Edward Herr
| Error creating thumbnail: Herr in The New Hampshire College Monthly of December 1906 | |
| Biographical details | |
|---|---|
| Born | January 4, 1883[1] Waterbury, Connecticut, U.S.[2] |
| Died | March 18, 1950 (aged 67) Waterbury, Connecticut, U.S. |
| Alma mater | University of Vermont |
| Playing career | |
| 1902–1905 | Dartmouth |
| Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
| 1906–1907 | New Hampshire |
| 1908 | Vermont |
| Head coaching record | |
| Overall | 6–13–6 |
| Women's Basketball Hall of Fame | |
Edward Albert Herr[a] (January 4, 1883 – March 18, 1950) was an American player and head coach of college football, and a physician.
Biography
[edit | edit source]Herr was a 1906 graduate of Dartmouth College, where he played football for four years as a halfback and end.[4][5] He then served as head coach of the New Hampshire football team in 1906 and 1907,[b] and for the Vermont football team in 1908.[5] In his three seasons as a head coach, Herr compiled an overall 6–13–6 record, for a .360 winning percentage.
In August 1906, Herr saved two women from drowning following a canoe accident in Squam Lake in New Hampshire.[6] Following his time as a head coach, Herr earned his medical degree at the University of Vermont and went on to practice medicine in Hartford, Connecticut; Boston, Massachusetts; and Waterbury, Connecticut.[7] He died in March 1950 at Saint Mary's Hospital in Waterbury, following a brief illness.[7]
Head coaching record
[edit | edit source]| Year | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Bowl/playoffs | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New Hampshire (Independent) (1906–1907[c]) | |||||||||
| 1906 | New Hampshire | 2–5–1 | |||||||
| 1907 | New Hampshire | 1–5–2 | |||||||
| New Hampshire: | 3–10–3 | ||||||||
| Vermont Green and Gold (Independent) (1908) | |||||||||
| 1908 | Vermont | 3–3–3 | |||||||
| Vermont: | 3–3–3 | ||||||||
| Total: | 6–13–6 | ||||||||
Notes
[edit | edit source]- ^ New Hampshire's media guide lists his middle initial as 'R';[3] however, contemporary sources from the early 1900s refer to him as E. A. Herr.[4]
- ^ The school was then named New Hampshire College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts; it would become the University of New Hampshire in 1923 and would adopt the Wildcats nickname in 1926.
- ^ New Hampshire's media guide also lists Herr as their head coach for the 1905 season. However, this is not corroborated by contemporary sources, he was a student at Dartmouth through the 1905–06 academic year, and upon his hiring at Vermont it was noted that he had been coach at New Hampshire for the prior two years.[5]
References
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- 1883 births
- 1950 deaths
- People from Waterbury, Connecticut
- Dartmouth Big Green football players
- New Hampshire Wildcats football coaches
- Vermont Catamounts football coaches
- University of Vermont alumni
- Coaches of American football from Connecticut
- Physicians from Connecticut
- Players of American football from Waterbury, Connecticut