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T. L. Bayne

T. L. Bayne
Sport(s) Football, baseball
Biographical details
Born July 25, 1865
Died August 31, 1934(1934-08-31) (aged 69)
Playing career
1884 Yale
Position(s) Quarterback
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Football
1893 Tulane
1893 LSU (assistant)
1895 Tulane
Baseball
1894–1895 Tulane
Head coaching record
Overall 4–4 (football)

Thomas Levingston Bayne, Jr. (July 25, 1865 – August 31, 1934) was an American football player, coach of football and baseball, and attorney. He served as the first head football coach at Tulane University in 1893 and returned for a second season in 1895. Bayne was responsible for helping to introduce the sport of football to the city of New Orleans with an inter-club game in 1892. In 1893, he helped establish the intercollegiate program at Louisiana State University. He also coached the baseball team at Tulane for two seasons.

A native of New Orleans, Bayne was born the son of Thomas Levingston Bayne, a reputable lawyer of the city, former Confederate Army lieutenant colonel, and son-in-law of Alabama governor John Gayle. The younger Bayne attended Yale University and graduated as a member of the Class of 1887. In 1884, he played on the Yale football team as a quarterback. In 1888, Bayne joined his father's law firm, Denègre & Bayne.

On December 31, 1892, Bayne and his brother, Hugh Aiken Bayne, organized the Southern Club to play a football game against a club from Birmingham, Alabama at Audubon Park in New Orleans. The Southern Club won, 6–0, before a crowd of 2,000 spectators in cold and rainy conditions.

In 1893, he coached Tulane's first intercollegiate football team to a 1–2 record. That season, he arranged for his team to play Louisiana State on November 25 at Sportsman's Park in New Orleans. It was the initial season of football for LSU, and he made several trips to Baton Rouge to assist chemistry professor Charles E. Coates coach a team of cadets. Before the game, Bayne discovered that Coates was not available for the contest. Bayne agreed to coach both teams, and also handled ticket sales, construction of the goal posts, and officiating duties. He was compensated with a green umbrella. Tulane won, 34–0, which prompted the Chicago Daily Tribune to remark in 1955 that "Bayne's Tulane team whipped Bayne's L. S. U. team."


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