There’s something about history that intrigues me, which proves beneficial in my current vocation.
So you can imagine how cool it was when I recently unearthed a pair of old photographs, one more than a century old and the other just shy of that.
The images are of a pair of Ashtabula County football teams and looking at them, I can’t help but wonder what became of the young men shown in the photographs.
One of the really neat aspects of the photos are some of the equipment the players are wearing.
The first photo is of the 1906 Geneva Eagles, posed in front of some type of wooden wall.
Which prompted a telephone call to Norm Potter, our resident Geneva football historian. Norm, a 1986 Geneva graduate, is now living in Dundee, Mich.
Not surprisingly, Norm has a copy of the photo.
“Actually, that photo is from a postcard,” he said. “I also have a copy of a studio shot of that team.”
The 1906 Eagles, which were the fourth team in Geneva history, were coached by Scott Ross. They went 5-1 on the season and claimed the county championship, losing only to a school named University, 15-6.
That Geneva team outscored its opposition, 126-21, that fall en route to winning the third of four straight county championships.
The second photo is of the 1909 Jefferson football team, which is posed in what appears to be a football field as some white lines are visible.
Those Falcons were coached by first-year mentor Andy Carnegie and posted a 6-2-0 record, finishing second in the county championship race behind Conneaut, which went 7-1-1 that fall and beat Jefferson at Jefferson, 5-0. (Touchdowns were worth five points in those days). Conneaut’s only loss that season was a 5-0 forfeit to Grand River Institute, which it had beaten the week before, 22-6.
That Jefferson team’s only other loss 99 years ago was a 26-0 verdict to Ashtabula.
While Geneva began playing football in 1903, our research shows Jefferson played its first contests on the gridiron in the fall of 1896.
Geneva has fielded a team every year since 1903, though in 1910, it folded up the tent after two games, losses to Lakewood, 12-0, and Conneaut, 17-5.
A story in the Thursday, Oct. 27, 1910 Star Beacon said:
“Geneva High is disbanded because of parental objection, illness and absence from school make up reasons for the action.”
Jefferson played football from 1896 through 1926, though after losses at Conneaut, 7-0, and at Geneva, 25-0, it gave up football, switching instead to baseball in the fall.
Football was not played at Jefferson again until 1940, when the school played two six-man games and in 1941, when it played five six-man games.
Jefferson did not play again at all until 1946, when it brought 11-man football back and began playing at Memorial Field, where it remained until moving to Falcon Pride Stadium in 1981.
Picture this?
Anyone possessing old photos of any sport they believe might prove interesting can email them or contact yours truly at the address at the end of this column.
McCormack is the sports editor of the Star Beacon. Reach him at donmac@suite224.net.
Sports
A Don McCormack column: Blasts from the past
Old football photos offer glimpse of yesteryear
- Sports
-
-
Riverside sneaks past Edgewood
Riverside wrestling coach Scott Blank learned a good deal of what he knows from Edgewood coach Greg Stolfer as a former Warrior great. Thursday, he used a bit of that knowledge to get the better of his old coach as the Beavers bested the Warriors, 31-28, at Edgewood.
-
Madison rolls past Geneva
Madison recovered from coming out on the short end of a pin in the first match of the night by taking six of the next seven matches against Geneva and capped the night with pins from their last pair of grapplers in dismantling the Eagles, 49-17.
-
Boys tourney returning to county
On Feb. 27, for the first time in 20 years, postseason boys basketball will return to Ashtabula County when the Division II sectional-district tournament comes to Lakeside high school.
-
Dragons dump Lakers in drink
Despite the fact his girls have been through a tough season, Lakeside coach Rob Livingston spoke as though he had sensed that better things might be around the corner.
-
Mustangs dominate Heralds
In their last home game of the season, the Grand Valley Mustangs rose to the occasion on Senior Night, defeating the SS. John and Paul Heralds, 59-28.
-
Clark, Francis help give Falcons Liberty
Paige Clark led an attack that saw three Jefferson players reach double figures and Rachel Francis had a triple-double as the Falcons blasted visiting Liberty, 59-17, in an All-American Conference game Thursday night in Falcon Gym.
-
Scholastic Statistics:
WRESTLING
NON-CONFERENCE
Riverside 31, Edgewood 28
at Edgewood -
Scholastic Schedule:
FRIDAY, FEB. 10
Boys Basketball
n Lakeside at Madison
n Conneaut at Edgewood
n Liberty at Jefferson (WFUN)
n South at Geneva
n PV at Bloomfield
n Grand Valley at Southington
n Riverside at North
n Harvey at Perry -
PV prevails
Cody Miller and Zach Campbell knew what they had to do in order for the Pymatuning Valley wrestling team to complete a come-from-behind victory over Jefferson on Wednesday at triangular match at PV.
The pair delivered exactly that and the Lakers pulled off the win, 37-36. -
Eagles bounce back
The Geneva girls didn’t have much time to regroup. But just one day after a heartbreaking defeat, they were able to knock off a strong Perry team on the road, 39-33.
- More Sports Headlines
-





