Sport(s) | Football, basketball |
---|---|
Biographical details | |
Born |
Gazam, Pennsylvania |
May 1, 1894
Died | June 5, 1966 Salina, Kansas |
(aged 72)
Playing career | |
Football | |
1913 | Dickinson Seminary |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
Football | |
1921–1937 | Kansas Wesleyan |
Basketball | |
1921–1938 | Kansas Wesleyan |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 73–40–13 (football) 113–161 (basketball) |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
6 KCAC (1927, 1929, 1931, 1934–1936) | |
Alexander Brown Mackie was college professor, business college founder, and an American football coach in the United States.
Mackie was the co-founder of Brown Mackie College in Salina, Kansas. He and Perry E. Brown founded the school as a business college, taking what was a part of the Kansas Wesleyan school of business. The school operates today with campuses in many locations across the United States.
Before moving to Salina and Kansas Wesleyan, Mackie was a student at Ohio Wesleyan University in Delaware, Ohio.
Mackie played football for Dickinson Seminary in Williamsport, Pennsylvania for the 1913 season.
Mackie was the ninth head football coach for the Kansas Wesleyan University Coyotes located in Salina, Kansas and he held that position for 17 seasons, from 1921 until 1937. His coaching record at Kansas Wesleyan was 73 wins, 40 losses, and 13 ties. As of the conclusion of the 2009 season, this ranks him 2 at Kansas Wesleyan in total wins and second at the school in winning percentage (.631).
Mackie's 1922 team was considered having "no great strengths" by football legend Walter Camp. As he spent more time with the program, his teams encountered more success. Mackie's teams won the Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference championship five times during his tenure. Midway through the 1931 season, his team was one of the few undefeated teams in the country.