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Gustave Ferbert - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gustave Ferbert

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gustave Ferbert
Gustave Ferbert

Gustave H. Ferbert (July 22, 1873 – January 15, 1943), nicknamed "Dutch,"[1] was first a player (1893–1896) and then the head coach (1897–1899) for the University of Michigan American football team. In 1898, his Michigan team went 10-0 and won the first Western Conference (now known as the Big Ten Conference) championship in the school's history. He left the University of Michigan in 1900 and spent nine years prospecting for gold in Alaska, finally striking it rich off claims he discovered in 1908 and 1909.

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[edit] University of Michigan football player

Ferbert played quarterback and right halfback for the University of Michigan from 1893-1896.[1] During the four years Ferbert played, the Michigan team compiled an overall record of 33-4-1 record. In his senior year, 1896, the team went 9-1, winning its first nine games by a combined score of 256 to 4. In a 20-0 victory over Minnesota, Ferbert scored two touchdowns. However, the team lost the final game of the season to the University of Chicago, 7-6, in a game played indoors at the Chicago Coliseum. The newspapers reported that Pingree was the "whole thing" for Michigan in the first half, though Ferbert took his place in the second half and was "equally effective."[2] The game was played in front of 15,000 enthusiasts in the same building in which William Jennings Bryan had been nominated for the presidency just five months earlier, and the game was "one of the most desperately contested games ever played Chicago."[2] Neither team resorted to trick plays, "both relying on straight, hard foot ball."[2] Toward the end of the second half, it got very dark, and "the spectators were treated to a novelty in the shape of foot ball by electric light."[2]

[edit] University of Michigan football coach

After his graduation, Ferbert was named as Michigan's head football coach at age 22.[1]

[edit] The 1897 season and the first Ohio State game

In 1897, Ferbert's team was 6-1-1 and finished third in the Western Conference. Ferbert's team played to a scoreless tie against an Ohio Wesleyan team coached by Fielding H. Yost.[1]

Ferbert was Michigan's head coach in the first match in The Michigan-Ohio State Game. On October 16, 1897, the teams met at Regents Field in Ann Arbor, where Michigan won, 34-0. The Michigan Daily reported: "Michigan had no trouble in defeating the Ohio State University representatives in Saturday's game. Two halves of 20 and 15 minutes respectively were played and the score was 34-0." [3] All the scoring took place in the first half, and the score would have been much worse if Ferbert had wanted to run up a higher score. [4]

[edit] "Champions of the West" in 1898

The 1898 Wolverines went 10-0 and won the Western Conference (now known as the Big Ten Conference) championship. The first great Michigan football team, the 1898 group outscored its opponents 205 to 26.[5] In the first meeting with what would become Michigan State, Michigan prevailed 39-0, and they also shut out Notre Dame, 23-0. The team finished the season traveling to Chicago for a final game against Amos Alonzo Stagg's University of Chicago team on November 24, 1898. Led by All-American center, William Cunningham, Michigan came out on top, 12-11, for its first Western Conference championship.

A newspaper account described Michigan's victory this way: "The western football championship goes to Michigan. On a field that was simply perfect for fast football, and before a crowd of 12,000 the maroons of Chicago went down before the maize and blue of Michigan today by a score of 12 to 11. . . . The Michigan line, in which big holes were torn by the light Northwestern team, was simply impregnable today, with the exception of about ten minutes in the second half, when the Chicago men pushed their opponents aside with an apparent ease."[6]

Another article noted: "Michigan, with the exception of one or two double passes, relied almost altogether on straight football, line bucking and runs around the end. Chicago, on the contrary, used trick plays throughout but the team work was of a high order, as shown by both teams."[7]

During Ferbert's three-year tenure as Michigan's head football coach, his teams were 24-3-1 -- a winning percentage of .875. From 1898 to 1899, his Michigan teams had a 16-game winning streak.

[edit] Gold prospecting in Alaska

After his coaching career at Michigan, Ferbert went to Alaska to search for gold.[8] In May 1900, amid the Klondike Gold Rush, newspapers reported that Ferbert had left Ann Arbor for Seattle, where he planned to join "High" Allen and "Count" Villa, described as "two other prominent Michigan football men."[9] Ferbert, Allen and Villa intended to "proceed to the Alaska gold fields," leaving unsettled the question of who would coach the Michigan football team in 1900.[9]

For a considerable period of time, Ferbert was out of contact in the Klondike, but he emerged on the Seward Peninsula.[1] An article published in 1909 after his return reported that Ferbert had struck it rich. The article stated: "Eight years ago, with the determination to come back rich or not at all, 'Dutch' Ferbert, old Michigan coach and one of the most famous football players, left Cleveland for the Klondike. For eight years he has toiled over endless snows, fought fierce hardships, endured everything in his battle to win his word -- to come back home a rich man. And now he has made a strike and is coming back to civilization. He sailed from Nome and is rushing homeward with $1,000,000 as his reward."[10]

Another article reported on Ferbert's $1,000,000 "Touchdown in the Arctic."[11] The article reported that Ferbert's parting words were that he would return rich or not at all. Ferbert made a "killing," the report continued, near Doering City in the Candle Creek region in 1908 and 1909, and "it is reported that his claims are valuable enough to put him in the millionaire class."[11] Before striking it rich, Ferbert spent several years prospecting in several districts with "slim success." He worked part time in restaurants and stores, but he finally located some of the best claims in the region and "panned out more gold than he had ever dreamed of and became a bonanza king overnight."[11]

[edit] Later life

When Ferbert returned from Alaska, he practiced as a mining engineer and consultant until his retirement in 1928.[8]

His brother A.H. Ferbert was the president of the Pittsburgh Steel Co.[12]

Ferbert died of a heart ailment in Cleveland, Ohio on January 15, 1943 at age 69.[8]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e Madej, Bruce (1997). {{{title}}}. Sport Publishing. 
  2. ^ a b c d "One Point Ahead: Was Chicago University in the Game with Michigan: Great Battle of the Gridiron", Waterloo Daily Courier, 1896-11-27. 
  3. ^ "Varsity Takes A Brace: Ohio State University Defeated by a Score of 34-0", The Michigan Daily, 1897-10-18. 
  4. ^ Park, Jack (2003). The Official Ohio State Football Encyclopedia, p. 20. 
  5. ^ University of Michigan 1898 Football Team. The Regents of the University of Michigan (2007-03-31).
  6. ^ "Michigan Wins: Wrests Western Gridiron Championship From Chicago", The Lincoln Evening News, 1898-11-25. 
  7. ^ "On Football Fields: Western Championship Carried Away From Chicago By Michigan Boys", The Galveston Daily News, 1898-11-25. 
  8. ^ a b c "Ex-Michigan Coach Stricken by Death", The Nevada State Journal, 1943-01-16. 
  9. ^ a b "Half-Back for Alaska: 'Dutch' Ferbert of Michigan Going to Hunt for Gold", Daily Iowa Capital, 1900-05-02. 
  10. ^ "Finds Wealth in Klondike: Famous Athlete Coming Back Home After Making a Rich Strike in the North"", Coshcocton Daily Tribune (Ohio), 1909-10-23. 
  11. ^ a b c "His Touchdown in the Arctic: How Former Football Star Made Good In Venture in the Frozen North, His Bulldog Courage", The Billings Daily Gazette, 1909-11-09. 
  12. ^ "Heart Ailment Fatal", The Piqua Daily Call (Ohio), 1943-01-15. 

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