Richard Von Albade Gammon

Richard Von Albade Gammon (December 4, 1879 October 31, 1897) was a University of Georgia football fullback who died after injuries sustained in a collegiate football game.

Richard Von Albade Gammon
Georgia Bulldogs
PositionFullback / Quarterback
Career history
CollegeGeorgia (1896–97)
Personal information
Born:(1879-12-04)December 4, 1879
Rome, Georgia
Died:October 31, 1897(1897-10-31) (aged 17)
Atlanta, Georgia
Career highlights and awards
  • SIAA championship (1896)

Biography

Richard Von Albade Gammon was born December 4, 1879 in Rome, Georgia. He grew up on downtown Rome's 3rd Avenue and was a very talented athlete.

University of Georgia

Gammon attended the University of Georgia and played football on the 1896 and 1897 teams under Glenn "Pop" Warner and Charles McCarthy. In 1897, they played their first two games against Clemson and Georgia Tech.

Death versus Virginia

On October 30, 1897, UGA played the University of Virginia in Atlanta, Georgia.[1] The two teams the year before were the two most vocal claimants to a Southern football title.[2] Early in the second half, Von Gammon was on defense, and dove into the mass around Virginia's right tackle. Once the pile-up cleared, he lay there motionless. Two doctors in the stands came to his aid and determined he had a severe concussion. He was on his feet in a few minutes, however, and was being taken off the field by Coach McCarthy, when captain and later judge William B. Kent, not realizing how badly he was hurt, said to him:

"Von, you are not going to give up, are you?"

"No, Bill," he replied, "I've got too much Georgia grit for that."

Those were the last words he ever spoke. Upon reaching the sideline, he lapsed into unconsciousness.[3] They rushed him to Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Gammon died in the early morning hours of October 31, 1897. His funeral was held at First Presbyterian Church in Rome, Georgia. News spread of Von Gammon's death and the people were devastated as were the Virginia players.[4]

Legacy

The Georgia Legislature was in session at the time and public opinion caused them to pass a bill to ban the sport of football in the state of Georgia.[5] The bill would have ended the football programs of Georgia, Georgia Tech, and Mercer. The bill only needed the signature of Governor William Yates Atkinson to become a law. Rosalind Burns Gammon wrote a letter to her representative, which later was in the hands of the governor. She was saddened by her son's death, but did not want the sport outlawed. She mentioned in her letter how his two friends were killed in rock climbing and skating accidents, and how those sports were not banned. Gov. Atkinson vetoed the bill on December 7, 1897.[6] His mother is known as the woman who saved college football in Georgia. In 1921, the University of Virginia team presented a plaque to the University of Georgia in honor of Von Gammon and his mother. Less than 3 years after Von's death, his brother Will died when he fell under a train following a baseball game in Cartersville, Georgia.

gollark: Or, I guess, more generically, "a thing to run a shell command based on some ingame action", which I bet already exists.
gollark: That sounds like a highly inefficient way to say "a thing to take ZFS snapshots on command".
gollark: I am very happy that none of my stuff ever has to deal with more than something like a few requests a second of traffic.
gollark: No, I either use NetworkManager or don't have very complex config anyway.
gollark: It's AMD's brand name for (most of) their consumer CPUs based on the Zen series of architectures.

References

  1. http://theantiorangepage.com/node/1790 The Anti-Orange Page
  2. "Which Is Champion?". Atlanta Constitution. December 7, 1896. p. 6. Retrieved March 8, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  3. William Hanford Edwards (1916). Football Days: Memories of the Game and of the Men Behind the Ball. p. 244.
  4. http://www.romegeorgia.com/history.html Roman History
  5. Meyers, Christopher C. (2009). "'Unrelenting War on Football': The Death of Richard Von Gammon and the Attempt to Ban Football in Georgia". Georgia Historical Quarterly. 93 (4): 388–407. Retrieved February 14, 2018.
  6. http://georgiainfo.galileo.usg.edu/vongammon.htm Georgia Info
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.