1904 University of Florida Blue and White football team

The 1904 University of Florida Blue and White football team represented the University of Florida in Lake City in the sport of American football during the 1904 college football season. This was neither the modern University of Florida nor the modern Florida Gators, but a team fielded by one of its four predecessor institutions that had been known as Florida Agricultural College until 1903.[1] They were led by player-coach Marvin O. Bridges, whose brothers also played on the squad.

1904 University of Florida Blue and White football
ConferenceIndependent
Record0–5
Head coach
CaptainBernard Bridges
Seasons
← 1903
1904 Southern college football independents records
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T W   L   T
Georgetown     7 1 0
Southwest Texas State     5 1 0
Southwestern Louisiana Industrial     2 0 1
Davidson     6 1 1
Navy     7 2 1
North Carolina     5 2 2
Virginia     6 3 0
North Carolina A&M     3 1 2
West Virginia     6 3 0
VPI     5 3 0
George Washington     4 2 2
Arkansas     4 3 0
Oklahoma     4 3 1
South Carolina     4 3 1
Stetson     2 2 0
Central Oklahoma     2 3 0
VMI     3 5 0
Kentucky University     3 4 0
Grant     2 3 0
Florida State College     2 3 0
Maryland     2 4 2
East Florida Seminary     1 2 0
Goldey College     1 2 0
Baylor     2 5 1
Louisiana Industrial     1 4 0
TCU     1 4 1
Delaware     1 5 1
Kendall     0 2 1
Rollins     0 1 0
Tusculum     0 2 0
Florida at Lake City     0 5 0
Oklahoma A&M     0 6 0
Tennessee Docs     0 7 0

College football was becoming more popular, and Bridges wanted to grow the semi-organized Blue and White program into the first in Florida that could compete with more established programs across the south.[2] In an attempt to expedite the process, he sought and received permission to schedule road games against four top out-of-state opponents instead of the handful of contests against nearby colleges and amateur athletic clubs that the school had previously played. The 1904 slate proved too challenging for the squad, which went winless and failed to score a point over the course of its five game season.

The difficult 1904 season would be the final campaign for the program, as the University of Florida in Lake City ceased to exist after the 1904-1905 school term. The Florida legislature consolidated the school with three other state-supported institutions per the Buckman Act of 1905 to establish the modern University of Florida in Gainesville. When the university fielded its first football team in 1906, no players or coaches from the 1904 Blue and White squad were associated with the new program.[2]

Before the season

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Various public and private colleges in Florida had organized football teams before 1904, but the programs were informal, and schedules usually consisted of a few games played against in-state colleges and local athletic clubs in venues that were little more than open fields. The University of Florida at Lake City sought to jump-start its football program by playing the most ambitious schedule of any Florida school to date. The "Blue and White" had never faced off against an out of state opponent, but they assembled a 1904 slate which featured road games against several established southern football programs, including Mike Donahue's first Auburn squad and John Heisman's first team at Georgia Tech.[2]

Schedule

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The entire schedule was played in October. To reduce travel costs, the team played four road games during a two and a half week train trek through Alabama and Georgia. They returned to Lake City in mid-October and concluded the season with their lone home game, a match-up with in-state rival Florida State College on October 21. The slate proved too ambitious for the fledgling program, as the squad went winless and did not score a single point over the entire season.[2]

DateOpponentSiteResultSource
October 1at AlabamaL 0–29[3]
October 4at AuburnAuburn, ALL 0–44
October 15at GeorgiaMacon, GAL 0–52
October 17at Georgia TechL 0–77
October 21Florida State CollegeLake City, FLL 0–23

[4]

Game summaries

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Alabama

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The season opened with a 29–0 loss to Alabama. Touchdowns were scored by William LaFayette Ward (2), Chamberlain, Auxford Burks and Frank Clark.[5]

The starting lineup was: Weller (left end), Buck (left tackle), T. Cason (left guard), Keene (center), Bratton (right guard), T. McGuire (right tackle), B. H. Bridges (right end), McDonnell (quarterback), R. Cason (left halfback), B. T. Bridges (right halfback), C. McGuire (fullback).[6][7]

Auburn

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The October 4, 1904 game against the University of Florida was considered a practice game by Auburn[8] and is not included in the Tiger's official record of 5–0 for the season.[9]

Florida-Georgia dispute

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The Florida team next traveled to Macon, Georgia to face the Georgia Bulldogs and lost 52–0. The University of Georgia still counts this game as a win against the Florida Gators even though the modern University of Florida did not yet exist, adding another layer of intrigue to the Florida–Georgia football rivalry.[10][11] UGA sports historian Dan Magill sums up Georgia's attitude: "That's where Florida was back then. We can't help it if they got run out of Lake City."[12]

Georgia Tech

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1 2Total
Florida 0 0 0
Ga. Tech 36 41 77
  • Location: Atlanta, GA
  • Source:

Only a single first down was scored on Tech, a 77–0 loss. The starting lineup was: Zealius (left end), Bratton (left tackle), T. McGuire (left guard), Keene (center), O'Berry (right guard), Rowlett (right tackle), R. Woller (right end), R. Cason (quarterback), Clarke (left halfback), Bridges (right halfback), C. McGuire (fullback) [13]

Florida State College

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The Blue and White had reason for optimism coming into their last game of the season against the Florida State College Eleven (FSC). They were finally playing a home game, they had beaten FSC in Lake City in 1902, and FSC had been beaten soundly by Georgia Tech in the only game they'd played of their 1904 slate. This was not first meeting between FSC's player-coach Jack Forsythe and Marvin Bridges, his counterpart for the Blue and White; Forsythe was a player on the Clemson Tigers team that tied Bridges' Cumberland Bulldogs in a 1903 battle which was dubbed the SIAA championship game.

Their 1904 match-up was not nearly as close; the Blue and White were shut out again and lost 23–0. As a newspaper account reported, "The people of Lake City had expected at least one victory after a long series of defeats encountered by the university and were greatly disappointed. The university should be made stronger before it attempts to play again."[2] FSC would go on to beat Stetson and lay claim to a "state championship".[14]

1905 season

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1905 was a year of transition. The Florida legislature had completely reorganized the state's system of higher education with the passage of the Buckman Act. The University of Florida in Lake City was consolidated with three other state colleges (including Florida State College) to form the new "University of the State of Florida", a school for men in Gainesville, while the campus of Florida State College in Tallahassee was transformed into a school for women.[1] Construction began immediately on a new campus in Gainesville, but it would not be ready until the fall of 1906, so classes were offered at the existing Lake City campus during the 1905–06 academic year.

The hybrid University of Florida in Lake City attempted to field a football team in the fall of 1905 but was unsuccessful. Five contests against small colleges in Florida and Georgia were scheduled, but four were cancelled because too many players were deemed to be "behind in their studies" by university president Andrew Sledd, who sought to increase the academic rigor of the new institution. The last game of the 1905 season against the Julian London Institute kicked off in Jacksonville but was never completed. Florida's squad refused to take the field for the second half after discovering that the opposing team included a professional player, and the game was suspended with Florida leading 6-0.[2]

The University of the State of Florida completed its move to Gainesville for the 1906–07 academic year. When the school finally completed its first football game on October 13, 1906, their coach was former FSC head coach Jack Forsythe, and no player who had played a game for the Lake City Blue and White was on the roster.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b Armstrong, Orland K. (1928). The life and work of Dr. A.A. Murphree. Gainesville, FL: University of Florida. p. 41. Retrieved April 20, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g McEwen, Tom (1974). The Gators: A Story of Florida Football. Huntsville, Ala: The Strode Publishers. ISBN 087397025X.
  3. ^ "Florida lost to Alabama". The Atlanta Constitution. October 2, 1904. p. 5. Retrieved February 16, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ "1904 Florida Gators Schedule and Results".
  5. ^ 1904 Alabama season Recap
  6. ^ "Florida was beaten". The Montgomery Advertiser. NewsBank: America's Historical Newspapers. October 2, 1904. p. 5.
  7. ^ "Florida lost to Alabama". The Atlanta Constitution. October 2, 1904. p. 5. Retrieved February 12, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.  
  8. ^ "1905 Glomerata" Archived 2011-10-01 at the Wayback Machine "(Annual),p182, Retrieved August 18, 2011"
  9. ^ 2011 Auburn Tigers Football Media Guide Archived 2012-11-11 at the Wayback Machine, Auburn University Athletic Department, Auburn, Alabama, pp. 178–189, 191 (2011). Retrieved August 16, 2011
  10. ^ Steve Rajtar (July 21, 2014). Gone Pro: Florida: Gator Athletes Who Became Pros. p. 25. ISBN 9781578605439.
  11. ^ 2011 Georgia Football Media Guide Archived 2011-10-16 at the Wayback Machine, University of Georgia Athletic Department, Athens, Georgia, pp. 157 & 158 (2011). Retrieved August 19, 2011.
  12. ^ Patrick Garbin (August 2012). I Love Georgia/I Hate Florida. ISBN 9781623680350.
  13. ^ "Georgia Score Badly Beaten". Atlanta Constitution. October 18, 1904. p. 9. Retrieved September 11, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.  
  14. ^ "Florida State College (1901-1905) - Florida State University History - Research Guides at the Florida State University". Archived from the original on December 27, 2015. Retrieved September 17, 2015.