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Tom Shevlin

Thomas Leonard Shevlin (March 1, 1883 – December 29, 1915) was an American college football player and coach at Yale University and a businessman. He was a consensus All-American for three of his four years, selected a first-team All-American by some selector in all. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1954.

Tom Shevlin
Born:(1883-03-01)March 1, 1883
Muskegon, Michigan
Died:December 29, 1915(1915-12-29) (aged 32)
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Career information
Position(s)End
CollegeYale
High schoolThe Hill School
Career history
As coach
1906–1909Minnesota (assistant)
1910–1915Yale (assistant)
Career highlights and awards
  • 3x Consensus All-American (1902, 1904, 1905)
  • 2x national champion (1902, 1905)
  • Camp All-time All-America team
  • College Football Hall of Fame, 1954

Early years

Shevlin was born in Muskegon, Michigan, the son of Thomas Henry and Alice Ann (Hall) Shevlin. His family moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota when he was a young boy, and his father became successful in the lumber business and active in Republican Party politics.[1] Shevlin attended The Hill School in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, and then enrolled at Yale University.[2]

Athlete at Yale

Shevlin attended Yale from 1902 to 1906. He became best known as a football player, but also competed in track and field, baseball, boxing, and hockey.[3] By 1905, Shevlin had a national reputation as Yale's premier athlete and "unquestionably one of the most remarkable all round athletes in America."[4] He was six feet tall and weighed "190 pounds when in training and 212 pounds out of training.[4] One newspaper account described his athletic prowess as follows:

The famous athlete has won a "Y" in three branches of sport and might win two or three more if he had time to devote to that many games. As left fielder on the baseball team, as hammer thrower on the track team and a football player Shevlin has been found worthy of the coveted letter. He also is a good sprinter, basketball player, tennis expert and boxer. ... He can run 100 yards in less than 11 seconds and could easily make the varsity tennis and basket ball teams if he wished. He is not on the golf team simply because he has not the time to devote to the game.[4]

Football

 
Frank Hinkey and Tom Shevlin (right)

Shevlin played for Yale's varsity football team from 1902 to 1905. He was selected as an All-American at the end position each year, making him one of a handful of four-time All-American in the history of college football.[5] During his time at Yale, the football team defeated Princeton three times and Harvard four times.[6] As a senior in 1905, Shevlin was captain of the Yale football team that has been called "the best aggregation that ever represented the school."[5] It was said that in his years at Yale, "not an opposing rushing attack has gained a first down around his end."[4] The 1905 Yale team went 10–0, outscored its opponents 227–4, and was picked as co-national champions with the University of Chicago. For his accomplishments in leading the football team, Shevlin became known as the "miracle man of football".[5]

In 1905, college football came under fire by university presidents and others who felt that its violent nature was a negative influence on institutions of higher learning. Shevlin spoke in defense of the sport. He noted that, though he loved all forms of sport, football was a particular favorite: "There's something primitive about football that I like. You get down to the fundamentals, as it were. Football is a war game. You have to plan it like a battle. It requires more brains to play it and develop it than any other game ..."[3]

The Atlanta Constitution wrote of Shevlin: "Probably no more sensational athlete ever played on Yale teams than Shevlin. He was an all-round star, being identified with virtually every branch of sport."[7] At the close of his football career with Yale, The Washington Post wrote:

Whether Capt. Tom Shevlin can be induced to come back to act as head coach is not sure. He has planned to go into the lumber business in the West, but strong pressure will be brought to bear to induce him to return to Yale as coach. His year as captain closes with him one of the most popular leaders who ever headed a Yale team.[8]

 
Tom Shevlin - Yale

Track and field

While best known for football, Shevlin also received varsity letters at Yale as a hammer thrower for the track and field team.[5][9] He won the 1903 collegiate hammer throw competition with a throw of 156 feet, 3 inches,[10] and set the world's record in the 12-pound hammer throw.[11] In 1904, he travelled to England, Scotland and Ireland to compete in international track and field competition.[12] In 1905, Shevlin hired world's champion John Flanagan to come to New Haven as his personal trainer, helping Shevlin reach a personal record with a 160-foot throw of the hammer.[13]

Boxing

Shevlin also developed an interest in boxing. In 1904, heavyweight boxing champion "Gentlemen Jim" Corbett agreed to a three-round bout with Shevlin at the Yale gymnasium. Corbett won the match, but praised Shevlin afterward: "He hits the hardest blow and is the best man at foot work I ever met with the exception of [James J.] Jeffries."[4] Some in the press expressed concern that Shevlin had taken up a sport that was uncommon in the Ivy League and wondered whether "society will drop" Shevlin "because he has been taking to the gloves."[14]

Automobile racing

While at Yale, Shevlin also developed a passion for the new sport of automobile racing. In early 1905, he purchased a $15,000 French automobile and spent considerable time racing it throughout New England.[15][16] He twice left New Haven racing to beat the express train to Meriden, Connecticut. On the second occasion, the mayor of Meriden saw Shevlin "whirling riotously into town" and set the police after him. A Meriden police officer was tasked with finding Shevlin and followed his trail for two days. The pursuit was unsuccessful, but Shevlin turned himself in after hearing that a warrant had been issued for his arrest. Shevlin paid a $40 fine and returned to New Haven.[16] Shevlin drew a further fine when he and a friend drove an automobile "at furious pace" up and down past the dormitories of Smith College as young women "waved responsively to the reckless autoing."[17]

Reputation for spending

As exemplified in his purchase of the $15,000 French automobile and hiring the world's champion hammer thrower as a trainer, Shevlin developed a reputation as a free spender. He was known for his "flashy clothes and his loud manner" and for being "a bit wild" in his four years at Yale.[18] The New Haven Register wrote that, even at a school attended by the country's elites, Shevlin had set a record for spending:

He is credited with having spent more money than any undergrad ever spent in the course of a year, $17,000 is the figure given. He bought everything—flowers, taxicabs, autos (they were just coming in when Tom was in college), clothes (and such clothes!), jewelry, canes, dinners, and their accompaniments—there wasn't a thing that was untouched by Tom's versatile and seemingly bottomless purse.[18]

Shevlin did not spend only on himself. He reportedly helped "many a poor fellow, struggling to get an education," sometimes anonymously leaving $1,000 on the desk of a classmate in need.[18]

Snubbing at "tap-day"

At the conclusion of the academic year, Yale held its annual "tap-day" custom in which juniors were selected for the school's three senior societies—Skull and Bones, Scroll and Key, and Wolf's Head. By tradition, the captain of Yale's football team was tapped to join Skull and Bones. However, in May 1905, Shevlin was snubbed by all three societies, resulting in a public furor. After the public snubbing, Shevlin reportedly "left the campus and whirled away in his automobile."[19] One newspaper speculated that Shevlin's automobile was the reason for the snub:

Can it be true that Tom Shevlin, Jr. ... missed being "tapped" for one of the senior societies merely because he had just become the possessor of a fine, new automobile and was putting on a good deal of style with it? It is true that he was not "tapped;" equally true that he whirled up to the "tapping" place in a splendid automobile, but why should the possession of a 40-horse power horseless wagon militate against a student who desires to be "tapped" and is entitled to the distinction? ... Evidently because he had made himself unpopular and in some way the cause of the unpopularity was the splendid touring car. Other automobiles there are at Yale, but the Minnesota boy had the best machine in the bunch. Envy may have had something to do with the shabby treatment handed out to young Shevlin.[20]

There were also suggestions that it was the reckless manner in which Shevlin drove his car that led to his being snubbed.[20] Shevlin had also drawn attention in 1904 when traveling to England as part of the Harvard-Yale track team; his decision to stay at a different hotel than the team reportedly "cost him considerable of his rather meager popularity."[21] According to another story, Shevlin had placed a $100 bet that he would be tapped by Skull and Bones, and when word of the bet reached the group, they declined to have him.[18]

Shortly after the snub, Yale's famed trainer Mike Murphy announced that he was leaving Yale to take a position at Penn. Some reports indicated that Murphy was "disgusted" over the snub of Shevlin and "the growth of aristocratic as opposed to democratic sentiments" at New Haven and did not care to remain there.[22][23] Others suggested that the real reason for Murphy's move to Penn had more to do with the question of salary,[22] as Penn agreed to pay Murphy a salary of $10,000 per year—more than double the salary then paid to a U.S. Senator.

Shevlin responded by rallying support to keep Murphy at Yale,[24] even offering personally to pay any sum necessary to keep Murphy at Yale.[15] In the end, Murphy went to Penn, and Shevlin stayed at Yale.

Personal and family life

As the handsome son of a millionaire and one of the most famous athletes in the United States, Shevlin's courting of, and engagement to, Elizabeth Sherley was the subject of extensive press coverage. Sherley was reported to be one of the most beautiful young women in the South and the daughter of one of the wealthiest families of Louisville, Kentucky.[citation needed] Shevlin met the 17-year-old Sherley in 1905, and she attended all of Yale's football games in the fall of 1905. The press covered the courtship with articles bearing headlines such as, "Tom Shevlin Is Downed By Cupid."[25][26] Sherley was described as "one of the prettiest girls who ever sat in a grandstand waving a blue banner and cheering a good play on the gridiron."[27] After beating Harvard in 1905, newspapers reported that Shevlin said to a teammate, "I've realized my first ambition today, beating Harvard. I've got one more—to marry that pretty girl you see sitting there in that box."[28]

The news of the engagement drew national press coverage, and the announcement that Sherley had broken off the engagement a few weeks later drew even wider coverage. After the engagement was announced, Sherley traveled to Baltimore, where she was the subject of considerable attention from the city's men. When news of this attention reached Shevlin, he wrote to her complaining of her activities. Sherley reacted by calling off the engagement noting "it was not her fault that men wished to pay her attention."[29]

In 1906, Shevlin's courtship of Vera Gilbert, the stepdaughter of famed New York architect C. P. H. Gilbert, again put Shevlin's personal life in the public eye. After Shevlin announced his engagement to Gilbert, Gilbert's stepfather spoke publicly in opposition to the union and insisted that there was no engagement. Shevlin insisted that the couple was, in fact, engaged, and the back-and-forth between the two men received extensive press coverage in the last half of 1906.[30][31] After Shevlin's second engagement in less than a year was called off, one newspaper asked, "Has the little love god deserted Tom Shevlin, Yale's ex-football captain, when not long ago the mere effect of his big, manly self plowing across a player-strewn football field set a hundred feminine hearts a-flutter?"[30]

In February 1909, after renewing his courtship with Elizabeth Sherley, the two were married.[1][28][32] The couple had two children, Betty and Thomas, Jr.[1] In 1911, Shevlin and his first child, Betty Shevlin, were profiled in a lengthy article on millionaire babies. The article noted:

Some of the children of the busy rich inherit more than money. Some have a heritage of beauty. There is little Betty Shevlin of Minneapolis and Yale. ... Betty's father was Thomas Shevlin, famous football end, captain of the Yale team during his senior year, and present advisory coach for Old Eli's players. Tom was the idol of his college mates. He won numerous honors for his college, but he soon fell a victim to Cupid's tackle. There was no hope for Tom after he met that beautiful Kentucky thoroughbred, Miss Elizabeth Sherley. He looked into her violet eyes, saw her long black lashes, gave one glance at her radiant complexion, and, while losing his heart, did not fail to win hers.[33]

Business career

After graduating from Yale, Shevlin returned to Minneapolis where he operated a lumber business.[5] Shevlin's father died in 1912 leaving an estate valued at $1.5 million to Shevlin and his two sisters.[7] Shevlin and his sisters formed the Shevlin Company, a holding company for the family's lumber interests.[1] Shevlin was successful in the lumber business and became president of 13 separate lumber companies and a director of two Minneapolis banks.[1]

Football coach

After moving back to Minneapolis, Shevlin also spent time coaching the football players at the University of Minnesota, where the team developed a new scheme known as "the Minnesota shift."[18][21] After his death, a friend recounted a story of the passion for football displayed by Shevlin in coaching the Minnesota Golden Gophers at Northrop Field. Shevlin attended a practice in an expensive business suit, overcoat, derby and light colored gloves. Not satisfied with "verbal participation," Shevlin joined in the scrimmages, and at the end of an hour's work he "was thoroughly happy, but his natty clothes were hanging from him in shreds."[34]

On several occasions, Shevlin also returned to Yale to help coach the school's football team during periods of difficulty.[5][35][36] One writer opined that Shevlin made his reputation when he brought the Minnesota shift to Yale in 1910.[18][21] When Yale was defeated 21-0 by Brown in 1910, the school sent for Shevlin.[5] Backed by Yale's advisory coach Walter Camp, Shevlin was called from the West to teach the Yale football team the new style of play that had developed in that region. The New York Times reported as follows:

Thomas Shevlin, the famous Captain and end, who was called from the West to show the Yale men how the game was being played in his section undertook to give the team the benefit of his knowledge. Then came reports of dissensions among the coaches because of a conflict of old and new ideas.[37]

Shevlin succeeded in turning the program around in 1910, as he coached the team to a 5-3 win over Princeton and a scoreless tie against Harvard.[5]

 
Frank Hinkey posing with Shevlin (right), wearing his familiar derby and Persian lamb lined overcoat

Shevlin continued assisting the Yale football team until the time of his death, and his colorful presence on the Yale sidelines was described as follows:

In that familiar heavy Persian lamb lined overcoat, wearing that familiar derby at that rakish angle, carrying that famous cane, with his horseshoe diamond pin in that flashy tie, and smoking that inevitable cigarette, he will run down the field with the varsity ends under kicks, and beat the youngsters in their togs every time. Then he'll get excited, and dressed though he is in top form, will rush right into a scrimmage and show 'em how it should be done, no matter how muddy the field. Practice over, Tom will go back to the Taft and order another suit. He seems to have a new suit of clothes every day.[18]

In November 1915, Shevlin led Yale to a 13-7 win over Princeton in front of 50,000 fans at New Haven—the largest crowd ever to view a Yale-Princeton game. After the game, Shevlin was hailed as "the miracle man of football" who had "saved Yale from the worst gridiron defeat in her history."[38] Shevlin had been called east in October 1915 and was credited with having "made order out of chaos" in just two weeks training the Yale team.[38]

Death and family

In the fall of 1915, Shevlin contracted a cold while training the Yale football team. He continued to coach through his illness,[5] and reportedly lost 12 pounds during the training.[39] At the close of the football season, Shevlin left for California, hoping to recuperate from the illness. The rest in California improved his condition, and he cut the stay short to return to Minneapolis to attend to his business interests.[39] After returning to Minneapolis in late December 1915, Shevlin developed pneumonia.[7] As his condition worsened, a telegram was sent to B.W. Sippy, a specialist in Chicago to come to his beside. Sippy was sent to Minneapolis on a special train which sped to Minneapolis in a then-record time of eight hours,[39] but Shevlin died at his home on December 29, 1915, at age 32.[1][7][40] After his death, it was written that "Shevlin gave his life to make Yale a winner."[5] A Midwestern newspaper wrote:

The death of Tom Shevlin at Minneapolis, Minn., his home, closes one of the finest careers a college athlete ever led. From the time Shevlin entered Yale in 1902 he was a credit to clean amateur sports and from the time he left college in 1905 he was a credit to the business world.[5]

Shevlin was survived by his widow and two children.[6][7] Shevlin left a fortune estimated to be worth $3,500,000. The estate was left in trust for his children, and his widow was left with an allowance of $60,000 per year.[41] He also left more than $1.5 million in life insurance, most of which went to the companies that he ran.[6][42] Only seven other men in the United States carried as much life insurance as Shevlin.[43] After his death, the $1.5 million life insurance purchased by the Shevlin companies was used by life insurance in a major advertising campaign promoting the use of keyman insurance. The following text from a full-page advertisement in The Atlanta Constitution is an example:

The value of an officer or worker in any partnership or corporation is most realized at his death. Then insurance in favor of the business should be ready to replace him. Tom Shevlin's firm lost its most valuable asset in Tom Shevlin's death, but insurance of about a million dollars will replace his loss. There's a real moral in this for Atlanta partnerships and corporations—be prepared.[44]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Tom Shevlin, Famous as a Football Star: Died of Pneumonia today After a Short Illness". Fort Wayne News. December 29, 1915.
  2. ^ "Tom Shevlin, Noted Yale Athlete, Dead: Succumbed to Pneumonia, Which Followed Cold Contracted While Coaching". The Philadelphia Inquirer. December 30, 1915.
  3. ^ a b "Great Player Defends Game: Shevlin Talks On Football Situation". Baltimore American. December 25, 1905. (Shevlin "is not only a gridiron star, but is a baseball player, hockey player, automobilist, skater and weight thrower and stands well in his studies")
  4. ^ a b c d e "Yale's Big Hero: Tom Shevlin, All Round Star, Is the Pride of New Haven". Aberdeen Daily News. December 30, 1904.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Tom Shevlin". Fort Wayne Sentinel. December 30, 1915.
  6. ^ a b c "Mrs. Shevlin Wed To M.H. Russell: Widow of Noted Yale Football Player Marries New York Broker at the Ritz-Carlton" (PDF). The New York Times. June 15, 1917.
  7. ^ a b c d e "Tom Shevlin Dies of Pneumonia: Famous Yale Player and Coach Dies at Age of 32; Caught Cold While Coaching Yale This Past Season". The Atlanta Constitution. December 30, 1915.
  8. ^ "Yale's Next Year's Eleven". The Washington Post. November 27, 1905.
  9. ^ "Yale Mourns for Shevlin". The Philadelphia Inquirer. December 30, 1915.
  10. ^ "In the World of Sport". Springfield Sunday Republican. April 6, 1903.
  11. ^ "Sporting News From Colleges". Springfield Daily Republican. April 5, 1903.
  12. ^ "Tom Shevlin Will Compete Abroad". The Boston Journal. June 9, 1904.
  13. ^ "Shevlin Put Wright 160 Feet in Trial". The Boston Journal. May 11, 1905.
  14. ^ "untitled". Duluth News Tribune. March 13, 1906.
  15. ^ a b "Minnesota Man Is Yale Captain: Big Guard Shevlin Who Has Done Great Work In Blue Line for Past Three Years—His Home Is In Minneapolis". Duluth News Tribune. August 13, 1905.
  16. ^ a b "Shevlin and His Auto: Yale Football Captain Pushed it Along Some and Paid a Fine at Meriden". Springfield Daily Republican. May 9, 1905.
  17. ^ "$50 For Flirting With Smith Girls: Tom Shevlin and Friend in Auto Tear Up 'Dormitory Row'—Fined for Speeding". Pawtucket Times. May 9, 1905.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g "Tom Shevlin of Yale Kindly Swashbuckler". Anaconda Standard (reprinted in part from the New Haven Register). November 14, 1915.
  19. ^ "'Tap Day' At Yale: Senior Society Elections—Shevlin Not 'Tapped'". Springfield Daily Republican. May 26, 1905.
  20. ^ a b "An Enigma". Duluth News Tribune. June 5, 1905.
  21. ^ a b c R.E. McMillin (December 30, 1915). "Tom Shevlin True Son of the Forest: Reared in Luxury He Brought Energy of Wilderness Into His Life". The Boston Journal.
  22. ^ a b "Mike Murphy and Yale". Waterloo Daily Register. June 17, 1905.
  23. ^ "Trainer Murphy Stands By Shevlin". Duluth News Tribune. June 4, 1905.
  24. ^ "Murphy May Stay At Yale: Tom Shevlin Is Stirring Up Influence to Hold the Trainer". The Philadelphia Inquirer. June 3, 1905.
  25. ^ "The Evening Times (Pawtucket)". November 27, 1905.
  26. ^ "How Cupid Caught Old Eli's Captain: The Engagement of Tom Shevlin, of Yale Team, Reveals Charming Romance". Baltimore American. December 17, 1905.
  27. ^ "Tom Shevlin's Bride-To-Be: Yale's Great Football Player Engaged to a Kentucky Beauty". The Evening Times (reprinted from the New York Press). November 27, 1905.
  28. ^ a b "Tom Shevlin Wins His Kentucky Belle: Miss Shirley, Who Broke Former Engagement, Will Wed Football Star". The Evening Times (Pawtucket). January 18, 1909.
  29. ^ "Tom Shevlin and His Fiance Part". The Philadelphia Inquirer. December 25, 1905.
  30. ^ a b "Fickle Cupid Again Deserts Tom Shevlin: Former Football Captain Once More Jilted By Sweetheart; His Second Romance Ends". Anaconda Standard. December 1, 1906.
  31. ^ "Romance of Tom Shevlin: Athlete Says He'll Wed Vera Gilbert, But Girl's Father Says 'No'". Duluth News Tribune. December 30, 1906.
  32. ^ "Beauty, Riches, Romance: Were They Ever Bunched More Lavishly Than in the Life of Mrs. Russell Marshall, the 'Luckiest Girl in the World'". Oakland Tribune. August 5, 1917.
  33. ^ "Millionaire Babies: Will The Enormous Wealth That Awaits Them Really Bring Happiness". San Antonio Light. December 24, 1911.
  34. ^ "Many Anecdotes Related About Tom Shevlin: How Coach Spoiled Nice Suit of Clothes Teaching Football". San Jose Mercury Herald. Associated Press. December 31, 1915.
  35. ^ "Tom Shevlin Called To Give First Aid: Yale Football Captain Said to Have Ignored Hinkey and Sounded S.O.S. Signal". The State. November 1, 1915.
  36. ^ "Big Shake-Up At Yale Result Poor Showing: 'Tom' Shevlin to Take Charge of Team, It's Said". The Macon Daily Telegraph. November 1, 1915.
  37. ^ "Yale Men Not Surprised: Camp and Shevlin Drilled New Football Ideas into Team" (PDF). The New York Times. November 13, 1910.
  38. ^ a b George L. Holmes (November 14, 1915). "Shevlin, Miracle Man, Responsible for Yale Victory". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. United Press.
  39. ^ a b c "Thomas Shevlin Is Dead: Millionaire Football Coach Is Victim of Pneumonia". Oshkosh Daily Northwestern. Associated Press. December 29, 1915.
  40. ^ "Shevlin Dies of Pneumonia: Millionaire Football Star Victim of Malady Caused by Coaching Yale Team". Stevens Point Daily Journal. January 1, 1916.
  41. ^ "Tom Shevlin Left a Large Fortune". Wilkes-Barre Times Leader. January 5, 1916.
  42. ^ "Football Star Had $1,525,000 of Life Insurance: Nine Companies Handled Big Policy on Life of Tom Shevlin". The Atlanta Constitution. February 27, 1916.
  43. ^ "Shevlin's Death Is Great Shock: Noted Yale Football Coach and Millionaire Athlete Dies at Minneapolis Home". Duluth News Tribune. December 30, 1915.
  44. ^ "A Million Dollar Insurance Policy Protects Tom Shevlin's Business Partners". The Atlanta Constitution. February 27, 1916.

External links

shevlin, thomas, leonard, shevlin, march, 1883, december, 1915, american, college, football, player, coach, yale, university, businessman, consensus, american, three, four, years, selected, first, team, american, some, selector, inducted, into, college, footba. Thomas Leonard Shevlin March 1 1883 December 29 1915 was an American college football player and coach at Yale University and a businessman He was a consensus All American for three of his four years selected a first team All American by some selector in all He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1954 Tom ShevlinBorn 1883 03 01 March 1 1883Muskegon MichiganDied December 29 1915 1915 12 29 aged 32 Minneapolis MinnesotaCareer informationPosition s EndCollegeYaleHigh schoolThe Hill SchoolCareer historyAs coach1906 1909Minnesota assistant 1910 1915Yale assistant Career highlights and awards3x Consensus All American 1902 1904 1905 2x national champion 1902 1905 Camp All time All America teamCollege Football Hall of Fame 1954 Contents 1 Early years 2 Athlete at Yale 2 1 Football 2 2 Track and field 2 3 Boxing 2 4 Automobile racing 2 5 Reputation for spending 2 6 Snubbing at tap day 3 Personal and family life 4 Business career 5 Football coach 6 Death and family 7 References 8 External linksEarly years EditShevlin was born in Muskegon Michigan the son of Thomas Henry and Alice Ann Hall Shevlin His family moved to Minneapolis Minnesota when he was a young boy and his father became successful in the lumber business and active in Republican Party politics 1 Shevlin attended The Hill School in Pottstown Pennsylvania and then enrolled at Yale University 2 Athlete at Yale EditShevlin attended Yale from 1902 to 1906 He became best known as a football player but also competed in track and field baseball boxing and hockey 3 By 1905 Shevlin had a national reputation as Yale s premier athlete and unquestionably one of the most remarkable all round athletes in America 4 He was six feet tall and weighed 190 pounds when in training and 212 pounds out of training 4 One newspaper account described his athletic prowess as follows The famous athlete has won a Y in three branches of sport and might win two or three more if he had time to devote to that many games As left fielder on the baseball team as hammer thrower on the track team and a football player Shevlin has been found worthy of the coveted letter He also is a good sprinter basketball player tennis expert and boxer He can run 100 yards in less than 11 seconds and could easily make the varsity tennis and basket ball teams if he wished He is not on the golf team simply because he has not the time to devote to the game 4 Football Edit Frank Hinkey and Tom Shevlin right Shevlin played for Yale s varsity football team from 1902 to 1905 He was selected as an All American at the end position each year making him one of a handful of four time All American in the history of college football 5 During his time at Yale the football team defeated Princeton three times and Harvard four times 6 As a senior in 1905 Shevlin was captain of the Yale football team that has been called the best aggregation that ever represented the school 5 It was said that in his years at Yale not an opposing rushing attack has gained a first down around his end 4 The 1905 Yale team went 10 0 outscored its opponents 227 4 and was picked as co national champions with the University of Chicago For his accomplishments in leading the football team Shevlin became known as the miracle man of football 5 In 1905 college football came under fire by university presidents and others who felt that its violent nature was a negative influence on institutions of higher learning Shevlin spoke in defense of the sport He noted that though he loved all forms of sport football was a particular favorite There s something primitive about football that I like You get down to the fundamentals as it were Football is a war game You have to plan it like a battle It requires more brains to play it and develop it than any other game 3 The Atlanta Constitution wrote of Shevlin Probably no more sensational athlete ever played on Yale teams than Shevlin He was an all round star being identified with virtually every branch of sport 7 At the close of his football career with Yale The Washington Post wrote Whether Capt Tom Shevlin can be induced to come back to act as head coach is not sure He has planned to go into the lumber business in the West but strong pressure will be brought to bear to induce him to return to Yale as coach His year as captain closes with him one of the most popular leaders who ever headed a Yale team 8 Tom Shevlin Yale Track and field Edit While best known for football Shevlin also received varsity letters at Yale as a hammer thrower for the track and field team 5 9 He won the 1903 collegiate hammer throw competition with a throw of 156 feet 3 inches 10 and set the world s record in the 12 pound hammer throw 11 In 1904 he travelled to England Scotland and Ireland to compete in international track and field competition 12 In 1905 Shevlin hired world s champion John Flanagan to come to New Haven as his personal trainer helping Shevlin reach a personal record with a 160 foot throw of the hammer 13 Boxing Edit Shevlin also developed an interest in boxing In 1904 heavyweight boxing champion Gentlemen Jim Corbett agreed to a three round bout with Shevlin at the Yale gymnasium Corbett won the match but praised Shevlin afterward He hits the hardest blow and is the best man at foot work I ever met with the exception of James J Jeffries 4 Some in the press expressed concern that Shevlin had taken up a sport that was uncommon in the Ivy League and wondered whether society will drop Shevlin because he has been taking to the gloves 14 Automobile racing Edit While at Yale Shevlin also developed a passion for the new sport of automobile racing In early 1905 he purchased a 15 000 French automobile and spent considerable time racing it throughout New England 15 16 He twice left New Haven racing to beat the express train to Meriden Connecticut On the second occasion the mayor of Meriden saw Shevlin whirling riotously into town and set the police after him A Meriden police officer was tasked with finding Shevlin and followed his trail for two days The pursuit was unsuccessful but Shevlin turned himself in after hearing that a warrant had been issued for his arrest Shevlin paid a 40 fine and returned to New Haven 16 Shevlin drew a further fine when he and a friend drove an automobile at furious pace up and down past the dormitories of Smith College as young women waved responsively to the reckless autoing 17 Reputation for spending EditAs exemplified in his purchase of the 15 000 French automobile and hiring the world s champion hammer thrower as a trainer Shevlin developed a reputation as a free spender He was known for his flashy clothes and his loud manner and for being a bit wild in his four years at Yale 18 The New Haven Register wrote that even at a school attended by the country s elites Shevlin had set a record for spending He is credited with having spent more money than any undergrad ever spent in the course of a year 17 000 is the figure given He bought everything flowers taxicabs autos they were just coming in when Tom was in college clothes and such clothes jewelry canes dinners and their accompaniments there wasn t a thing that was untouched by Tom s versatile and seemingly bottomless purse 18 Shevlin did not spend only on himself He reportedly helped many a poor fellow struggling to get an education sometimes anonymously leaving 1 000 on the desk of a classmate in need 18 Snubbing at tap day EditAt the conclusion of the academic year Yale held its annual tap day custom in which juniors were selected for the school s three senior societies Skull and Bones Scroll and Key and Wolf s Head By tradition the captain of Yale s football team was tapped to join Skull and Bones However in May 1905 Shevlin was snubbed by all three societies resulting in a public furor After the public snubbing Shevlin reportedly left the campus and whirled away in his automobile 19 One newspaper speculated that Shevlin s automobile was the reason for the snub Can it be true that Tom Shevlin Jr missed being tapped for one of the senior societies merely because he had just become the possessor of a fine new automobile and was putting on a good deal of style with it It is true that he was not tapped equally true that he whirled up to the tapping place in a splendid automobile but why should the possession of a 40 horse power horseless wagon militate against a student who desires to be tapped and is entitled to the distinction Evidently because he had made himself unpopular and in some way the cause of the unpopularity was the splendid touring car Other automobiles there are at Yale but the Minnesota boy had the best machine in the bunch Envy may have had something to do with the shabby treatment handed out to young Shevlin 20 There were also suggestions that it was the reckless manner in which Shevlin drove his car that led to his being snubbed 20 Shevlin had also drawn attention in 1904 when traveling to England as part of the Harvard Yale track team his decision to stay at a different hotel than the team reportedly cost him considerable of his rather meager popularity 21 According to another story Shevlin had placed a 100 bet that he would be tapped by Skull and Bones and when word of the bet reached the group they declined to have him 18 Shortly after the snub Yale s famed trainer Mike Murphy announced that he was leaving Yale to take a position at Penn Some reports indicated that Murphy was disgusted over the snub of Shevlin and the growth of aristocratic as opposed to democratic sentiments at New Haven and did not care to remain there 22 23 Others suggested that the real reason for Murphy s move to Penn had more to do with the question of salary 22 as Penn agreed to pay Murphy a salary of 10 000 per year more than double the salary then paid to a U S Senator Shevlin responded by rallying support to keep Murphy at Yale 24 even offering personally to pay any sum necessary to keep Murphy at Yale 15 In the end Murphy went to Penn and Shevlin stayed at Yale Personal and family life EditAs the handsome son of a millionaire and one of the most famous athletes in the United States Shevlin s courting of and engagement to Elizabeth Sherley was the subject of extensive press coverage Sherley was reported to be one of the most beautiful young women in the South and the daughter of one of the wealthiest families of Louisville Kentucky citation needed Shevlin met the 17 year old Sherley in 1905 and she attended all of Yale s football games in the fall of 1905 The press covered the courtship with articles bearing headlines such as Tom Shevlin Is Downed By Cupid 25 26 Sherley was described as one of the prettiest girls who ever sat in a grandstand waving a blue banner and cheering a good play on the gridiron 27 After beating Harvard in 1905 newspapers reported that Shevlin said to a teammate I ve realized my first ambition today beating Harvard I ve got one more to marry that pretty girl you see sitting there in that box 28 The news of the engagement drew national press coverage and the announcement that Sherley had broken off the engagement a few weeks later drew even wider coverage After the engagement was announced Sherley traveled to Baltimore where she was the subject of considerable attention from the city s men When news of this attention reached Shevlin he wrote to her complaining of her activities Sherley reacted by calling off the engagement noting it was not her fault that men wished to pay her attention 29 In 1906 Shevlin s courtship of Vera Gilbert the stepdaughter of famed New York architect C P H Gilbert again put Shevlin s personal life in the public eye After Shevlin announced his engagement to Gilbert Gilbert s stepfather spoke publicly in opposition to the union and insisted that there was no engagement Shevlin insisted that the couple was in fact engaged and the back and forth between the two men received extensive press coverage in the last half of 1906 30 31 After Shevlin s second engagement in less than a year was called off one newspaper asked Has the little love god deserted Tom Shevlin Yale s ex football captain when not long ago the mere effect of his big manly self plowing across a player strewn football field set a hundred feminine hearts a flutter 30 In February 1909 after renewing his courtship with Elizabeth Sherley the two were married 1 28 32 The couple had two children Betty and Thomas Jr 1 In 1911 Shevlin and his first child Betty Shevlin were profiled in a lengthy article on millionaire babies The article noted Some of the children of the busy rich inherit more than money Some have a heritage of beauty There is little Betty Shevlin of Minneapolis and Yale Betty s father was Thomas Shevlin famous football end captain of the Yale team during his senior year and present advisory coach for Old Eli s players Tom was the idol of his college mates He won numerous honors for his college but he soon fell a victim to Cupid s tackle There was no hope for Tom after he met that beautiful Kentucky thoroughbred Miss Elizabeth Sherley He looked into her violet eyes saw her long black lashes gave one glance at her radiant complexion and while losing his heart did not fail to win hers 33 Business career EditAfter graduating from Yale Shevlin returned to Minneapolis where he operated a lumber business 5 Shevlin s father died in 1912 leaving an estate valued at 1 5 million to Shevlin and his two sisters 7 Shevlin and his sisters formed the Shevlin Company a holding company for the family s lumber interests 1 Shevlin was successful in the lumber business and became president of 13 separate lumber companies and a director of two Minneapolis banks 1 Football coach EditAfter moving back to Minneapolis Shevlin also spent time coaching the football players at the University of Minnesota where the team developed a new scheme known as the Minnesota shift 18 21 After his death a friend recounted a story of the passion for football displayed by Shevlin in coaching the Minnesota Golden Gophers at Northrop Field Shevlin attended a practice in an expensive business suit overcoat derby and light colored gloves Not satisfied with verbal participation Shevlin joined in the scrimmages and at the end of an hour s work he was thoroughly happy but his natty clothes were hanging from him in shreds 34 On several occasions Shevlin also returned to Yale to help coach the school s football team during periods of difficulty 5 35 36 One writer opined that Shevlin made his reputation when he brought the Minnesota shift to Yale in 1910 18 21 When Yale was defeated 21 0 by Brown in 1910 the school sent for Shevlin 5 Backed by Yale s advisory coach Walter Camp Shevlin was called from the West to teach the Yale football team the new style of play that had developed in that region The New York Times reported as follows Thomas Shevlin the famous Captain and end who was called from the West to show the Yale men how the game was being played in his section undertook to give the team the benefit of his knowledge Then came reports of dissensions among the coaches because of a conflict of old and new ideas 37 Shevlin succeeded in turning the program around in 1910 as he coached the team to a 5 3 win over Princeton and a scoreless tie against Harvard 5 Frank Hinkey posing with Shevlin right wearing his familiar derby and Persian lamb lined overcoatShevlin continued assisting the Yale football team until the time of his death and his colorful presence on the Yale sidelines was described as follows In that familiar heavy Persian lamb lined overcoat wearing that familiar derby at that rakish angle carrying that famous cane with his horseshoe diamond pin in that flashy tie and smoking that inevitable cigarette he will run down the field with the varsity ends under kicks and beat the youngsters in their togs every time Then he ll get excited and dressed though he is in top form will rush right into a scrimmage and show em how it should be done no matter how muddy the field Practice over Tom will go back to the Taft and order another suit He seems to have a new suit of clothes every day 18 In November 1915 Shevlin led Yale to a 13 7 win over Princeton in front of 50 000 fans at New Haven the largest crowd ever to view a Yale Princeton game After the game Shevlin was hailed as the miracle man of football who had saved Yale from the worst gridiron defeat in her history 38 Shevlin had been called east in October 1915 and was credited with having made order out of chaos in just two weeks training the Yale team 38 Death and family EditIn the fall of 1915 Shevlin contracted a cold while training the Yale football team He continued to coach through his illness 5 and reportedly lost 12 pounds during the training 39 At the close of the football season Shevlin left for California hoping to recuperate from the illness The rest in California improved his condition and he cut the stay short to return to Minneapolis to attend to his business interests 39 After returning to Minneapolis in late December 1915 Shevlin developed pneumonia 7 As his condition worsened a telegram was sent to B W Sippy a specialist in Chicago to come to his beside Sippy was sent to Minneapolis on a special train which sped to Minneapolis in a then record time of eight hours 39 but Shevlin died at his home on December 29 1915 at age 32 1 7 40 After his death it was written that Shevlin gave his life to make Yale a winner 5 A Midwestern newspaper wrote The death of Tom Shevlin at Minneapolis Minn his home closes one of the finest careers a college athlete ever led From the time Shevlin entered Yale in 1902 he was a credit to clean amateur sports and from the time he left college in 1905 he was a credit to the business world 5 Shevlin was survived by his widow and two children 6 7 Shevlin left a fortune estimated to be worth 3 500 000 The estate was left in trust for his children and his widow was left with an allowance of 60 000 per year 41 He also left more than 1 5 million in life insurance most of which went to the companies that he ran 6 42 Only seven other men in the United States carried as much life insurance as Shevlin 43 After his death the 1 5 million life insurance purchased by the Shevlin companies was used by life insurance in a major advertising campaign promoting the use of keyman insurance The following text from a full page advertisement in The Atlanta Constitution is an example The value of an officer or worker in any partnership or corporation is most realized at his death Then insurance in favor of the business should be ready to replace him Tom Shevlin s firm lost its most valuable asset in Tom Shevlin s death but insurance of about a million dollars will replace his loss There s a real moral in this for Atlanta partnerships and corporations be prepared 44 References Edit a b c d e f Tom Shevlin Famous as a Football Star Died of Pneumonia today After a Short Illness Fort Wayne News December 29 1915 Tom Shevlin Noted Yale Athlete Dead Succumbed to Pneumonia Which Followed Cold Contracted While Coaching The Philadelphia Inquirer December 30 1915 a b Great Player Defends Game Shevlin Talks On Football Situation Baltimore American December 25 1905 Shevlin is not only a gridiron star but is a baseball player hockey player automobilist skater and weight thrower and stands well in his studies a b c d e Yale s Big Hero Tom Shevlin All Round Star Is the Pride of New Haven Aberdeen Daily News December 30 1904 a b c d e f g h i j k Tom Shevlin Fort Wayne Sentinel December 30 1915 a b c Mrs Shevlin Wed To M H Russell Widow of Noted Yale Football Player Marries New York Broker at the Ritz Carlton PDF The New York Times June 15 1917 a b c d e Tom Shevlin Dies of Pneumonia Famous Yale Player and Coach Dies at Age of 32 Caught Cold While Coaching Yale This Past Season The Atlanta Constitution December 30 1915 Yale s Next Year s Eleven The Washington Post November 27 1905 Yale Mourns for Shevlin The Philadelphia Inquirer December 30 1915 In the World of Sport Springfield Sunday Republican April 6 1903 Sporting News From Colleges Springfield Daily Republican April 5 1903 Tom Shevlin Will Compete Abroad The Boston Journal June 9 1904 Shevlin Put Wright 160 Feet in Trial The Boston Journal May 11 1905 untitled Duluth News Tribune March 13 1906 a b Minnesota Man Is Yale Captain Big Guard Shevlin Who Has Done Great Work In Blue Line for Past Three Years His Home Is In Minneapolis Duluth News Tribune August 13 1905 a b Shevlin and His Auto Yale Football Captain Pushed it Along Some and Paid a Fine at Meriden Springfield Daily Republican May 9 1905 50 For Flirting With Smith Girls Tom Shevlin and Friend in Auto Tear Up Dormitory Row Fined for Speeding Pawtucket Times May 9 1905 a b c d e f g Tom Shevlin of Yale Kindly Swashbuckler Anaconda Standard reprinted in part from the New Haven Register November 14 1915 Tap Day At Yale Senior Society Elections Shevlin Not Tapped Springfield Daily Republican May 26 1905 a b An Enigma Duluth News Tribune June 5 1905 a b c R E McMillin December 30 1915 Tom Shevlin True Son of the Forest Reared in Luxury He Brought Energy of Wilderness Into His Life The Boston Journal a b Mike Murphy and Yale Waterloo Daily Register June 17 1905 Trainer Murphy Stands By Shevlin Duluth News Tribune June 4 1905 Murphy May Stay At Yale Tom Shevlin Is Stirring Up Influence to Hold the Trainer The Philadelphia Inquirer June 3 1905 The Evening Times Pawtucket November 27 1905 How Cupid Caught Old Eli s Captain The Engagement of Tom Shevlin of Yale Team Reveals Charming Romance Baltimore American December 17 1905 Tom Shevlin s Bride To Be Yale s Great Football Player Engaged to a Kentucky Beauty The Evening Times reprinted from the New York Press November 27 1905 a b Tom Shevlin Wins His Kentucky Belle Miss Shirley Who Broke Former Engagement Will Wed Football Star The Evening Times Pawtucket January 18 1909 Tom Shevlin and His Fiance Part The Philadelphia Inquirer December 25 1905 a b Fickle Cupid Again Deserts Tom Shevlin Former Football Captain Once More Jilted By Sweetheart His Second Romance Ends Anaconda Standard December 1 1906 Romance of Tom Shevlin Athlete Says He ll Wed Vera Gilbert But Girl s Father Says No Duluth News Tribune December 30 1906 Beauty Riches Romance Were They Ever Bunched More Lavishly Than in the Life of Mrs Russell Marshall the Luckiest Girl in the World Oakland Tribune August 5 1917 Millionaire Babies Will The Enormous Wealth That Awaits Them Really Bring Happiness San Antonio Light December 24 1911 Many Anecdotes Related About Tom Shevlin How Coach Spoiled Nice Suit of Clothes Teaching Football San Jose Mercury Herald Associated Press December 31 1915 Tom Shevlin Called To Give First Aid Yale Football Captain Said to Have Ignored Hinkey and Sounded S O S Signal The State November 1 1915 Big Shake Up At Yale Result Poor Showing Tom Shevlin to Take Charge of Team It s Said The Macon Daily Telegraph November 1 1915 Yale Men Not Surprised Camp and Shevlin Drilled New Football Ideas into Team PDF The New York Times November 13 1910 a b George L Holmes November 14 1915 Shevlin Miracle Man Responsible for Yale Victory Fort Worth Star Telegram United Press a b c Thomas Shevlin Is Dead Millionaire Football Coach Is Victim of Pneumonia Oshkosh Daily Northwestern Associated Press December 29 1915 Shevlin Dies of Pneumonia Millionaire Football Star Victim of Malady Caused by Coaching Yale Team Stevens Point Daily Journal January 1 1916 Tom Shevlin Left a Large Fortune Wilkes Barre Times Leader January 5 1916 Football Star Had 1 525 000 of Life Insurance Nine Companies Handled Big Policy on Life of Tom Shevlin The Atlanta Constitution February 27 1916 Shevlin s Death Is Great Shock Noted Yale Football Coach and Millionaire Athlete Dies at Minneapolis Home Duluth News Tribune December 30 1915 A Million Dollar Insurance Policy Protects Tom Shevlin s Business Partners The Atlanta Constitution February 27 1916 External links EditTom Shevlin at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tom Shevlin amp oldid 1130302955, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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