (1909, 1910)
Sewanee All-Time Football Team

Alvin Lowell "Chigger" Browne[1] (August 3, 1888 – March 2, 1955) was a college football player and track coach.

Sewanee

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Browne was a quarterback for the Sewanee Tigers of Sewanee: The University of the South from 1908 to 1910. Browne also played baseball, basketball, and track.[2] He was twice selected All-Southern,[3][4] and mentioned by Grantland Rice as one of the great little men of the sport, once weighing only 111 pounds.[5] He was most often listed as some 5 feet 8 inches tall and 125 pounds. Rice also said he was "harder to surround and tackle than a flea."[6] He could run 100 meters in 10 seconds flat.[7] At Sewanee he was a member of Kappa Alpha.[8]

1908

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College Football Hall of Fame quarterback Harry Van Surdam, coach of the 1908 team, said of Browne, he "was the greatest quarterback that I have ever seen in my 50 years of being connected with football as a coach and official . . . he was fast as lightning and wasn't afraid of anything. Chigger was so small that we had to keep him taped up to prevent him from getting broken up . . . We had only 18 men on the squad. If we wanted to scrimmage we had to bend the line around."[2]

1909

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Browne was quarterback on the SIAA champion 1909 team.

Coaching career

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University of Florida

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He coached the Florida Gators track team of the University of Florida in 1926 and 1927.[9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Deaths". Sewanee Alumni News: 14. 1956.
  2. ^ a b "Brown Is All-Time Tiger Great". Sewanee Alumni News: 15. 1952.
  3. ^ "National and Southern Honors". Sewanee Football Media Guide: 31. 2011.
  4. ^ e. g. Closed access icon "All S. I. A. A. Team". Times-Picayune. December 8, 1910.
  5. ^ Grantland Rice (January 31, 1942). "Hogan and Hinkey Rate Among Best Little Men". The Miami News.
  6. ^ Grantland Rice (June 18, 1937). "Size Doesn't Make Athlete". The Milwaukee Journal.
  7. ^ "Sewanee Here On Saturday". Atlanta Constitution. November 11, 1908.
  8. ^ "Alpha-Alpha". The Kappa Alpha Journal. 27 (2): 200. 1909.
  9. ^ Old Yearbook Filled with Future Leaders. October 17, 1992. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)