Henry L. Williams
{{Short description|American football player and coach (1869–1931)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2024}}
{{Infobox college coach
| name = Henry L. Williams
| image = Henry L. Williams.jpg
| alt =
| caption =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1869|7|26}}
| birth_place = Hartford, Connecticut, U.S.
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1931|6|14|1869|7|26}}
| death_place = Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.
| alma_mater =
| player_years1 = 1889–1890
| player_team1 = Yale
| player_positions= Halfback
| coach_years1 = 1891
| coach_team1 = Army
| coach_years2 = 1892–1899
| coach_team2 = William Penn Charter (PA)
| coach_years3 = 1900–1921
| coach_team3 = Minnesota
| overall_record = 141–34–12 (college)
| bowl_record =
| tournament_record =
| championships = 1 national (1904)
8 Western (1900, 1903–1904, 1906, 1909–1911, 1915)
| awards =
| coaching_records =
| CFBHOF_year = 1951
| CFBHOF_id = 1232
}}
Henry Lane Williams (July 26, 1869 – June 14, 1931) was an American football player and coach. He served as the head football coach at the United States Military Academy in 1891 and the University of Minnesota from 1900 to 1921, compiling a career college football record of 141–34–12. Williams's Minnesota Golden Gophers teams won eight Western Conference—now known as the Big Ten Conference—titles and his 136 wins are the most of any coach in team history. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 1951.
Coaching career
After playing football at Yale University under head coach Walter Camp, where with Camp he co-invented the "tackle-back" formation,{{Cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OmwfnipKuogC&pg=PA83 | title=The Anatomy of a Game: Football, the Rules, and the Men who Made the Game| isbn=9780874134551| last1=Nelson| first1=David M.| year=1994}} Williams began his coaching career at the United States Military Academy in 1891 while he was a teacher at Siglar Academy in Newburgh, New York. He then moved to Philadelphia where he enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine while he coached football and track at William Penn Charter School.
In 1900, Williams was hired as the head football coach at the University of Minnesota, where he invented the Minnesota shift.[https://web.archive.org/web/20101123031627/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,772774,00.html "Sport: Trophies and Gophers"], Time, November 3, 1941. His Minnesota Golden Gophers were Big Ten Conference champions eight times (1900, 1903, 1904, 1906, 1909, 1910, 1911, 1915). Williams had a 136–33–11 record at Minnesota. His winning percentage (.786) is the highest of any Gopher football coach to date with the exception of Wallie Winter who went 6–0 in his only season 1893. In 1903, the Gophers went 14–0–1. Their lone tie came against Fielding H. Yost's Michigan Wolverines. After the contest, the Wolverines left behind their water jug at Northrop Field, which gave rise to the Little Brown Jug, one of the oldest and most famous college football trophies.
Williams was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame with the inaugural class in 1951. Williams Arena, the home venue for Minnesota basketball, was renamed in his honor after a remodeling in the 1950s.
=Legacy=
Williams coaching tree includes:
Head coaching record
=College=
{{CFB Yearly Record Start | type = coach | team = | conf = | bowl = no | poll = no }}
{{CFB Yearly Record Subhead
| name = Army Cadets
| conf = Independent
| startyear = 1891
| endyear = single
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1891
| name = Army
| overall = 5–1–1
| conference =
| confstanding =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Subtotal
| name = Army
| overall = 5–1–1
| confrecord =
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Subhead
| name = Minnesota Golden Gophers
| conf = Western Conference / Big Ten Conference
| startyear = 1900
| endyear = 1921
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship = conference
| year = 1900
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 10–0–2
| conference = 3–0–1
| confstanding = T–1st
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1901
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 9–1–1
| conference = 3–1
| confstanding = 3rd
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1902
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 9–2–1
| conference = 3–1
| confstanding = 3rd
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship = conference
| year = 1903
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 14–0–1
| conference = 3–0–1
| confstanding = T–1st
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship = national
| year = 1904
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 13–0
| conference = 3–0
| confstanding = T–1st
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1905
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 10–1
| conference = 2–1
| confstanding = T–2nd
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship = conference
| year = 1906
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 4–1
| conference = 2–0
| confstanding = T–1st
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1907
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 2–2–1
| conference = 0–1–1
| confstanding = 5th
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1908
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 3–2–1
| conference = 0–2
| confstanding = T–6th
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship = conference
| year = 1909
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 6–1
| conference = 3–0
| confstanding = 1st
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship = conference
| year = 1910
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 6–1
| conference = 2–0
| confstanding = T–1st
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship = conference
| year = 1911
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 6–0–1
| conference = 3–0–1
| confstanding = 1st
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1912
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 4–3
| conference = 2–2
| confstanding = T–3rd
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1913
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 5–2
| conference = 2–1
| confstanding = T–2nd
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1914
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 6–1
| conference = 3–1
| confstanding = 2nd
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship = conference
| year = 1915
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 6–0–1
| conference = 3–0–1
| confstanding = T–1st
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1916
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 6–1
| conference = 3–1
| confstanding = 3rd
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1917
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 4–1
| conference = 3–1
| confstanding = 2nd
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1918
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 5–2–1
| conference = 2–1
| confstanding = T–4th
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1919
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 4–2–1
| conference = 3–2
| confstanding = T–4th
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1920
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 1–6
| conference = 0–6
| confstanding = T–9th
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1921
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 3–4
| conference = 2–4
| confstanding = T–6th
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
| bowloutcome = no
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record Subtotal
| name = Minnesota
| overall = 136–33–11
| confrecord = 50–25–5
}}
{{CFB Yearly Record End
| overall = 141–34–12
| bowls = no
| poll = no
| polltype =
}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{College Football HoF|1232}}
- {{Find a Grave|7470770}}
{{Army Black Knights football coach navbox}}
{{Minnesota Golden Gophers football coach navbox}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Williams, Henry}}
Category:19th-century players of American football
Category:American football halfbacks
Category:Army Black Knights football coaches
Category:Minnesota Golden Gophers football coaches
Category:Yale Bulldogs football players
Category:High school football coaches in Pennsylvania
Category:College Football Hall of Fame inductees
Category:Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania alumni
Category:Coaches of American football from Connecticut
Category:Players of American football from Hartford, Connecticut