Elgin Ralston Lovell Gould (1860–1915) was a Canadian social scientist, educator, and lacrosse coach. In 1883, he served as the first head coach of the lacrosse team at Johns Hopkins University.
Biographical details | |
---|---|
Born | Ottawa, Canada West | August 15, 1860
Died | August 18, 1915 Cartier, Ontario | (aged 55)
Alma mater | University of Toronto |
Playing career | |
1882 | Johns Hopkins (football) |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1883 | Johns Hopkins (lacrosse) |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 0–1 |
Early life and college
editGould was born in Ottawa, Canada West, on August 15, 1860.[1] He attended college at the University of Toronto and received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1881.[2] The following year, he emigrated to the United States and attended Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. From 1882 to 1884, he held a Fellowship in the history and political science departments under Herbert Baxter Adams.[1] He also played a role in increasing the importance of lacrosse at Johns Hopkins.[1][2] In 1883, Gould coached the first official lacrosse Johns Hopkins lacrosse team. That inaugural season consisted of one game, in which Hopkins lost to the Druid Lacrosse Club, 4–0, on May 11.[3][4] Gould also played on the first Johns Hopkins football team.[5] Gould befriended future President Woodrow Wilson while attending the university.[1]
Professional career
editHe spent some time working as an assistant to statistician Carroll D. Wright at the Department of Labor in Washington, D.C.[1] Gould received his Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins in 1886.[2] He married Mary Hurst née Purnell of Baltimore in 1887,[1] and they had six children, two of whom died in infancy.[2] One of their sons, Erl Clinton Barker Gould, was an original member of the First Yale Unit prior to World War I.[2]
Gould was then employed by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which sent him to Europe to study living conditions of laborers.[1] In 1892, he returned to Johns Hopkins University, and taught social sciences there until 1897.[1][2] Gould then taught as a professor at the University of Chicago.[1]
He moved to New York City where he was tasked with helping to address the city's congestion and poor housing conditions. Gould served as the city chamberlain under Mayor Seth Low.[1] He was also a founder of the Citizens Union, a government watchdog organization established to oppose the Tammany Hall political machine.[2]
Gould's work often concerned city sanitation and living conditions.[6][7] One source wrote that he was "a major proponent of the idea of philanthropic housing".[8] He suggested that entrepreneurs build working-class housing outside of the cities, where commuters would travel by streetcar, an emerging form of transportation at the time.[8] His goal was to reduce the congestion and crowding in the tenement neighborhoods.[8]
He authored at least two books, The Social Condition of Labor in 1893, and the "influential 1895 volume", The Housing of the Working People.[9] Gould was killed in a horseback riding accident on August 18, 1915, in Cartier, Ontario.[2]
Published works
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i j The Johns Hopkins Alumni Magazine: Published in the Interest of the University and the Alumni, Volume 4, p. 82, The Johns Hopkins Alumni Association, 1915.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Puck Purnell, Erl Clinton Barker Gould, The Millionaires' Unit Documentary Film, retrieved July 14, 2010.
- ^ Charbel Barakat, Men's team has 119 years of history backing it up; From humble, 19th-century beginnings to the Olympic Gold Medal in 1928 and 1932, JHU lax has done it all Archived 2011-03-01 at the Wayback Machine, The Johns Hopkins News-Letter, March 2, 2002.
- ^ David G. Pietramala and Neil Grauer,Lacrosse: Technique and Tradition; The Second Edition of the Bob Scott Classic, p. 230, JHU Press, 2006, ISBN 0-8018-8410-1.
- ^ The Johns Hopkins Alumni Magazine: Published in the Interest of the University and the Alumni, Volume 4, p. 16, The Johns Hopkins Alumni Association, 1915.
- ^ The Lancet, Volume 2: A Journal of British and Foreign Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics, Physiology, Chemistry, Pharmacology, Public Health, and News, p. 399, December 1891.
- ^ Medical Record, Volume 40, p. 342, 1891.
- ^ a b c Conceiving the future: Pronatalism, Reproduction, and the Family in the United States, 1890-1938, p. 61, UNC Press, 2007, ISBN 0-8078-5803-X.
- ^ Howard Gillette, Jr., Civitas by Design: Building Better Communities, from the Garden City to the New Urbanism, p. 7, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2010, ISBN 0-8122-4247-5.