William & Mary Tribe football, 1910–19

The William & Mary Orange and White / Orange and Black / Indians football[a] teams represented the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, United States. Now known as the William & Mary Tribe, the program was established in 1893. Their long-time football rival is the University of Richmond. Their annual meeting was dubbed the I-64 Bowl (renamed the Capital Cup starting in the 2009 season), so named for the highway connecting the two nearby schools.

1910

1910 William & Mary Orange and Black football
Conference Independent
1910 record 1–7–1
Head coach J. Merrill Blanchard (3rd year)
Date Opponent Site Result
October 1 at Virginia Madison Hall FieldCharlottesville, VA L 0–10  
1910 University College of Medicine Williamsburg, VA L 3–5  
1910 Norfolk High School Williamsburg, VA T 5–5  
1910 at VMI Lexington, VA (Rivalry) L 0–33  
1910 at Norfolk Collegian Norfolk, VA L 0–41  
1910 Hampden–Sydney Williamsburg, VA L 6–17  
1910 Randolph–Macon Williamsburg, VA L 2–11  
1910 St. Vincent's Academy Williamsburg, VA L 6–18  
1910 at Richmond Richmond, VA (I-64 Bowl) W 18–6  

1911

1911 William & Mary Orange and Black football
Conference Independent
1911 record 1–5–2
Head coach William J. Young (1st year)
Date Opponent Site Result
September 30 at Virginia Madison Hall FieldCharlottesville, VA L 0–81  
October 7 at Georgetown Washington, D.C. L 0–66  
1911 University College of Medicine Williamsburg, VA T 0–0  
1911 Fredericksburg College Williamsburg, VA T 0–0  
1911 Virginia Medical Williamsburg, VA L 0–6  
1911 vs. Randolph–Macon Newport News, VA L 11–14  
1911 Richmond Williamsburg, VA (I-64 Bowl) W 3–0  
1911 at Hampden–Sydney Hampden Sydney, VA L 0–19  

1912

1912 William & Mary Orange and Black football
Conference Independent
1912 record 0–7
Head coach William J. Young (2nd year)
Date Opponent Site Result
September 28 at Virginia Madison Hall FieldCharlottesville, VA L 0–60  
1912 at Norfolk Academy Norfolk, VA L 0–13  
1912 University College of Medicine Williamsburg, VA L 0–20  
1912 Virginia Medical Williamsburg, VA L 0–66  
1912 Randolph–Macon Williamsburg, VA L 0–20  
1912 at Richmond Richmond, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 0–20  
1912 vs. Hampden–Sydney Petersburg, VA L 0–27  

1913

1913 William & Mary Orange and Black football
Conference Independent
1913 record 0–5–1
Head coach Dexter W. Draper (1st year)
Date Opponent Site Result
October 4 at VMI Lexington, VA (Rivalry) L 3–33  
1913 Richmond Blues Williamsburg, VA T 0–0  
1913 at Randolph–Macon Ashland, VA L 3–37  
1913 vs. Richmond Newport News, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 13–20  
1913 at Hampden–Sydney Hampden Sydney, VA L 0–32  
1913 Richmond Williamsburg, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 13–20  

1914

1914 William & Mary Orange and Black football
Conference Independent
1914 record 1–7
Head coach Dexter W. Draper (2nd year)
Date Opponent Site Result
1914 Richmond Blues Williamsburg, VA L 9–13  
October 10 at VMI Lexington, VA (Rivalry) L 0–38  
1914 Randolph–Macon Williamsburg, VA W 10–7  
1914 Richmond Williamsburg, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 3–7  
1914 vs. Hampden–Sydney Newport News, VA L 0–19  
1914 at Randolph–Macon Ashland, VA L 0–63  
1914 Hampden–Sydney Williamsburg, VA L 0–41  
1914 at Richmond Richmond, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 0–32  

1915

1915 William & Mary Orange and Black football
Conference Independent
1915 record 0–9–1
Head coach Dexter W. Draper (3rd year)
Date Opponent Site Result
1915 Union Theological Seminary Williamsburg, VA L 0–7  
October 2 at VMI Lexington, VA (Rivalry) L 6–19  
1915 Richmond Blues Williamsburg, VA T 0–0  
1915 at Hampden–Sydney Hampden Sydney, VA L 0–28  
1915 Richmond Williamsburg, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 0–28  
1915 at Randolph–Macon Ashland, VA L 7–34  
1915 vs. Hampden–Sydney Newport News, VA L 0–38  
1915 Randolph–Macon Williamsburg, VA L 7–15  
1915 at Richmond Richmond, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 0–45  
November 25 at Delaware Newark, DE (Rivalry) L 0–93  

1916

1916 William & Mary Orange and Black football
Conference South Atlantic Intercollegiate Athletic Association
1916 record 2–5–2 (0–2–1 SAIAA)
Head coach Samuel H. Hubbard (1st year)
1916 SAIAA football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
VPI $ 4 0 0     7 2 0
Maryland 4 0 0     6 2 0
Georgetown 2 0 0     8 1 0
Washington and Lee 1 0 0     5 2 2
North Carolina 3 1 0     5 4 0
Virginia 3 1 0     4 5 0
George Washington 2 1 0     3 3 1
Catholic 2 1 0     4 4 0
Davidson 1 2 0     5 3 1
Richmond 1 3 1     5 2 2
VMI 1 5 0     4 5 0
St. John's (MD) 0 1 0     0 1 0
William & Mary 0 2 1     2 5 2
Johns Hopkins 0 2 0     0 2 0
North Carolina A&M 0 4 0     2 5 0
  • $ Conference champion
Date Opponent Site Result
1916 Union Theological Seminary Williamsburg, VA W 7–0  
October 7 at VMI Lexington, VA (Rivalry) L 0–66  
1916 Portsmouth Naval Williamsburg, VA T 13–13  
1916 Randolph–Macon Williamsburg, VA L 0–17  
1916 at Richmond Richmond, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 0–48  
1916 Hampden–Sydney Williamsburg, VA L 0–31  
1916 at Randolph–Macon Ashland, VA W 14–7  
1916 Richmond Williamsburg, VA (I-64 Bowl) T 0–0  
1916 vs. Hampden–Sydney Norfolk, VA L 0–9  

1917

1917 William & Mary Indians football
Conference South Atlantic Intercollegiate Athletic Association
1917 record 3–5 (0–3 SAIAA)
Head coach Herbert J. Young (1st year)
1917 SAIAA football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
Georgetown $ 2 0 0     8 1 0
Washington and Lee 2 1 0     4 3 0
North Carolina A&M 2 1 1     6 2 1
VPI 2 1 1     6 2 1
Richmond 2 1 0     4 2 1
Maryland 2 1 1     3 3 1
Davidson 1 2 0     6 4 0
VMI 1 3 1     4 4 1
St. John's (MD) 0 1 0     0 1 0
Johns Hopkins 0 1 0     0 3 0
William & Mary 0 3 0     3 5 0
  • $ Conference champion
Date Opponent Site Result
October 6 at VMI Lexington, VA (Rivalry) L 0–53  
1917 at Richmond Richmond, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 0–28  
1917 Randolph–Macon Williamsburg, VA W 13–0  
1917 at Hampden–Sydney Hampden Sydney, VA L 0–21  
1917 at Emory and Henry Emory-Meadowview, VA W 7–0  
1917 at Randolph–Macon Ashland, VA W 21–6  
1917 Richmond Williamsburg, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 0–19  
1917 vs. Hampden–Sydney Newport News, VA L 0–32  

1918

1918 William & Mary Indians football
Conference South Atlantic Intercollegiate Athletic Association
1918 record 0–2 (0–1 SAIAA)
Head coach Vernon Geddy (1st year)
1918 SAIAA football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
VPI $ 4 0 0     7 0 0
Maryland 2 0 1     4 1 1
Davidson 2 0 0     2 1 1
Richmond 1 0 0     3 1 1
Johns Hopkins 0 0 1     0 0 1
NC State 0 1 0     1 3 0
St. John's (MD) 0 1 0     0 1 0
William & Mary 0 1 0     0 2 0
North Carolina 0 2 0     1 3 0
VMI 0 2 0     1 3 0
Washington and Lee 0 2 0     1 2 0
Georgetown 0 0 0     3 2 0
  • $ Conference champion
Date Opponent Site Result
1918 at Lynchburg Lynchburg, VA L 0–13  
1918 Richmond Williamsburg, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 0–7  

1919

1919 William & Mary Indians football
Conference South Atlantic Intercollegiate Athletic Association
1919 record 2–6–1 (1–3–0 SAIAA)
Head coach James G. Driver (1st year)
1919 SAIAA football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
Georgetown $ 2 0 0     7 3 0
Maryland 4 1 0     5 4 0
NC State 3 1 0     7 2 0
North Carolina 3 1 0     4 3 1
Washington and Lee 2 1 0     8 1 0
VMI 4 2 0     6 2 0
Richmond 2 2 1     5 2 2
VPI 2 4 0     5 4 0
Virginia 1 2 1     2 5 2
William & Mary 1 3 0     2 6 1
Catholic 0 1 0     1 6 1
St. John's (MD) 0 1 0     0 1 0
Johns Hopkins 0 1 0     0 2 0
Davidson 0 4 0     4 6 1
  • $ Conference champion
Date Opponent Site Result
1919 at Lynchburg Lynchburg, VA T 0–0  
October 11 vs. VMI Richmond, VA (Rivalry) W 3–21  
1919 Richmond Williamsburg, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 7–0  
1919 Randolph–Macon Williamsburg, VA W 3–0  
1919 vs. Hampden–Sydney Norfolk, VA L 3–7  
1919 at Richmond Richmond, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 0–17  
1919 vs. Randolph–Macon Richmond, VA L 6–7  
1919 Hampden–Sydney Williamsburg, VA L 6–7  
1919 at Richmond Richmond, VA (I-64 Bowl) L 0–21  

Decade totals

Notes

  • a Between 1896 and 1909 their nickname was "Orange and White," deriving that name from the school's former colors (William & Mary now uses green and gold).[1] Since white uniforms dirtied too quickly, they became known as the "Orange and Black" from 1910 through 1916.[1] Between 1917 and 1977 they were known as the Indians, and throughout this period a man dressing up as a Native American would ride around on a pony along the sidelines during games.[1] This practice was discontinued when the outcry of stereotyping Native Americans as well as the use of a live animal became controversial.[1] Since the 1978 season William & Mary has adopted the nickname "Tribe."[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "A History of W&M Mascots and Nicknames". wm.edu. The College of William & Mary. 2008. Retrieved February 12, 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.