Roo fans:
This week's story takes us back from West to East Texas, and is dedicated to my good friend and AC alum Mr. Cliff Brooks.
Chapter 1: The Season
Chapter 2: The Protest
Chapter 3: Herbert on Fire
Chapter 4: We'll always have Paris
Chapter 1: The Season
Herbert
Hollis (AC '24) arrived on campus in the fall of 1920, and made an
immediate splash. The Denison, TX star was a solid short stop on the
diamond, and a fullback with lightning speed on the gridiron. Hollis
was a starter his freshman year in baseball and football, and
contributed to AC's TIAA championship in 1920 on the football field.
His
sophomore year was even more impressive. Hollis was voted captain of
the football team, leading AC to a winning season. The 1921 campaign
included a win against SMU and a competitive loss to Baylor. The AC
fullback was also the team's kicker, and accounted for 34 points that
season…..3 touchdowns, 3 field goals, and 7 extra points.
Expectations
were through the roof for football in 1922, as most of the team was
back. Sharing running back duties with Hollis was Ray Morehart, the
future 1927 Yankees star mentioned in an earlier story. This duo was at
times described by Texas newspapers as the "fastest backfield in the
state." And the AC Roos of 1922 would not disappoint.
The
season began with a loss. But a respectable loss. The Roos journeyed
to Austin to take on the mighty Longhorns of UT. By the half, UT had
managed only a 3-0 advantage. The Horns would prove too strong in the
second half, prevailing 19-0. But Hollis had a tremendous game at Clark
Field, breaking one long run after another against an impressive Horns
team that would finish the season 7-2 with wins over Alabama and
Oklahoma.
It's not known if UT President Robert Vinson
was in attendance, but it would not be surprising if he were. President
Vinson was an 1896 AC grad, and played a pivotal role in the
acquisition of land for DKR Memorial stadium in 1924.
See photo of the 1922 game. Roos are in solid; Horns are in vertical burnt orange stripes.
After the UT game, the Roos and Hollis went on a tear…..
A
win over Howard Payne. A 10-7 victory at SMU. Victories over Daniel
Baker and Simmons (later Hardin-Simmons). An impressive 20-7 defeat of
TCU. And a 7-0 victory over Southwestern. Hollis was pivotal in nearly
every game, scoring touchdowns against Daniel Baker, Simmons, TCU, and
Southwestern, and providing the difference in the SMU game with a late
field goal. Hollis himself was on his way towards his third straight
year on the All-TIAA team.
The Roos stood at 6-1,
and undefeated in conference. According to team manager Jimmy
Creighton, the 1921 team was "dreaming of a bowl invitation, possibly on
the west coast". All that remained was a season finale against rival
Trinity and the TIAA championship would come back home to Sherman. And
who knows what post season game might await?
But A.E. Chandler had other ideas.
Recap of the AC - UT game in 1922. "The Eyes of Texas Are Upon You." "Kangaroo meets Longhorn." "Cow bells in distance."
Because of the references to Hardin-Simmons in Abilene, this chapter is dedicated to Abilene native Mr. Stephen Sides.
Chapter 2: The Protest
A.E.
Chandler was a professor of business administration at Simmons
University. He was also the president of the T.I.A.A. Simmons had a
quality T.I.A.A. team in 1922, second only to the undefeated Roos. Late
that season, Chandler learned that Hollis had played summer baseball in
Oklahoma, and heard allegations that his ball club had paid Hollis for
his services. Acting as T.I.A.A. president, Chandler demanded that
Hollis answer questions about his summer ball in Oklahoma.
Hollis
responded. Yes, he was a poor student. Yes, he had played summer
ball. Yes, he was paid in cash. But he was never under contract. And
T.I.A.A. rules clearly stated that only baseball contracts were illegal.
And
Hollis was correct. In 1921. However, according to Chandler, a little
publicized rule change in 1922 meant that renumeration in any form,
contract or no, was a violation of the rules. With Chandler's prodding,
the T.I.A.A. ruled Hollis ineligible and demanded that A.C. forfeit all
T.I.A.A. games in which Hollis played. With this ruling, Simmons was
declared T.I.A.A. champions in 1922.
AC formally
protested (see November 1922 article in the Port Arthur News). The rule
change was unknown. The rule was unjust. And the penalty was
excessive. The protest fell on deaf ears, and the ruling stood. In
spite of a perfect 6-0 T.I.A.A. record for AC, Simmons would be awarded
the conference championship.
It all stinks to high heaven, if you ask me…..
The
dispirited Roos found themselves with no Hollis, no conference
championship, and no more dreaming of a West Coast bowl. Not
surprisingly, they fell to Trinity in the last game of the season, 9-0.
The 6-2 season was remarkable and impressive, yet the Roos
understandably felt cheated and despondent. Hollis himself, exasperated
at the ruling, would not be allowed to play ball for AC ever again.
Careers
in education often required advanced degrees. So after a decade
absence, Hollis returned to Austin College in the 1930s in order to
earn a masters degree in history. His AC degree required, among other
things, a master's thesis on a a topic of Hollis's choosing. Hollis
submitted his thesis, received his M.A. from Austin College, and quietly
placed his work in his attic, where it collected dust for nearly a half
century…….
3 time All-TIAA fullback Herbert Hollis in the 1922 Austin College Chromascope.
Austin
College told A.E. Chandler to take a hike, and informally declared
themselves 1922 TIAA champions. Hollis is front and center with the
football.
Chapter 3: Herbert on Fire
To
this day, no one is sure how it was started. Some say school kids
playing with matches at the railyard. Others suspect an industrial
fire. But the result is well known. On a very warm day in March 1916,
with winds blowing from the southwest at speeds up to 60 mph, the entire
city of Paris, TX was destroyed by a catastrophic fire. By the next
morning, very few buildings remained and most of the city was homeless.
The Paris fire of 1916 is often compared with the
great Chicago fire of 1871, infamously started by Mrs O'Leary's cow. The
citizens and firefighters of Paris did their best to contain the blaze.
But firefighting in 1916 was primitive and ineffective compared to the
efforts of firefighters today such as Cliff Brooks. Buckets of waters
and lots of volunteers were no match for the raging inferno fueled by
high winds. Nearly 90% of the town was destroyed.
Over
the decades to follow, Paris would eventually recover and thrive.
However, the memory of the fire began to fade. As did the knowledge.
Why did it begin? Where did it spread? What was lost? What was the
cost? How many casualties? By the 1980s, most of the story about the
fire came from a rapidly decreasing number of eye witnesses.
Until…………….Hollis's AC master's thesis was found. His topic in Sherman?
The Paris Fire of 1916.
The Genealogical Society
of Northeast Texas learned of the Hollis thesis, and began work on
republishing alongside photographs of the disaster. Hollis's work from
1936 was extremely detailed, and included eyewitness interviews,
insurance claim data, newspaper clippings, maps, and other relevant
information about the scope of the disaster.
For
historians interested in the 1916 event, the Hollis thesis was
equivalent to recuperating detailed history assumed lost forever. The
work was republished in 1982, ironically the same year that Paris was
hit with the second of its two famous natural disasters………… the April 2,
1982 F4 tornado that leveled parts of the city.
The
100th anniversary of the Paris fire of 1916 was just a few months ago.
Cliff even posted about the anniversary on social media recently. As
for our knowledge of that event? We can thank Mr. Hollis and his work on
the campus of Austin College. An Amazon link to his work is included.
https://www.amazon.com/Paris-Texas-Fire-1916-Mini-History-ebook/dp/B00VRTY84M?ie=UTF8&*Version*=1&*entries*=0
Hollis's work is enhanced and republished in 1982, nearly 50 years after it was first created in Sherman.
Special shout out to Tina Cook....AC alum, Paris resident, and Student Advisor at Paris Junior College. Salute!
Cliff Brooks shares an article in March 2016 on the 100 year anniversary of the great Paris fire.
https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=10208829434444307&id=1567146521
Chapter 4: We'll always have Paris
Herbert
L. Hollis went by the nickname of "Hub". That was his nickname in
Sherman, and that's what he was called during his half century in Paris.
"Hub" was inducted into the Austin College Athletic Hall of Honor in
1965, one of six founding members. Herbert Lynn "Hub" Hollis passed away
in 1973.
After AC, Hollis played minor league
baseball for 3 seasons in Paris, TX after graduation. In Paris, he
found a home. He married a local Paris girl. After retirement from
Paris minor league baseball, he became head football and baseball coach
of the Paris Junior College Dragons, as well as a history teacher at
Paris High School. And in 1937, Herbert Hollis accepted the position of
principal at the Graham School within Paris ISD, a job he would hold
for nearly three decades.
For his contributions to
baseball in the city of Paris, both as a minor league player and as head
baseball coach of Paris Junior College, the home field of the Dragons
was named for Hollis. All who venture to 24th street in order to watch
or play will be arriving at "H.L. 'Hub' Hollis field", just north of
Paris High School. Hollis field is used by both the PJC Dragons and the
Paris High School Wildcats. The field has been used for decades in
Paris. Why, the local paper even reported our own Cliff Brooks hitting a
triple there in 1988 for a local Paris summer club. See photo of "Hub"
Hollis field and newspaper clipping of Cliff's triple.
It's
a shame Hub was not around in 1988-89 to watch his local Wildcats that
year. After starting the season 0-3, Placekicker Cliff Brooks and the
rest of the Paris HS football team simply decided to never lose again.
They rolled to the Class 4A state championship, easily defeating West
Orange-Stark in College Station for the title and finishing with an 11-3
record. But Paris was not yet done.
The Wildcat
baseball team picked up where the football squad left off, dominating
opponent after opponent on Hub Hollis field in route to a Class 4A state
championship in baseball. Paris defeated Austin Anderson at Disch-Falk
in dramatic fashion just weeks after Cliff's graduation and months
before his arrival on campus. No wonder he was such a fun guy to be
around. :)
The
Hub Hollis naming honors were not confined to Paris either. Austin
College acquired a live kangaroo as a mascot in 1923, and began the
process of naming the Roo. According to AC sources, three finalist
names were nominated and voted upon:
"Pat", in honor of athletics supporter Pat E. Hooks.
"Steve", in honor of Stephen F. Austin.
"Hub", in honor of fullback H. L. "Hub" Hollis.
In
the end, "Pat" would win. But probably not without some competition
from "Hub". Both Hooks and Hub were inducted into the Hall of Honor
together in 1965.
Cliff Brooks is a
firefighter/paramedic in The Colony. He's also a member of the 1988
Paris High School state champions in football, a veteran baseball player
at "Hub" Hollis field, and a fightin' AC Roo. If I have not yet
convinced you why this story is dedicated to Cliff, I ain't ever gonna
do it. :)
Our next story will be dedicated to my good friend Mr. John Cotton, AC Class of 1984.
Go Roos!
Cliff Brooks hits a three bagger at Hollis field in 1988!
"Hub" Hollis (AC '24) one of the original inductees into the AC Athletic Hall of Honor in 1965.
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