Katy Easterday

Katy Easterday

Easterday pictured in The Bronco 1920, Simmons yearbook
Sport(s) Football, basketball, baseball, track and field
Biographical details
Born (1894-06-29)June 29, 1894
Lisbon, Ohio
Died May 26, 1976(1976-05-26) (aged 81)
Odessa, Texas
Playing career
Football
1917–1918 Pittsburgh
Basketball
1916–1918 Pittsburgh
Position(s) Halfback (football)
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Football
1919–1920 Simmons (TX)
1921 Bethany (WV) (assistant)
1922–1923 Bethany (WV)
1925–1927 Waynesburg
Basketball
1920–1921 Simmons (TX)
1921–1924 Bethany (WV)
1924–1928 Waynesburg
Baseball
1920 Simmons (TX)
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
1919–1921 Simmons (TX)
1924–1928 Waynesburg
Head coaching record
Overall 33–24–8 (college football)
83–69 (college basketball)
13–7 (baseball)

Statistics

Accomplishments and honors
Awards
All-American, 1918

Roy Alexander "Katy" Easterday (June 29, 1894 – May 26, 1976) was an American football and basketball player, track and field athlete, coach, college athletics administrator, and dentist. He played at the halfback position for the Pittsburgh Panthers football teams from 1917 to 1918 and was selected as an All-American in 1918. Easterday served as the head football coach at Simmons Collegenow Hardin–Simmons Universityfrom 1919 to 1920, at Bethany College in Bethany, West Virginia from 1922 to 1923, and at Waynesburg University from 1925 to 1927, compiling a career college football record of 33–24–8.

Early life and playing career

Easterday was born in Lisbon, Ohio. He was an all-state basketball player and held the state record in the pole vault.[1] Before enrolling in college, Easterday also played on sandlot and hometown teams from Ambridge, Salem, Beaver Falls and other western Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio teams.[1]

In 1913, Easterday enrolled at the University of Pittsburgh. When he announced that he wanted to play football for "Pop" Warner, his comments initially "invoked some chuckles from officials there."[1] Easterday made the team as a halfback and scatback. He played on Pitt teams that ran up a 33-game winning streak before losing to Syracuse by a score of 24–3 in 1919.[2] As a senior in 1918, Easterday was selected as a first-team All-American by Tom Thorpe, sports editor of The New York Times, and Robert "Tiny" Maxwell, sports editor of The Philadelphia Inquirer.[1] Walter Camp praised Easterday as “one of the finest forward pass snaggers Camp had ever seen.”[1]

Pitt's undefeated 1917 team was known as "The Fighting Dentists" because on occasion every position was filled by dental students.[3] The dental students on the 1917 team included Easterday,[4] Skip Gougler,[5] "Tank" McLaren,[6] "Jake" Stahl.[7] and Jock Sutherland.[8]

Easterday also ran track at Pitt and played for the university's basketball teams, serving as the team captain in 1917.

Coaching career

Easterday graduated from Pitt in 1919 with a degree in dentistry. He passed his state dentistry examination but opted to pursue a career in coaching.[1] After graduating, Easterday became the athletic director and head coach of all sports at Hardin–Simmons College, a private Baptist college in Abilene, Texas. In three years at Hardin–Simmons, Easterday coached two conference basketball championships and a conference baseball championship. He also coached three pitchers who went on to play Major League Baseball: Jesse "T-Bone" Winters, John "Lefty" Middleton, and Lefty Ward.[1]

He also coached for four years each at Bethany College in Bethany, West Virginia. From 1924 to 1928, Easterday was the athletic director at Waynesburg College. Waynesburg later played in the first televised football game in 1939. He was inducted into Waynesburg’s Yellow-Jacket Sports Hall of Fame in 1971. Easterday coached all sports at Waynesburg, including football, basketball and track in the mid-1920s.[9]

From 1929 to 1933, Easterday coached football and basketball at Kittanning High School, located 44 miles (71 km) northeast of Pittsburgh. He coached the Kittanning Wildcats to their first undefeated, untied season in which they allowed only 12 points scored against them the entire year.[2]

Later life and family

Easterday also practiced as a dentist in Kittanning, Pennsylvania in the 1930s, and worked for a couple of years with the National Youth Association. From 1937 to 1942, he worked for Allegheny Ludlum Steel and from 1942 to 1959, Easterday was a safety supervisor at the Pullman-Standard Company in Butler, Pennsylvania.[1] He was also one of the organizers of the Butler County Safety Council.[1]

After retiring from Pullman-Standard, Easterday moved to Odessa, Texas. Easterday had begun his coaching career at Hardin-Simmons College near Odessa and met his wife there.[10] In 1968, he was named "Elk of the Year" by the Elks lodge at Odessa.[10] Easterday was married to Myrtle Christian, and the couple had a daughter.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "All-American Gridder: Former Wildcat Mentor Retires". LEADER.TIMES, KITTANNING, PA. 1959-07-06.
  2. 1 2 "Along With Others of 1917 Team... Former Kittanning Coach Among Pitt Honor Guests". Leader-Times. 1967-11-03.
  3. "50th Anniversary: Last Unbeaten Pitt Team, 1917 'Fighting Dentists', Will Be Honored Saturday". Daily Courier. 1967-11-02.
  4. "All-American Gridder: Former Wildcat Mentor Retires". LEADER.TIMES, KITTANNING, PA. 1959-07-06. (Easterday graduated from Pitt in 1919 with a degree in dentistry.)
  5. "‘SKIP’ GOUGLER NEW COACH IS TRAINING BACKFIELD PLAYER". The Lafayette Weekly. 1921-10-05. (Gougler completed his education in dentistry at Pitt in 1920.)
  6. "PITT CRACK ATHLETES SECURE COACHING JOBS". Altoona Mirror. 1919-04-30. (McLaren "graduates from the university dental school in June.")
  7. "Dr. Stahl was dentist in Hampton". North Hills News Record. 1966-10-12.
  8. "Jimmy Phelan to Fulfill Promise Of Coaching Job". Nevada State Journal. 1936-12-22.
  9. "Everhart Placed In Hall Of Fame". THE MORNING HERALD - THE EVENING STANDARD (Uniontown, Pa.). 1971-10-23.
  10. 1 2 "Ex-Waynesburg Coach Honored". THE MORNING HERALD - THE EVFNING STANDARD. 1968-07-15.

External links

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