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Byrd Douglas

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Sport(s)
  
Football, baseball

1928–1930
  
Princeton

Positions
  
Catcher

1920–1921
  
Vanderbilt

Alma mater
  
Princeton University

1922
  
Cumberland

Name
  
Byrd Douglas

1915–1916
  
Princeton

1922
  
Cumberland


Born
  
August 28, 1894 Nashville, Tennessee (
1894-08-28
)

Died
  
August 11, 1965, Wilson County, Tennessee, United States

Byrd Douglas (August 28, 1894 – August 11, 1965) was a college baseball and football coach as well as a judge.

Contents

Early years

Byrd Douglas was born on August 28, 1894 in Nashville, Tennessee to William "Byrd" Douglas and Adelaide "Addie" Wharton Gaines. He attended Wallace University School of Nashville, Tennessee and Vanderbilt University. Douglas attended Vanderbilt in 1911 and 1912. He then attended Princeton University and was a star catcher on the baseball team.

Coaching career

Douglas coached the 1921 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SIAA) champion Vanderbilt Commodores baseball team. The Vanderbilt yearbook claimed the season's success was "due almost entirely to one man," namely Douglas. Douglas was athletic director and football and baseball coach at Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tennessee the year after. That same year he wrote The Science of Baseball. He was inducted into the Cumberland Athletics Hall of Fame in 1991.

Douglas was also a judge. Upon retirement he was designated Chairman Emeritus of the Conference of Trial Judges of Davidson County, Tennessee. Douglas wrote the book Steamboatin' On The Cumberland in December 1961.

References

Byrd Douglas Wikipedia


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