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Schreiner University
created the Athletic Hall of Honor in 2003 to celebrate
former students' athletic achievements during their
years at Schreiner and afterward. |
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Tom
Ball, Jr.
1940-42
Football Player
Year Inducted: 2006
Schreiner
University has named Tom Ball, Jr. to its
Athletic Hall of Honor. He will be honored at a
banquet on April 1, during Recall, Schreiner
University’s annual homecoming event. When
Tom Ball, Jr., '42 entered Schreiner Institute
in 1940 he was already a celebrated high school
football player. To this day he is remembered
throughout East Texas as a versatile triple
threat running back, who was strong on both
offense and defense. In his freshman year
at Schreiner, Ball excelled as half-back and
punter. According to the 1940 Recall, the team,
under Coach Rex Kelly, began the season with the
motto “Nothing less than the conference
championship.” On November 22 that dream came
true as Schreiner defeated Kilgore Junior
College for the Texas Junior College
Championship. Of that season Recall
states, “Tom Ball’s punting….. was worthy of
mention and commendations.” He was named captain
of the 1941 Mountaineers, and although the
season record reflected four wins and three
losses, Ball once again distinguished himself on
the field. After having his education
disrupted to serve in World War II, he finished
his education and went on to distinguish himself
in his professional life, retiring as a
vice-president with Paine-Webber Investments in
1999. Ball makes his home in Houston,
where he enjoys spending time with his two
children and four grandchildren. |
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Raymond Berry
1950
Football Player
Year Inducted: 2003
Berry played football at Schreiner Institute in
1950, helping the team finish its most
successful season in 10 years with a record of
73. He then played football at Southern
Methodist University, before being drafted into
the NFL by the Baltimore Colts in 1955. During
his 13 years as wide receiver for the Colts, he
was a member of two world championship teams.
When he
retired, he had caught more passes - a
then-record 631 - than any other player in pro
football history. He was inducted into the Pro
Football Hall of Fame five years after he
retired. Berry coached
in the NFL for 19 years, including six seasons
as head coach of the New England Patriots. He
led the team to five playoff games, an AFC East
Division title, an AFC championship and a Super
Bowl. In 1985, he was selected NFL coach of the
year by The Vince Lombardi Committee.
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John R. "Bob" Bowmer
1952-53
Football/Tennis Player
Year Inducted: 2004
Bowmer was
quarterback at Schreiner for two years, leading
the team to 6-4 and 5-4-1 records. He was
selected twice as All Conference and All State
Quarterback. He also played tennis at Schreiner,
and was No. 1 in doubles and No. 2 in singles.
Bowmer then played
football for the University of Texas for two
years before serving two years in the U.S. Army.
He then earned his bachelor's degree in geology
from Midwestern State University. He worked for
Shell Oil for almost eight years before being
offered a position with Morgan Stanley Dean
Witter in 1967. Today, he is a vice president
and financial advisor at Morgan Stanley. |
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William
G. Gillis
1936-37
Football/Track
Year Inducted: 2006
William G. Gillis, Jr., '37
distinguished himself while at Schreiner
Institute having been Best All-Around Cadet, a
football and track letterman, and a member of
Phi Theta Kappa. He was from Cameron, Texas.
Maj. Gillis '41 went on to glory at the U. S.
Military Academy at West Point, where he was a
cadet lieutenant, captain of the 1940 football
team and a three-year track letterman. He
was killed in action October 1, 1944 in Gremercy
Forest in France during WW II. When he died
Gillis was married to Lenore Riley Mudge '37.
Gillis received the Distinguished Service Cross,
Silver Star, Bronze Star, two Purple Hearts,
Distinguished Service Order (British), Croix De
Guerre, Silver Gilt and Vermillion Stars
(French). As a testament to his popularity and
the legacy he left behind, West Point dedicated
the Gillis Field House in his memory in 1989. |
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H.C. "Bully" Gilstrap
1925-37
Football Coach
Year Inducted: 2004
Gilstrap played
football, basketball and ran track at the
University of Texas from 1921 to 1923. In 1925,
he was named the head coach of a young Schreiner
football team. He built the team into one of the
state's top junior college powers. The highlight
of his 12 years at Schreiner was winning the
state junior college football championship in
1935. In 1937, Gilstrap
was hired as an assistant football coach at UT.
He coached football at UT for 20 years. In
addition, he coached basketball at UT for three
years, compiling a 43-28 record and leading his
team to the Southwest Conference basketball
co-championship and to a runner-up finish in the
NCAA Tournament.
Gilstrap retired from coaching in 1956 and
became a physical-training instructor at UT
until retiring in the early 1970s. He was voted
into the Longhorn Hall of Honor in 1968. He died
in 1989 at the age of 87. |
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Claude R. "Chena" Gilstrap
1933-53
Football Player/Coach
Year Inducted: 2005
His Schreiner Institute classmates knew him as
“Chena” in the 1930s. Schreiner students and
athletes in the 1950s knew him simply and
affectionately as “Coach.” Claude R. Gilstrap
played many roles during his long and
distinguished life—mentor, friend, athlete,
visionary, humorist, inspirational leader,
colleague, role model, and outstanding citizen.
By the time he got to Schreiner, he was already
a physical and moral force to be reckoned with.
Gilstrap's older brother, H.C. “Bully” Gilstrap,
had preceded him to the Institute in 1925. Chena
arrived in 1933 as a student and is remembered
as one of Schreiner's outstanding athletes.
In 1950, Gilstrap took over the reins of
Schreiner's football program and promptly led
the Mountaineers to their most successful season
in a decade. He left Schreiner in 1953 to become
head football coach and athletic director at
Arlington State College—now University of Texas
at Arlington.
During Coach Gilstrap's tenure at Schreiner and
again while he was at Arlington State, he was
honored as Coach of the Year by regional and
national sports organizations, and was inducted
into both the Texas Sports Hall of Fame
and the National Football Hall of Fame. At his
memorial service in 2002, former players and
protégés returned with heartfelt words of
praise.
One of these protégés, Bobby Lane, who had been
an assistant coach under Chena at Arlington and
went on to become a National Football Hall of
Famer himself, said “He was probably the
greatest motivator of kids I have ever known. If
anyone should have a lasting legacy, it's him,
for the number of lives he touched and the young
men he meant so much to over the years.” |
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Joe
Love Hedrick
1941
Football Player
Year Inducted: 2007
Hedrick
graduated from high school in 1939, after which
he enrolled in Schreiner Institute. He was
a standout football player at Schreiner under
legendary coaches W.C. “Heine” Weir and Rex
Kelly. After graduating in 1941, he attended
Tulsa University where, playing under coach
Henry Franka, he capped his college athletic
career by playing in the 1943 Sugar Bowl. After
graduating from Tulsa with a degree in business
administration Hedrick joined the U.S. Marines,
and participated in several of the toughest
battles of the World War II Pacific Theater. He
was proudest of his service in the battle for
Iwo Jima, during which he was both wounded and
decorated with the Bronze Star for exceptional
bravery under fire. After the war, Hedrick
earned his master’s in education from Texas A&M,
and to begin a long and distinguished career in
coaching for Franklin ISD, where he served as
both coach and teacher from 1946 to 1985.
Hedrick was head football coach for most of his
career with Franklin ISD and, in addition,
served as Superintendent of Schools from 1965 to
1985. Hedrick was inducted into the Texas High
School Coaches Association’s Hall of Honor in
1979, and when he finished his coaching career
in 1985, his teams had amassed a lifetime record
of 247 wins, 119 losses, and 15 ties. During his
tenure, Hedrick’s teams won 13 district
championships, 6 bi-district championships, 2
regional championships and 2 quarterfinal
championships. |
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Roland E.
Ingram
1962
Tennis Player
Year Inducted: 2003
Ingram
attended Schreiner Institute for one year but
during that time he left his mark as one of
Schreiner's tennis legends. He helped lead the
1962 SI team to the 1962 National Junior College
Team Championship, where the team captured the
title. Ingram was both the singles and doubles
champion at the tournament. After leaving
Schreiner Institute, attended North Texas State
University, where he earned his bachelor's and
master's degrees. He coached at Amarillo High
School from 1966 to 1973; coached at Midland
College from 1973 to 1974; was the tennis pro at
Amarillo Town Club from 1974 to 1975; and was
the tennis pro at Colonial Country Club in Fort
Worth from 1976 to 1983. In 1983,
Ingram was hired as the head women's tennis
coach at Texas Christian University in Fort
Worth. While coaching at TCU, he was named
Southwest Conference Coach of the Year in 1986
and 1991; Western Athletic Conference Coach of
the Year in 2000 and 2001; Southwest Regional
Coach of the Year in 2001; and Conference USA
Coach of the Year in 2002. He was inducted into
the Texas Tennis Coaches Association Hall of
Fame in 1995. Under his leadership, the TCU
women's tennis team was named conference
champions in 1991, 2000, 2001 and 2002. Ingram
retired in 2002, after 19 years at TCU. "Schreiner was
very special. It was the right school at the
right time for me. I don't think I would have
finished college if I had gone to any other
school," said Ingram, who lives in Fort Worth.
"I would not have met: Dr. Edington who had the
faith in me to admit me as the first
ex-serviceman to school, Mr. Hammond whose
wisdom and patience allowed me to pass physics,
Mr. Wilbourn who taught me that history was
filled with real people who had something to
teach to future generations, Mr. Ainsworth who
made me fall in love with literature and drama,
and especially Mr. Becker who taught me more by
example than any other person in my life." |
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Dr. Charles L. Johnson
1956-58
Football/Basketball/Golf Player
Year Inducted: 2003
Johnson played football, basketball and golf at
Schreiner Institute from 1956 to 1958. He then
attended New Mexico State University, where he
was quarterback of the football team. His
college career included two consecutive Sun Bowl
victories and an undefeated 11-0 record in 1960.
The team recorded 23 wins and only nine losses
during Johnson's three years. His jersey number
(33) is the only number ever retired in more
than 105 years of New Mexico State football.
While at NMSU, Johnson continued his military
training that began at Schreiner and was the
Army ROTC Cadet Commander one semester. He was
commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant after
graduating with a bachelor's degree in chemical
engineering.
Johnson then played 15 years as an NFL
quarterback in St. Louis, Houston and Denver. He
was selected for the NFL Pro Bowl in 1963 and
was named AFC All Conference in 1973. He started
in more than 110 games, winning 65 of those.
During his pro career, Johnson continued his
education and received his master's and doctoral
degrees from Washington University in St. Louis.
He also served two years on active duty assigned
to NASA in Virginia. He was honorably discharged
as a Captain, USAR.
After 30 years of working in private business in
Houston, Johnson returned to New Mexico State in
January 2000 as professor and head of the
department of engineering. He has been inducted
into the Big Spring High Hall of Fame, NMSU Hall
of Fame, Sun Bowl Legends and the Denver Broncos
Ring of Fame.
"I have said for years that Schreiner had a huge
impact on my life and education," said Johnson,
who lives in Mesilla, N.M. "At Schreiner, I
learned to discipline myself to study as was
necessary in a tight, military-based schedule.
And, I learned how to study from a very
demanding, but caring and supportive faculty." |
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Cliff
Kellett
1951
Football Player
Year Inducted: 2007
When Kellett arrived at Schreiner
Institute in 1950, his reputation as an
outstanding athlete preceded him. While at
Schreiner, Kellett played guard for what turned
out to be the most successful Schreiner football
team in a decade, with an undefeated home game
record and an overall 7-3 season. Leaving
Schreiner after his first year, Kellett went on
to star as an All South Texas Conference guard
at Wharton
Junior
College, and then as an offensive/ defensive
guard at Lamar
University, where he graduated in
1954. Kellett served in the U.S. Army in
Korea, where in addition to his military duties,
he played on the Korea Championship Team, All
Far East All-Star team. When Kellett returned to
Beaumont, he joined Gulf Consolidated Services,
rising to vice president before his retirement
in 1990. In addition to a long, successful
business career Kellett gave untiringly of his
time and energy to a wide range of Beaumont-area
community organizations including Boy’s Haven,
4-H, FFA, and the Young Men’s Business League.
One of his proudest moments occurred when his
dream of establishing an Athletic Hall of Honor
become a reality in 2003. |
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Rex
Kelly
1935-52
Track/Football Coach
Year Inducted: 2006
Rex Kelly '52
coached track and football and taught Spanish at
Schreiner Institute from 1935 to 1952. Sam
Junkin '51, who nominated Kelly, said, “Rex was
an outstanding track coach, but an even better
friend. Often a friend to the least likely. Many
are the stories of the young men Rex ’adopted’
when all others had given up. I have heard of
those the administration voted to suspend, only
for Rex to ask that they be given one more
chance and that he be given responsibility.
After his service to Schreiner, Rex became and
full-time rancher, but he kept up his
relationships to his athletes and other
Schreiner students. He was a rare and wonderful
man.” |
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Donald
"Red" Richardson
1950-51
Football/Track
Year Inducted: 2004
Richardson was a punter for the Schreiner
football team, earning the All-Pioneer
Conference punting crown in 1950. He also
assisted the Schreiner track team to an
undefeated year in 1950, taking first place in
the high jump, placing second in the broad jump
and running a leg on the championship 440-yard
relay team. After graduating from Schreiner, he
attended Alabama University. Richardson's love
for sports continued into his adulthood. He
played semi-pro football, softball and
basketball; he coached a semi-pro women's
basketball team; and he officiated football,
basketball and baseball. He died in 1984. |
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H.N. "Jack"
Stevens
1923
Football Player
Year Inducted: 2003
Stevens was quarterback and captain of Schreiner
Institute's first football team, scoring the
team's first touchdown during a Sept. 28, 1923,
game against Junction.
On Feb. 13,
1924, Stevens married Dorothy Doyle of
Kerrville, left Schreiner and began his 40-year
career working at the Fawcett Furniture Company.
He was active in the Kiwanis Club, Chamber of
Commerce and Appliance Dealers Association of
Kerrville. "The letter I
received from (then Schreiner Institute
president) Dr. J.J. Delaney in the spring of
1923 probably did more to change my life than
any other one thing," Stevens was quoted as
saying in a 1980 SCENE magazine article. Stevens
died on Dec. 5, 1983, at the age of 79. |
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Donald W.
Suman, Sr.
1938
Football/Basketball
Year Inducted: 2004
Suman was first team All-State in football at
Schreiner in 1938 and second team All-State in
basketball that same year. He then played
football and basketball at Rice before leaving
at the end of his junior year to enter the U.S.
Air Force. While at the second stage of his
pilot training, he injured his knee and was
given an Honorable Medical Discharge. Suman returned to
Rice and graduated in 1944. He then worked for
Rice, eventually becoming the assistant
basketball coach in 1947 and head basketball
coach in 1949. In 1954, his team won the
Southwest Conference Championship, with a 23-5
record. That same year he was named Outstanding
Coach of the Year in the Southwest Conference.
After coaching for 10 years at Rice, he went to
work for an American League Professional
football team for three years and then joined
John L. Wortham and Son Fire and Casualty
Insurance Agency, where he remained for 22 years
until his retirement in 1985. |
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Bill E.
Thompson
1949-52
Football Player
Year Inducted: 2003
Thompson was
quarterback at Schreiner Institute from 1949 to
1951. He helped his 1950 team finish with a 6-2
season. After leaving SI, Thompson attended Sam
Houston State College, where he led his team to
two championships and two bowl games. Thompson
graduated from Sam Houston with bachelor's and
master's degrees. After
graduation, Thompson coached football at high
schools in Hallettsville, Livingston and Vidor.
In 1962, Thompson and his family moved to
Baytown, where he coached at Horace Mann Junior
School. In 1968, he became the defensive
coordinator at Robert E. Lee High School in
Baytown. In 1969, he
helped lead the Lee Ganders to their first
district title in a decade. The Ganders went to
the regional finals in 1970, were co-champs in
1973, district champs in 1976 and regional
champs in 1979. (Sports reporters have named
that 1979 game against La Porte as one of the
"Ten Best Games of the Decade," with the Ganders
winning 30-28.) Thompson retired from coaching
in 1985. "The
advantages Schreiner offered its students were
many. The campus was small and friendly. The
professors were helpful and caring. The
distractions were few, therefore, grades and
study habits become very important. The
friendships made there have lasted a lifetime.
We look forward to returning to campus Recall
every year," said Thompson, who lives in
Baytown. |
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W.C.
"Heinie" Weir
1937-45
Football Coach
Year Inducted: 2006
W.C. (Heinie) Weir
'45 was Schreiner Institute’s head football
coach and athletic director from 1937 until
1945. After that he served in a variety of other
roles at Schreiner, retiring as academic dean in
1971. Weir served as captain of the Texas
A&M football team in his senior year there,
wrote Sam M. Junkin '51, former Schreiner
president in his nomination. “When his leg was
broken in a game, the A&M coach told the student
body to be ready, that someone might be called
from the stands during the game. Hence was born
the 12th man tradition,” wrote Junkin. He went
on the say, “In many ways, Coach Weir was a
stern man, one who did not rest easy with what
he considered ‘nonsense.’ But, he was respected
and he served Schreiner admirably.” |
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