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| It Was Mostly Home Talent That Made the Big Green One of the Best of the Earliest Pro Football Teams |
| Ghosts of the Gridiron - Coadale Big Green |
| Link to News Articles of the Many Games that the Big Green Played |
| Link to the Ghost of the Gridiron - Virtual Scrapbook Library |
| COALDALE BIG GREEN ALL-TIME ROSTER (Updated 11/16/09) DOES ANYONE NOTICE ANY SPELLING OR OTHER ERRORS, OR MISSING NAMES OF PLAYERS? |
| Asplundh, Les | Bonner, James “Blue” | Bonner, Paddy | Bonner, “Wedger” | Boyle, Morgan |
| Boyle, Owen | Boyle, “Scoop” | Buck, Henry “Hen” | Bugarewicz, John | Burton, Jack |
| Chapman, Jack | Chapman, Tom | Davis, “Goo Goo” | Evans, Bill “Honeyboy” | Evans, Evan |
| Evans, John “Honeyboy” | Evans, T.J. | Flanagan, “Buzz” | Gallagher, “Foag” | Garland, Joe |
| Gildea, James “Casey” Head Coach | Gildea, Vince | Giltner, Charles “Froger | Giltner, Stanley | Hartwig, Bob |
| Harvey, Burk | Herring, Ben | Homick, John | Jones, Franklin | Jones, Deverus |
| Keebler, Oscar | Kelly, John | Kennedy, Jimmy | Lewchick, Simon | Lithgow, Leonard “Doc” |
| McDonald, Jack | McGeehan, John Patrick | McMichael, “Red” | Melley, James “Bubby” | Melley, John “Croppie |
| Middleton, Jimmy | Miller, Howard | Morgan, Albert “Abby” | Morgans, “Rub” | Morrall, George |
| Moser, Dan | Murphy, Irvin | Nuemuller, Carl | Neumuller, Will | Newton, “Bull” |
| Parfitt, Robert “Bobby” | Pavlick, Mike | Perbilla, “Yatsko” Mascot | Potteiger, Earl | Raymer, Tom |
| Roadside, Metro | Schwartz, Irvin | Sharpe, Charlie | Starr, Clarence | Walters, John |
| West, Tommy | Zaleha, Steve |
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| First Row: Irvin Schwartz, Tamaqua; Robert "Bobby " Parfitt, Coaldale: Bill "Honeyboy" Evans. Coaldale; Jack "Honeyboy" Evans, Coaldale: Leonard "Doc" Litghgow, Coaldalel; Stanley Giltner, Tamaqua Second Row: Ben Herring, Coaldale; Vince Gildea; Metro Roadside, Coaldale; Manager and Coach James "Casey" Gildea; Irvin News...; "Blue" Bonner Coaldale; John Walters, Tamaqua. Third Row: James "Bubby" Melley, Coaldale; Joseph Garland, Lansford; Mike Pavlick, Coaldale; Charles "Froger" Giltner, Tamaqua; ??name??; ??name??; Albert "Abby" Morgan, Tamaqua; Henry "Hen " Buck, Nesquehoning. |
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| Photos Submitted by Bill Scutta | |||
" THE BIG GREEN STORY " As in baseball, discussion as to which was the first team to represent the town in football is wide open, CHAMPIONS 1921-22-23. Members of the 1916 squad might give you some argument on the word best. But stalwarts of that year were still playing the game as champions during the early 20's and there's little question about it they were at their best the day they upset Benny Boynton and a choice collection of POTTSVILLE STARS on the COALDALE FIELD OCTOBER 20, 1923. David Williams is credited with being the first man to take a football to COALDALE shortly before the turn of the century. A team of PANTHER VALLEY players played a soldier team during the time the NATIONAL GUARD was stationed at MANILA GROVE in 1902. Members of that team included T.J.Evans, Clarence Starr, Next in line as a COALDALE FOOTBALL TEAM was the Coaldale High School via Lehigh Coal prep which dominated the scene in the days of John Melley, Kid Hill, Tom Lewis, and others. Their place in the sun was challenged by Jimmy Lithgow and his OLD STREET STARS, "Big" Smith, Mike Shigo, Paddy Malloy, "Barber" McGeehan and others who established their ability to battle the HIGH SCHOOL TEAM to a standstill. COALDALE ROSEBUDS took up after the HIGH SCHOOL and OLD STREET left off. Held together by Irv. Murphy, Rub Morgans, Andy Aiken, and a few others the ROSEBUDS had full sway until another OLD STREET team arose to challenge their place in the football sun. A memorable The years 1913 and 1914 saw memorable games against LANSFORD. The 1914 game was to live in memory as the 50-50 game. It broke up when jubilant COALDALE fans swarmed all over LANSFORD FIELD as COALDALE SCORED its winning and tie-breaking touchdown. The game Next year, 1915 saw COALDALE in action against SHENANDOAH DELMARS,with Dr. Andy Nork and his brother Johnny, furnishing the spark for a SHENANDOAH win in the final game of the year at COALDALE. The DELMARS continued giving COALDALE its keenest rivalry until succeeded by the SHENANDOAH team of the anthracite league. Butt was the POTTSVILLE game at TRESCKOW in 1916 that really dates COALDALE FOOTBALL and in some people's mind that game set the Next day at HAZLETON with Mike Coll, sports editor of theHAZLETON STANDARD, sitting in the famous TRESCKOW game was arranged to be played Sunday, December 10, 1916. The field POTTSVILLE had an All-Star team on the field at TRESCKOW.Chief Wheelock, the great Carlisle Indian fullback was in the POTTSVILLE backfield. Johnny Herndon, as fleet a back as ever carried a football was in the lineup. George Cockill, coach at BUCKNELL, played one tackle and his brother, Tom, played the other tackle spot. Mackert, of LEBANON VALLEY, WADDELL, of BUCKNELL, Danny Roth, Gus Swaving, just to mention a few of the stars that saw action were in the POTTSVILLE That confidence was to be challenged after the ANTHRACITE FOOTBALL LEAGUE was formed following WORLD WAR 1. POTTSVILLE, SHENANDOAH and GILBERTON went out after the best the college world produced. COALDALE remained satisfied with coal region players. "Frojer" Giltner, Stan Giltner, Bob Hartwig, "Goo Goo" Davis, and Irvin Schwartz of TAMAQUA, joined the squad, the Chapman brothers, Tom and Jack, came down from CENTRALIA, COALDALE youngsters had grown up to replace the older men on the 1916 squad and the team of championship days saw COALDALE take the field with Len Lithgow, Vince Gildea, Steve Zaleha, Ben Herring, Mike Pavlik, Metro Roadside, Bill "Honeyboy" Evans, Tom Raymer, and Oscar Keebler being added to the 1916 roster. Imported stars might be considered as being Earl Potteiger and Les Asplundh. The latter was COALDALE'S answer to the best other towns in the league could draft from college ranks. Asplundh put the foot in football as far as COALDALE was concerned. It is questionable if college or PRO-FOOTBALL from that day to this ever produced a better punter than LES Asplundh. He Famous game at FRANKFORD, ATLANTIC CITY, STATEN ISLAND and elsewhere adorn the memories of close followers of COALDALE football and stars taken in by rival coal region elevens The measure of COALDALE and coal region football can be gauged by POTTSVILLE'S success. In 1924 the POTTSVILLE MAROONS won the coal region championship defeating COALDALE 10-7 and 3-0, the identical scores by which COALDALE WON OVER POTTSVILLE IN 1923. Then in 1925 POTTSVILLE entered the NATIONAL PRO LEAGUE to win its championship out. Not only that in a post season game at SHIBE PARK AGAINST THE "FOUR HORSEMEN" and the "SEVEN MULES" of NOTRE DAME CONSIDERED TO HAVE BEEN THE OUTSTANDING FOOTBALL TEAM OF ALL TIME WHEN PLAYING FOR NOTRE DAME IN 1924, POTTSVILLE WITH TONY LATONE CARRYING THE BALL ON STRAIGHT FOOTBALL ALMOST THE LENGTH OF THE FIELD DEFENDED ITS PRO CHAMPIONSHIP AND THAT'S THE STORY. A HOME TALENT FOOTBALL TEAM COMPRISED OF COALDALE AND COAL REGION MEN WITH NO COLLEGE FOOTBALL FURNISHING ITS BACKGROUND MET THEM ALL AND HELD THE NAME COALDALE HIGH IN THE FIELD OF AMERICAN'S TOUGHEST COMPETITION. BRAVE DEEDS ARE REMEMBERED TO BE IMITATED THE EFFECT OF " BIG GREEN " FOOTBALL HELPED COALDALE HIGH ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "BIG GREEN" COAL REGION CHAMPIONS 1921 - 22 - 23 Metro Roadside, Bob Hartwig, Mike Pavlick, Irvin Swartz, Hen Boock, "Blue" Bonner, SUBMITTED BY: RICHARD C. REHATCHEK |
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Casey Gildea Center of top row
Submitted by Bill Scutta |
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