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Ralph Horween

Ralph Horween
Ralph Horween 2.jpg
Date of birth (1896-08-03)August 3, 1896
Place of birth Chicago, United States
Date of death May 26, 1997(1997-05-26) (aged 100)
Place of death Charlottesville, Virginia, United States
Career information
Position(s) Fullback
College Harvard
High school Francis W. Parker
Career history
As coach
1923 Chicago Cardinals (assistant)
As player
1921 Racine Cardinals
1921–23 Chicago Cardinals
Career highlights and awards
  • 1916 Walter Camp All-America honorable mention (fullback)
  • 1916 New York Times All-East honorable mention
  • 1919 Donald Grant Herring Third-Team center on the Princeton-Yale-Harvard composite team
  • 1919 New York Times All-East honorable mention
Career stats
Military career
Allegiance United States United States
Service/branch United States Navy seal U.S. Navy
Years of service 1917–19
Rank US-O2 insignia.svg Lieutenant
Unit USS Talofa, USS Connecticut, USS Maury, USS Gregory
Battles/wars World War I

Ralph Horween (born Ralph Horwitz; also known as Ralph McMahon or B. McMahon; August 3, 1896 – May 26, 1997) was an American football player and coach. He played fullback and halfback and was a punter and drop-kicker for the unbeaten Harvard Crimson football teams of 1919 and 1920, which won the 1920 Rose Bowl. He was voted an All-American.

Horween played three seasons in the National Football League (NFL), for the Racine Cardinals/Chicago Cardinals. In addition, he was an assistant coach for the Cardinals during his playing years.

His brother, Arnold Horween, was also an All-American football player for Harvard, and also played in the NFL for the Cardinals. They were the last Jewish brothers to play in the NFL until Geoff Schwartz and Mitchell Schwartz, in the 2000s.

After retiring from football, Horween attended Harvard Law School, and became a patent attorney, and later a federal government official. He was also a successful businessman, as he raised cattle and helped run the family leather tannery business, Horween Leather Company. He was the first NFL player to live to the age of 100.

Horween's parents, Isidore and Rose (Rabinoff), immigrated to Chicago from Ukraine in the Russian Empire in 1892. His family changed its name during his youth to Horween from its original name, which was either Horwitz or Horowitz.


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Wikipedia

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