The First Issue of CC

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Ken Crippen
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The First Issue of CC

Post by Ken Crippen »

For those interested, I have posted a full version of the very first issue of "The Coffin Corner" on the PFRA website. You will see several redactions, which are the personal addresses of the people listed in the issue.

http://profootballresearchers.com/coffi ... n1Full.pdf
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JohnR
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Re: The First Issue of CC

Post by JohnR »

Redactions, redactions, REDACTIONS! I'm so sick of trying to glean info from redactions!!!
NWebster
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Re: The First Issue of CC

Post by NWebster »

JohnR wrote:Redactions, redactions, REDACTIONS! I'm so sick of trying to glean info from redactions!!!

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
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TanksAndSpartans
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Re: The First Issue of CC

Post by TanksAndSpartans »

Thanks Ken - do you have the hard copy - in the comic book world, the #1 issues are worth quite a bit :)

I've seen that logo before on eBay - sometimes the old issues come up for sale.
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Ken Crippen
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Re: The First Issue of CC

Post by Ken Crippen »

TanksAndSpartans wrote:Thanks Ken - do you have the hard copy - in the comic book world, the #1 issues are worth quite a bit :)

I've seen that logo before on eBay - sometimes the old issues come up for sale.
Unfortunately, not. Bob left me the PFRA archives when he passed and it was not in there. We got this scan from the HOF.
Football Learning Academy: https://www.football-learning-academy.com
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FLA Podcast: https://www.football-learning-academy.com/pages/podcast
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TanksAndSpartans
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Re: The First Issue of CC

Post by TanksAndSpartans »

Too bad, maybe someday one will surface. It was a good read. I recognized one of the players on the All-Star team as having a football card - Doggie Trenchard.
sluggermatt15
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Re: The First Issue of CC

Post by sluggermatt15 »

Thanks for posting, Ken. This is an interesting piece of history. It's great to look back on the old days.
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Re: The First Issue of CC

Post by ChrisBabcock »

George Bozeka had copies of this at the recent Buffalo area PFRA meeting. What I found interesting was that the CC actually preceded the founding of the PFRA. I always thought it was the other way around.... As in, the organization was founded and then someone said “Hey, we need a newsletter!”
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TanksAndSpartans
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Re: The First Issue of CC

Post by TanksAndSpartans »

The article about the 1898 All-Star game mentions Princeton and Penn styles and not knowing what this meant, I asked a college football expert. Just wanted to share his reply with the group because I thought the formations were pretty cool.

The jist of his reply is the Princeton style brought ends into the backfield:
_ends_back.jpg
_ends_back.jpg (40.79 KiB) Viewed 15975 times
And George Woodruff, Yale Grad and later Penn coach devised "Guards Back":
_guards_back.jpg
_guards_back.jpg (26.49 KiB) Viewed 15975 times
rhickok1109
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Re: The First Issue of CC

Post by rhickok1109 »

TanksAndSpartans wrote:The article about the 1898 All-Star game mentions Princeton and Penn styles and not knowing what this meant, I asked a college football expert. Just wanted to share his reply with the group because I thought the formations were pretty cool.

The jist of his reply is the Princeton style brought ends into the backfield:
_ends_back.jpg
And George Woodruff, Yale Grad and later Penn coach devised "Guards Back":
_guards_back.jpg
That is cool stuff. "A Scientific and Practical Treatise on American Football for Schools and Colleges," by A.A. Stagg and H.L. Williams (1893) is full of diagrams like that. Of course, that was before the offense was required to have at least 7 players on the line of scrimmage and backs were allowed to be moving forward when the ball was snapped.

https://ia600904.us.archive.org/9/items ... agiala.pdf
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