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William H Maddren

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Sport(s)
  
Lacrosse

Overall
  
25–6

1892
  
Brooklyn Poly

Name
  
William Maddren


1897–1901
  
Died
  
January 8, 1909

1897–1901
  
Johns Hopkins


William Harvey Maddren was an American lacrosse coach and physician. He served as the fourth head coach of the Johns Hopkins University lacrosse team from 1897 to 1901 during which time his teams compiled a 25–6 record and captured three national championships.

Biography

The son of a doctor, Maddren was a native of Brooklyn, New York. He attended Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, from which he received a Bachelor of Science degree in 1896.

Maddren then studied medicine at Johns Hopkins University and received a medical doctorate in 1901. Maddren played lacrosse at Hopkins from 1897 to 1901, and in his first year there, was elected team captain and appointed as its player-coach. The Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association awarded Hopkins the national championship each year from 1898 to 1900.

In May 1904, Maddren returned to Baltimore to attend a medical clinic at Johns Hopkins Hospital, and while there, also served as an assistant coach to Charles MacInnes for the game against Swarthmore College.

Alexander M. Weyand and Milton R. Roberts wrote in The Lacrosse Story that Maddren's efforts were largely responsible for "convert[ing] sedate Baltimore into a seething hotbed of lacrosse enthusiasm, the like of which had never been seen elsewhere in the United States."

Maddren died on January 8, 1909. The National Lacrosse Hall of Fame inducted him in 1961.

References

William H. Maddren Wikipedia


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