1900 New Hampshire football team

The 1900 New Hampshire football team[lower-alpha 2] was an American football team that represented New Hampshire College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts[lower-alpha 3] during the 1900 college football season—the school became the University of New Hampshire in 1923. The team finished with a record of 1–6–1 or 1–5–1, per 1900 sources or modern sources, respectively.

1900 New Hampshire football
ConferenceIndependent
1900 record1–5–1[lower-alpha 1]
Head coachNone
CaptainRutherford B. Lewis[1][2]
Home stadiumCollege grounds, Durham, NH
1900 Eastern college football independents records
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Yale      12 0 0
Penn      12 1 0
Harvard      10 1 0
Cornell      10 2 0
Geneva      5 1 1
Lafayette      9 2 0
Syracuse      7 2 1
Princeton      8 3 0
Fordham      3 1 1
Army      7 3 1
Brown      7 3 1
Columbia      7 3 1
Villanova      5 2 2
Carlisle      6 4 1
Dickinson      5 4 0
Western Univ. of Penn      5 4 0
Rutgers      4 4 0
Lehigh      5 6 0
Frankin & Marshall      4 5 0
Temple      3 4 1
Pittsburgh College      2 3 1
Penn State      4 6 1
Amherst      4 7 1
Dartmouth      2 4 2
NYU      3 6 1
Tufts      3 6 1
Wesleyan      3 6 1
New Hampshire      1 5 1
Colgate      2 8 0
CCNY      0 1 0

Schedule

Scoring during this era awarded five points for a touchdown, one point for a conversion kick (extra point), and five points for a field goal. Teams played in the one-platoon system and the forward pass was not yet legal. Games were played in two halves rather than four quarters.

Date Opponent Site per 1900 sources per modern sources
Result Source Result Source
September 26 at Exeter Academy Exeter, NH T 0–0 [4] T 0–0 [5][6]
September 29 at Bowdoin Whittier Field · Brunswick, ME L 0–32 [7][8][9] L 0–32 [5][6]
October 10 at Andover Academy Andover, MA L 0–10 [10][2] L 0–10 [5][6]
October 13 MIT Durham, NH L 0–6 [11] L 0–6 [5][6]
September 26 Exeter Academy Durham, NH L 0–32 [12] L 0–32 [5][6]
September 26 Burdett College Durham, NH W 18–11 [13] W 18–11 [5][6]
November 3 at Tufts Medford, MA L 0–28 [14][15] L 0–28 [5][6]
November 21 at Unity Athletic Club South End Park · Portsmouth, NH L 5–12 [16][17] not listed
Overall record (1–6–1) (1–5–1)

The November 21 loss to the Unity Athletic Club was reported in The Portsmouth Herald, but is absent from other sources.

Contemporary sources are clear that the Andover game was played in Massachusetts;[2] modern sources list the site as Durham. Team captain Lewis suffered a broken leg in the game.[1]

The original schedule for the team, as published in October 1900, included two games against the University of Maine;[18] however, the first Maine–New Hampshire game would not occur until 1903.[19]

The New Hampshire second team (reserves) defeated Dover High School, 11–6, in a game played in Durham on November 15.[20]

Notes

  1. per the University's media guide; 1900 sources differ
  2. The school did not adopt the Wildcats nickname until February 1926;[3] before then, they were generally referred to as "the blue and white".
  3. The school was often referred to as New Hampshire College or New Hampshire State College in newspapers of the era.
gollark: I just don't do this. It saves time.
gollark: Why would you fall over?
gollark: Why not medium-hardness-wood?
gollark: Just copypaste the royale thing's admin page into cg-site.
gollark: I don't know why they designed it this way.

References

  1. "College News". The New Hampshire College Monthly. Vol. 8 no. 2. November 1900. p. 45. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
  2. "Andover Scores Twice". The Boston Globe. October 11, 1900. p. 5. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via newspapers.com.
  3. "Wild E. and Gnarlz". unhwildcats.com. Retrieved February 14, 2020.
  4. "N. H. v. Exeter". The New Hampshire College Monthly. Vol. 8 no. 2. November 1900. p. 47. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
  5. "New Hampshire Game by Game Results". College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on October 27, 2016. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
  6. "2017 New Hampshire Media Guide". University of New Hampshire. 2017. p. 66. Retrieved April 22, 2020.
  7. "Bowdoin v. N. H." The New Hampshire College Monthly. Vol. 8 no. 2. November 1900. p. 47. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
  8. "Sporting Notes". The Portsmouth Herald. Portsmouth, New Hampshire. October 2, 1900. p. 1. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via newspapers.com.
  9. "Other Foot Ball Games". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. September 30, 1900. p. 10. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via newspapers.com.
  10. "Phillips Andover v. N. H." The New Hampshire College Monthly. Vol. 8 no. 2. November 1900. p. 48. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
  11. "M. I. T. v. N. H." The New Hampshire College Monthly. Vol. 8 no. 2. November 1900. p. 48. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
  12. "Phillips Exeter v. N. H." The New Hampshire College Monthly. Vol. 8 no. 2. November 1900. pp. 48–49. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
  13. "N. H. v. Burdett". The New Hampshire College Monthly. Vol. 8 no. 2. November 1900. p. 49. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
  14. "Tufts, 28; New Hampshire, 0". The New Hampshire College Monthly. Vol. 8 no. 3. December 1900. pp. 66–67. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
  15. "Sporting Notes". The Portsmouth Herald. Portsmouth, New Hampshire. November 6, 1900. p. 4. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via newspapers.com.
  16. "Sporting Notes". The Portsmouth Herald. Portsmouth, New Hampshire. November 20, 1900. p. 3. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via newspapers.com.
  17. "Foot Ball". The Portsmouth Herald. Portsmouth, New Hampshire. November 22, 1900. p. 1. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via newspapers.com.
  18. "College News". The New Hampshire College Monthly. Vol. 8 no. 1. October 1900. p. 23. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
  19. "New Hampshire vs Maine". College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on September 10, 2015. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
  20. "Sporting Notes". The Portsmouth Herald. Portsmouth, New Hampshire. November 17, 1900. p. 5. Retrieved April 22, 2020 via newspapers.com.
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