Fred Luehring|
| Born | 1881 Hanover, Kansas, U.S. |
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| Died | (1981-02-01)February 1, 1981 (aged 99) Ridley Park, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
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| Alma mater | Chicago (Ph.M. 1907) |
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| 1901–1904 | North Central (IL) |
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| 1905 | Chicago |
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| 1905–1906 | Chicago |
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| Position | End (football) |
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| 1906–1909 | Ripon |
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| 1906–1910 | Ripon |
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| 1913–1920 | Princeton |
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| 1907–1912 | Ripon |
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| 1921–1922 | Nebraska |
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| 1906–1910 | Ripon |
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| c. 1918 | Princeton (acting AD) |
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| 1920–1922 | Nebraska |
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| 1922–1930 | Minnesota |
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| 1932 | US Olympic Swimming Committee |
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| Overall | 21–3–1 (football) 125–61 (basketball) 11–6–1 (baseball) |
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Frederick William Luehring (1882 – February 1, 1981) was an American football, basketball, baseball, and swimming coach college athletics administrator.[1] He served as the head football coach at Ripon College in Ripon, Wisconsin from 1906 to 1909, compiling a record of 20–3–1.[2] Luehring was the head basketball coach at Ripon from 1906 to 1910 and at Princeton University from 1913 to 1920, amassing a career college basketball coaching mark of 125–61.[3]
Luehring was credited with starting the swim team at the University of Nebraska in 1921 and later served as a committee member of the US Olympic Swimming team.[4]
As a college athlete, Luehring excelled at North Central University and then at the University of Chicago under head coach Amos Alonzo Stagg.[5]
In addition to his athletic pursuits Luehring also was an art collector. A selection of prints by Honore Daumier of people swimming were exhibited at Lehigh University Art Gallery in 1958 with the assistance of Head Curator Francis Quirk.[6]
Luehring died at the age of 99, on February 1, 1981, at Taylor Hospital in Ridley Park, Pennsylvania.[7]
Head coaching record
| Year
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Team
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Overall
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Conference |
Standing
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Bowl/playoffs
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| Ripon Crimson (Independent) (1906–1909)
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| 1906
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Ripon
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5–0–1 |
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| 1907
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Ripon
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5–2 |
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| 1908
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Ripon
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5–0 |
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| 1909
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Ripon
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6–1 |
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| Ripon:
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21–3–1 |
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| Total: |
21–3–1 |
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References
- ^ "Frederick Luehring". riponredhawks.com. Retrieved October 18, 2018.
- ^ "All-time Ripon College Men's Basketball Coaching Records by Wins". Ripon College. Retrieved October 18, 2018.
- ^ "Fred Luehring". Sports-Reference. Retrieved October 18, 2018.
- ^ "Frederick W. Luehring". International Swimming Hall of Fame. Retrieved November 28, 2018.
- ^ "Frederick Luehring, 99, Is Dead; Coached Basketball at Princeton". New York Times. February 17, 1981. Retrieved November 28, 2018.
- ^ "Library Shows Athletics in Art". Brown and White. February 14, 1958. Retrieved November 23, 2021.
- ^ "Frederick Luehring, 99, devoted to athletics throughout his life". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. February 5, 1981. p. 36. Retrieved December 7, 2020 – via Newspapers.com
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External links
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- Thomas Y. McGovran (1893)
- James Baird (1894)
- William Harvey Merriam (1895)
- Frank Erickson (1896–1901)
- F. J. Frazier (1902–1905)
- Fred Luehring (1906–1909)
- Ewald O. Stiehm (1910)
- A. C. Hoffman (1911)
- Wilbert Smith (1912)
- Kent Lambert (1913–1914)
- Harold Ofstie (1915–1916)
- No team (1917)
- Raymond McCrory (1918)
- Harold Olsen (1919–1921)
- Guy Sundt (1922–1923)
- Carl Doehling (1924–1955)
- Jerry Thompson (1956–1957)
- John Storzer (1958–1973)
- Bill Connor (1973–1975)
- Bob Giesey (1976–1979)
- Wayne Phillips (1980)
- Larry Terry (1981–1986)
- Doug Bradley (1987–1988)
- Bob Nielson (1989–1990)
- Ron Ernst (1991–2022)
- Jake Marshall (2023– )
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Princeton Tigers men's basketball head coaches |
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- Mowbray Forney (1900–1901)
- Augustus Enderbrock (1901–1902)
- Bill Roper (1902–1903)
- William McCoy (1903–1904)
- Frederick Cooper (1904–1906)
- William Kelleher (1906–1907)
- C. F. Kogel (1907–1908)
- Harry Shorter (1908–1911)
- Harry Hough (1911–1912)
- Fred Luehring (1912–1920)
- Lou Sugarman (1920–1921)
- James Hynson # (1921)
- Hill Zahn (1921–1923)
- Albert Wittmer (1923–1932)
- Fritz Crisler (1932–1934)
- John Jefferies (1934–1935)
- Kenneth Fairman (1935–1938)
- Franklin Cappon (1938–1943)
- William Francis Logan (1943–1945)
- Leonard Hattinger # (1945)
- Wes Fesler (1945–1946)
- Franklin Cappon (1946–1961)
- Jake McCandless (1961–1962)
- Butch van Breda Kolff (1962–1967)
- Pete Carril (1967–1996)
- Bill Carmody (1996–2000)
- John Thompson III (2000–2004)
- Joe Scott (2004–2007)
- Sydney Johnson (2007–2011)
- Mitch Henderson (2011– )
# denotes interim head coach.
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Princeton Tigers athletic directors |
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- Fred Luehring # (c. 1918)
- Burnham Dell (1934–1939)
- Kenneth Fairman (1941–1942)
- Asa Smith Bushnell III # (1942–1944)
- Kenneth Fairman (1944–1972)
- Royce Flippin (1972–1979)
- Bob Myslik (1979–1994)
- Gary Walters (1994–2014)
- Mollie Marcoux (2014–2021)
- John Mack (2021– )
# denotes acting/interim athletic director
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Nebraska Cornhuskers athletic directors |
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- E. J. Stewart * (1916–1919)
- Fred Luehring (1920–1922)
- Fred Dawson (1922–1925)
- Herbert D. Gish (1928–1931)
- Dana X. Bible (1932–1936)
- Biff Jones (1937–1942)
- Glenn Presnell # (1942)
- Adolph J. Lewandowski (1942–1947)
- George Clark (1948–1953)
- Adolph J. Lewandowski # (1953–1954)
- Bill Orwig (1954–1960)
- Charles Miller # (1961)
- Joseph Soshnik # (1961)
- Tippy Dye (1962–1967)
- Bob Devaney (1967–1992)
- Bill Byrne (1992–2002)
- Joe Selig # (2002)
- Steve Pederson (2003–2007)
- Tom Osborne (2007–2013)
- Shawn Eichorst (2013–2017)
- Dave Rimington # (2017)
- Bill Moos (2017–2021)
- Garrett Klassy # (2021)
- Trev Alberts (2021–2024)
- Dennis Leblanc # (2024)
- Troy Dannen (2024– )
# denotes interim athletic director, * denotes early, part-time athletic director
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- Fred Luehring (1922–1930)
- Fritz Crisler (1930–1932)
- Frank McCormick (1932–1941)
- Lou Keller # (1941–1945)
- Frank McCormick (1945–1950)
- Ike Armstrong (1950–1963)
- Marsh Ryman (1963–1971)
- Paul Giel (1971–1988)
- Belmar Gunderson (women's, 1974–1976)
- Vivian M. Barfield (women's, 1976–1981)
- M. Catherine Mathison # (women's, 1981–1982)
- Merrily Dean Baker (women's, 1982–1988)
- Holger Christiansen # (1988–1989)
- Chris Voelz (women's, 1988–2002)
- Rick Bay (1989–1991)
- Dan Meinert #(1991–1992)
- McKinley Boston (1992–1995)
- Mark Dienhart (1995–1999)
- Tom Moe (1999–2002)
- Joel Maturi (2002–2012)
- Norwood Teague (2012–2015)
- Beth Goetz # (2015–2016)
- Mark Coyle (2016– )
# denotes interim athletic director
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