Roscoe Channing
Roscoe Channing

Portrait of R.S. Channing from Walter Camp's 1894 book American Football |
Princeton Tigers |
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Position |
Halfback |
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Class |
Graduate |
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Career history |
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College |
Princeton (1889) |
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Personal information |
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Date of birth |
January 7, 1868 |
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Place of birth |
New York City |
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Date of death |
April 1, 1961(1961-04-01) (aged 93) |
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Place of death |
Tucson, Arizona |
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Weight |
141 lb (64 kg) |
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Career highlights and awards |
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Roscoe H. Channing, Jr. (January 7, 1868 – April 1, 1961)[1] was an All-American football player, member of the Rough Riders and mining executive. Channing was an All-American halfback for Princeton University. He was one of eleven players selected by Caspar Whitney for the first ever College Football All-America Team in 1889.[2] When the Spanish–American War commenced in 1898, Channing enlisted in Theodore Roosevelt's Rough Riders. Roosevelt took pride in how many Ivy League football players enlisted in the Rough Riders.[3][4] Channing later went into the mining business and managed the mining operations of the Whitney family.[5] In the 1920s, he formed a partnership with his friend Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney.[6] The two formed the Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting Company in Flin Flon, Saskatchewan, Canada, and Channing served as the company's President.[7] Channing died in 1961.[7]
References