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1919 Harvard Crimson football team


1919 Harvard Crimson football
Independent
9–0–1
Bob Fisher (1st season)
Billy Murray
Harvard Stadium

The 1919 Harvard Crimson football team was an American football team that represented Harvard University as an independent during the 1919 college football season. In their first season under head coach Bob Fisher, the Crimson compiled a 9–0–1 record, shut out seven of ten opponents, and outscored all opponents by a total of 229 to 19. The team was invited to play in the 1920 Rose Bowl and defeated Oregon, 7–6.

There was no contemporaneous system in 1919 for determining a national champion. However, Harvard was retroactively named as the national champion by the Helms Athletic Foundation and the Houlgate System, and as a co-national champion by the College Football Researchers Association, National Championship Foundation, and Parke H. Davis. Illinois (6–1 record), Notre Dame (9–0 record), and Texas A&M (10–0 record) were chosen as the 1919 national champion or co-champion by some selectors.

Harvard halfback Eddie Casey was selected as consensus first-team player on the 1919 All-America team. Casey was later inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.

Other notable players on the 1919 team included backs Arnold Horween and Frederic Cameron Church Jr. and linemen Tom Woods, Charles Arthur "Tubby" Clark and Robert "Duke" Sedgwick. Quarterback Billy Murray was the team captain.

The 1919 season was a transition year for Harvard football. Percy Haughton was the head coach from 1908 to 1916, leading the program to a record of 97–17–6. Varsity football was discontinued during the war years of 1917 and 1918, though the school did field an "informal" team. The 1919 season marked the return of varsity football under a new head coach. Coach Fisher compiled a 43–14–5 record in seven seasons as head coach and was later inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. Harvard's victory in the 1920 Rose Bowl has been called "the high-water mark" in program history, as athletics were deemphasized in the 1920s and thereafter.

DateTimeOpponentSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 273:00 p.m.BatesHarvard StadiumBoston, MAW 53–07,000
October 43:00 p.m.Boston CollegeHarvard StadiumBoston, MAW 17–016,000
October 113:00 p.m.ColbyHarvard StadiumBoston, MAW 35–010,000
October 183:00 p.m.BrownHarvard StadiumBoston, MAW 7–023,000
October 253:00 p.m.VirginiaHarvard StadiumBoston, MAW 47–0
November 1Springfield YMCAHarvard StadiumBoston, MAW 20–0
November 82:00 p.m.at PrincetonPalmer StadiumPrinceton, NJ (rivalry)T 10–1015,000
November 15TuftsHarvard StadiumBoston, MAW 23–0
November 22YaleHarvard StadiumBoston, MA (rivalry)W 10–3> 50,000
January 1, 19202:30 p.m.vs. OregonTournament ParkPasadena, CA (Rose Bowl)W 7–632,000–35,000
All times are in Eastern time
  • Brown, G
  • Eddie Casey, HB
  • W. Caswell, C
  • Frederic Cameron Church Jr., FB
  • Charles Arthur Clark, G
  • Desmond, E
  • Faxon, E
  • Felton, QB
  • Mitchell Gratwick, HB
  • Hadley, G
  • Hamilton, HB
  • Charles Frederick Havemeyer, C
  • Holmes, G
  • Arnold Horween, FB
  • Hubbard, E
  • R. S. Humphrey, QB
  • Richmond Keith Kane, T
  • McCagg, T
  • Billy Murray, QB
  • Nils V. "Swede" Nelson, HB
  • Olmstead, G
  • Philip J. Philbin, C
  • Morris Phinney, E
  • Ryan, E
  • Salter, T
  • Bob Sedgwick, T
  • Augustus Thorndike, G
  • Weatherhead, E
  • Tom Woods, G
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