Eugene Lamb Richards

Eugene Lamb Richards Jr. (June 14, 1863 – September 17, 1927) was an American football player, lawyer, and politician.

Eugene Lamb Richards
Yale Bulldogs
PositionHalfback
Career history
College
Personal information
Born:(1863-06-14)June 14, 1863
New Haven, Connecticut
Died:September 17, 1927(1927-09-17) (aged 64)
Woodbridge, Connecticut
Career highlights and awards

Early life

Richards was born on June 14, 1863 in New Haven, Connecticut. He was the son of Julia L. (née Bacon) Richards and Eugene Lamb Richards Sr., a Yale professor.[1]

While at Yale, he was a halfback on the undefeated 1881, 1882, 1883, and 1884 Yale Bulldogs football teams that have been recognized for winning four consecutive national championships.[2][3] He was the captain of the 1884 team. He set a Yale record in May 1883 by kicking a football 168 feet.[4]

Career

Richards later became a lawyer who was actively involved in Tammany Hall politics. He held state offices in New York, including Deputy Attorney General and Bank Commissioner.[5][6][4]

gollark: Of course, the longer-term plan is to infiltrate Intel HQ and make processors execute MIR instead of unsafe machine code.
gollark: Rust's async things, for instance, *may* implode if you run a blocking task in a normal async thing instead of using the dedicated threadpool for it.
gollark: In the case where it's a language runtime doing it it is quite possibly just doing cooperative multitasking internally, yes.
gollark: These have been known to exist, yes.
gollark: Thusly, modern runtimes or high performance applications will do stuff asynchronously, where they just wait for arbitrary amounts of events at once in a small threadpool.

References

  1. Osborn, Norris Galpin (1906). Men of Mark in Connecticut: Ideals of American Life Told in Biographies and Autobiographies of Eminent Living Americans. W.R. Goodspeed. p. 282. Retrieved 13 December 2018.
  2. Richard Melancthon Hurd (1888). A History of Yale Athletics, 1840-1888. Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor. p. 82.
  3. National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) (2015). "National Poll Rankings" (PDF). NCAA Division I Football Records. NCAA. p. 107. Retrieved January 4, 2016.
  4. Quarter-centenary Record of the Class of 1885, Yale University. The Fort Hill Press. 1913. pp. 280–283.
  5. "Richards Dies, Former Football Captain at Yale". The Hartford Courant. September 19, 1927. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  6. "Eugene Lamb Richards Jr". Brooklyn Life. March 26, 1916. p. 115.
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