1893 New Hampshire football
ConferenceIndependent
Record0–1
Head coach
  • None
Home stadiumn/a
1893 Eastern college football independents records
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Princeton    11 0 0
Fordham    4 0 0
Harvard    12 1 0
Yale    10 1 0
Colgate    3 0 2
Penn    12 3 0
Penn State    4 1 0
Wesleyan    4 1 0
Swarthmore    6 2 1
Holy Ghost    5 2 0
Lehigh    7 3 0
Brown    6 3 0
Carlisle    2 1 0
Delaware    2 1 0
Frankin & Marshall    4 2 1
Navy    5 3 0
Washington & Jefferson    5 3 0
Drexel    3 2 0
Bucknell    4 3 0
Amherst    7 6 1
Boston College    3 3 0
Geneva    2 2 1
Army    4 5 0
Williams    2 3 1
Tufts    4 7 0
Cornell    3 6 1
Worcester Tech    2 4 1
Boston University    1 2 0
Lafayette    3 6 0
Syracuse    4 9 1
Western Penn    1 4 0
MIT    1 5 0
Massachusetts    1 9 0
New Hampshire    0 1 0
Rutgers    0 4 0
Maine    0 5 0

The 1893 New Hampshire football team[lower-alpha 1] was an American football team that represented New Hampshire College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts[lower-alpha 2] during the 1893 college football season—the school became the University of New Hampshire in 1923. This was the first year that the college fielded a football team, which lost the only game it played.

Schedule

Scoring during this era awarded 4 points for a touchdown, 2 points for a conversion kick (extra point), and 5 points for a field goal. Teams played in the one-platoon system and the forward pass was not yet legal. Games were played in two halves rather than four quarters.

DateOpponentSiteResultSource
November 4 at Newmarket[lower-alpha 3] Newmarket, NH L 0–10[3]
Game summary
Scoring
First half
  • Newmarket – Mellows run (Mellows kick failed). NHC 0, Newmarket 4
Second half
  • Newmarket – Griffin run (Mellows kick good). NHC 0, Newmarket 10

Time: 40 minutes

NHC roster: Whittemore (C), Forrestal (RG), Sprague (RT), Brown (RE), Wiggin (LG), Russell (LT), Shattuck (LE), Roberts (QB), Howe (HB), Janvrin (HB), Demeritte (FB)

Newmarket roster: Barrett (C), Simpson (RG), G. Evans (RT), P. Griffin (RE), Walker (LG), Kennedy (LT), Maguire (LE), Haley (QB), W. Evans (HB), M. Griffin (HB), Mellows (FB)

Source:[3]

Notes

  1. The school did not adopt the Wildcats nickname until February 1926;[1] before then, they were generally referred to as "the blue and white".
  2. The school was often referred to as New Hampshire College or New Hampshire State College in newspapers of the era.
  3. College Football Data Warehouse identifies the opponent as Newmarket High School, while the Wildcats' media guide[2] and the contemporary The Enaichsee do not specify a high school team.

References

  1. "Wild E. and Gnarlz". unhwildcats.com. Retrieved February 14, 2020.
  2. "2017 New Hampshire Media Guide". University of New Hampshire. 2017. p. 66. Retrieved February 21, 2020.
  3. 1 2 "Newmarket vs. N. H. C." The Enaichsee (The NHC). Vol. 1, no. 3. November 1893. pp. 49–50. Retrieved February 22, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
  4. "New Hampshire Game by Game Results". College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on October 27, 2016. Retrieved February 22, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
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