BOYS’
CROSS-COUNTRY
Englewood
competed in the first Cook County League meet held in either the fall of 1908 or spring of 1909. From there, the school competed
over hill and dale, winning 12 Public League championship, placed in the top 10 of the team standings at the state finals
four times (including a second and a third in successive years), and had four individuals place in the top 10 to gather all-state
honors.
1933 Public League Champs
coach unknown
1934 Public League Champs
coach unknown
1936 Public League Champs coach unknown
1937 Public League Champs
coach unknown
1948 Individual Medalist
Jerold Richard----10th place
1950 6th
in State
Public League champs
State Final Standings (top 6 teams)
1 Chicago Hts Bloom Twp. 49
2 Paris 70
3
Des Plaines Maine Twp. 99
4 Peoria Woodruff 104
5 Lincoln 117
6 Chicago
Englewood 126
Individual
Medalist
Charles Towns----5th
place
1951 Public League champs
State qualifier
1953 Public
League champs
State qualifier
1954 Public
League champs
State qualifier
1955 2nd
in State!!!!
Public
League champs
State Final Standings (top 5 teams)
1 LaGrange Lyons 95
2 Chicago
Englewood
122
3 Urbana 139
4 DesPlaines Maine Twp. 161
5 Peoria Central 163
1956 3rd
in State!!!!
Public
League champs
State Final Standings (top 5 teams)
1 LaGrange Lyons
102
2 Rock Falls 113
3 Chicago Englewood
151
4 Maywood Proviso
156
5 Alton
Sr. 171
Individual
Medalist
Leonard Williamson---10th place
1957 Public League champs
State
qualifier
1966 State
qualifier
1967 State
qualifier
1968 9th
in State
Public
League champs
State Final Standings
1 Elmhurst York 121
9 Englewood 263
Individual
Medalist
Willie Thomas---5th place
1971 State qualifier
BOYS’
SWIMMING
Englewood’s tankmen were one of the better teams in the state of Illinois when the IHSA began offering a state championship in the sport during the 1930’s.
The Eagles scored three top-10 team finishes (two of them in the top five) in that era, and also were Public League champs
in both the indoor and outdoor seasons. Names of coaches are unknown.
1922-23 Public League Outdoor Champs
1924-25 Public League Indoor Champs--20-Yard Division
1927-28 Public League Indoor Champs--25-Yard
Division
1930-31 Public League Indoor Champs--20-Yard Division
1931-32 8th in State
State Final Standings
1 Des Plaines
Maine 22
8 Englewood 4
Relay
Medalists
200 medley relay---4th place
1933-34 5th in State
State Final Standings (top 5 teams)
1 Des Plaines
Maine
27
2 Chicago University 19
3 Chicago
Roosevelt
14
Rockford HS 14
5 Chicago
Englewood
8
Relay
Medalists
160 freestyle relay---4th place
180 medley relay—3rd place
Individual
Medalist
Harold Cullen diving---4th place
Public League Indoor Champs--20-Yard & 25-Yard Divisions
1934-35 4th in State
State Final Standings (top 5 teams)
1 Des Plaines
Maine 26
2 Chicago
University
19
3 Oak Park-River Forest 10
4 Chicago Englewood
8
5 Winnetka New Trier
7
Chicago Hyde Park
7
Relay
Medalists
160 freestyle relay---3rd place
180 medley relay---4th place
Individual
Medalist
Billy Edgecomb 40 freestyle---3rd place
Public League Indoor Champs--20-yard & 25-Yard Division
FOOTBALL
The Eagles enjoyed success
on the gridiron, taking home either the outright title or sharing it with another school on 14 occasions in its early years,
and even won a couple of division titles as well in Public League play. It even made a playoff appearance in 1996, winning
its first game in the 4A playoffs before ending its season.
There have been a number
of notable players that played for the Purple and White, but one has a trophy named after him: Robert Maxwell. The Maxwell
Trophy goes to the top collegiate player in the country, and was started in 1937 by friends of the Englewood grad, who died
from injuries suffered in a auto accident in 1922.
In addition, one of the oldest
traditional football rivalries involved Englewood with neighboring school Hyde Park. Robert Pruter wrote at length about the
meetings between the two schools that began in 1889 and serves as the oldest prep football rivalry in the state of Illinois:
http://www.ihsa.org/initiatives/hstoric/football_engle-hp.htm
With help from Pruter as well as Tom Sikorski and the IHSA's website (www.ihsa.org), here's a look back at some of the better teams in school history:
1889 First team
1890 Cook County League Champs
1895 Cook County League Champs
1897 Cook County League Champs
1898 Cook County League Champs
1899 Cook County League Champs
1903 Co-Cook County League Champs
1908 Cook County League Champs
1909 Cook
County League
Champs
1914 Co-Public League Champs
1915 Public League Champs
1916 Public League Champs
1918 Public League Champs
1919 Public League Champs
1920 Public League Champs
1933 3--2--1
1936 4--2--1
1947 5--2
1951 5--3
1958 7--0--1
Blue Division Champions!!
Blue South Central Division Champs
Defeated Roosevelt 19-6 & Farragut 12-6 for Blue Division Title
1961 8--1
Blue South Central Champs!! Coach
Yoshio Yamada
Defeated Wells 41-14 in Blue Division playoffs
Lost to Roosevelt in Blue Division finals, 14-13
1962 5--2--1 Coach
Yoshio Yamada
1963 5--2 Coach
Yoshio Yamada
1965 5--4 Coach
Yoshio Yamada
1966
7--2 White South Central Champs
Coach Yoshio Yamada
1967 5--3 Coach
Yoshio Yamada
1968 4--2--1
Coach Yoshio Yamada
1969 5--3--1
Coach Yoshio Yamada
1970
5--2--1 White South Reg. Season Champs Coach Yoshio Yamada
1975 6--3
1976 5--3
1977 6--2
1980 5--4
1984 6--3
1985 6--2
1994 6--3
Coach Eudell McKenzie
1995 5--4
Coach Eudell McKenzie
1996 9--2 State 4A Playoff Qualifier Coach David
Stiggers
Beat
Aurora Marmion in 1st round, 56-15
Lost to Batavia in 2nd round, 55-6
1997
Coach David Stiggers
1998
coach unknown
1999 6--3
Coach Albert Cruse
2000-02
Coach Albert Cruse
2003 6--3
Coach Albert Cruse
2004 6--3
Coach Albert Cruse
2005
Coach Albert Cruse
2006 4--5 (last season w/team)
Coach Michael Singleton
Last
win was a 1-0 forfeit victory from Chicago Sullivan
Last
game played was a 36-12 win over Chicago Payton
Englewood alumni that later went on to play professional football:
--Tom Farris: Following graduation, Farris attended the University
of Wisconsin and later played from 1946-47 with the Chicago Bears and 1948 with the Chicago Rockets of the All-American Football
Conference as a quarterback & defensive back.
--Ed Bradley: Bradley went on to play for Wake Forest, then
was chosen in the 16th round of the 1950 NFL draft by the Chicago Bears, with whom he played with in 1950 and 1952 as a
defensive end in 12 games.
--Harold Bradley: This offensive guard went on Iowa,
then signed with Cleveland, where he played from 1954-56. The Browns were NFL champs in 1955 as Bradley appeared
in 11 games that season. Following the three years with Cleveland, Bradley played the 1958 season with Philadelphia
before retiring.
BOYS’
BASKETBALL
Englewood’s basketball program made history on March 2, 1900, when the Eagles played
Elgin High School in the earliest-known
interscholastic game between two prep teams in Illinois, winning that contest at Sauer’s
Hall in Elgin by the score of 16-12. The school won three
conference titles, four more at the lightweight division, and a "Sweet 16" showing in the last year of operation.
1909-10 Cook County League Champions coach unknown
1917-18 Public League Champs
coach unknown
1922-23 Public League Lwt. Co-Champs coach unknown
1924-25 Public League Lwt. Champs
coach unknown
1925-26 Public
League Lwt. Champs
coach unknown
1926-27 Public League Champs
coach unknown
1927-28 Public League Lwt. Champs
coach unknown
2007-08 29-4 "Sweet 16" in 2A!!! Coach
Louis Adams
Defeated Hales Francisan for Englewood Regional Title, 60-57
Downed
Niles Northridge Prep 60-50 in Chicago North Lawndale Sectional
Upset
by North Lawndale in sectional finals, 70-68
(North Lawndale eventual state 2A champs)
BOYS’
SOCCER
The Eagles made history as
they participated with Oak Park-River Forest in the first-known prep match between two Illinois
schools, ending in a 1-1 tie in 1909. Soccer was introduced to the school in 1905 following a serious football injury, playing
the Chicago Wanderers that fall and winning 4-3. The school was not able to schedule games against other schools until 1909
when OP-RF started the sport due to a football death in 1908, so they played amateur clubs until then.
Archibald Patterson was the
school’s first coach, and helped push the Cook County League to establish the sport in the league in 1912. Englewood won a number of Public League titles as well as the Peel Shield
in the fall of 1914 as champion of the Public League and winner over the Suburban League participate in a winner-take-all
game. The Eagles were a perennial contender in the CPL as well as the Peel Shield for the remainder of the decade.
The 1919 Peel Shield match
versus OPRF was marred by rough play and the referee ordered an extra period of play after being knotted at two in regulation
time. OPRF pulled their team off the field, despite protests by Peter J. Peel, sponsor of the title match, and that ended
the series. Englewood won the CPL title again in 1922, then
disbanded their program in 1925.
1914
Public League Champions
Peel Shield Winners
1915
Public League Champions
1916
Public League Champions
1918
Public League Champions
1919
Public League Champions
1922
Public League Champions
BOYS’
TENNIS
The Eagles competed among
the Cook County League and Chicago Public League teams, coming away with two singles and two doubles titles in addition to
a team title. It also placed in the top three at the IHSA tournament in singles & doubles five times when the state finals
were in their infancy.
Englewood was a part of the Cook County
High School Lawn Tennis Association tournament that was held in 1894 only. The program gained some notice in 1910 when Alexander
Squair won the University of Chicago
Interscholastic singles title and then followed it up in 1914 with the Western Tennis Championship.
1912 Cook County
Team Singles & Doubles Champions
1913 Cook County
Team Singles & Doubles Champions
State
Tournament Medalists
Al
Lindauer & (?) Becker--2nd in doubles
(lost to Jerry & Jimmy Weber of Chicago Harvard 2-6, 7-5, 6-2)
Al Lindauer--2nd
in singles
(lost to Jerry Weber of Chicago Harvard 3-6, 6-4, 6-2)
1921 State Tournament Medalist
(?) Reichenbach--3rd
in singles
1922 State Tournament Medalists
Gene Quinn & Emmet Wertheimer--2nd
in doubles
(lost to Rudolph Mulfinger & Frank O'Connell of Chicago Hyde Park, scores unavailable)
Gene Quinn--3rd in singles
1923 Public League Champions
BASEBALL
The Eagles started as early
as 1890 on the baseball diamond, according to information received from historian Robert Pruter, as Englewood won three
Cook County League championship during the 1890’s. As you can tell below, they were still playing up to the school’s
final days.
1892 Cook County League
Champions
1898 Cook County League
Champions
1899 Cook County League
Champions
2005 17-4 good
record
Coach Louis Adams
GOLF
Englewood enjoyed success
as a team in the sport, winning three league titles, and even having one of its own players return home with a top five finish
at the state tournament during the 1922 meet.
1910 Cook County League Champs
1912 Cook County League Champs
1922 Chicago Public League Champs
Individual
Medalist
Eldridge
Robinson---4th place (246, 15 strokes behind)
BOYS’
GYMNASTICS
The Eagles were pioneers
in the sport, helped by the fact that they were coached by Henry Smidl, who introduced the sport to Illinois high schools. Englewood won the first Public League
title in 1924 & 1925 before Smidl moved onto other Public League members Lindblom
& Gage Park. Smidl was a gymnast himself, having
won the national Sokol Club all-around championship from 1919-26. (The Sokol Club was an organization that was made up of
Czechs and Slovaks who had immigrated to the US.)
GIRLS’
BASKETBALL
Englewood was a member of
the Cook County League from 1900-1906 before the sport was banned by Edwin Cooley, superintendent of Chicago schools. The Englewood
girls won the first league title in 1899-1900, and resumed play when girls' sports were re-introduced in the 1970's, but no
Eagle team won a league title or qualified for the state finals.
MINOR SPORTS
SPEED
SKATING
Englewood offered a team in the early
1920’s and won the senior division title at the 1922-23 Public League meet.This sport was contested all the way thru
the 1970's when it was dropped by the Public League.
RIFLE
MARKSMENSHIP
The Eagles had both boys’
& girls’ teams in the post World War I era (1919-1929) that competed in area competition between schools from the
city and possibly the suburbs, but no date is known on when the school discontinued these teams.
FAMOUS ALUMNI OF ENGLEWOOD
The folks at Englewood were
proud of their students and honored those who became successful in athletics, business, education, entertainment, government,
media, military, religion, and science & technology by inducting a number of them into the school's hall of fame (see
photo below). Among those that have been inducted:
--Patricia Roberts
Harris--attorney, former UN ambassador to Luxembourg, former Secretary of HUD (Housing & Urban Development) 1977,
served as Secretary of HEW (Health, Education, & Welfare) 1979-80, and Dean of Students at Howard University.
--Jewel S. LaFontant-Mankarious--attorney,
served as former Assistant General in US Attorney General's office, and as a US Ambassador.
--Avis Lavelle--public
relations specialist, former broadcaster with WGN Radio & Television in Chicago. Has served as media specialist for
former President Bill Clinton and Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley.
--Merri Dee--radio/television
personality with television stations WSNS & WGN in Chicago. Also worked as director of community relations for
WGN.
--Samuel Greenlee--writer,
poet, radio talk show host. Wrote "The Spook Who Sits by the Door" and "Bagdad Blues."
--Lorenzo Martin--former
EHS teacher and newspaper editor/publisher.
--Fred Farmer--first
African-American Army paratrooper & aviation instructor for helicopters.
--Maj. Robert H.
Lawrence (USAF)--1st African-American astronaut and officer. Lost his life in a fighter plane crash in 1967,
--Sgt. Donald L.
Minter (US Army)--Retired Master Sergeant and was the senior ROTC instructor at Englewood.
--Dr. Walter R. Benson--chemist,
pharmacist, retired Director of Drug Chemistry for the Food & Drug Administration.
--Dr. Jewel Plummer--cell
physiologist at California State University/Fullerton and President Emerita at the school.
--Warren "Pete" Miller,
Jr.--engineer and university professor
--Walter "Roger"
Brown--former Englewood basketball player, later played professionally in the NBA with the Los Angeles
Lakers & Detroit Pistons as well as the hometown Chicago Bulls and three teams in the former ABA following his college
days at Kansas.
--Napolean Montgomery--coach
of the 1996-97 boys' basketball team at Englewood, and was named to the University of Nevada Hall of Fame in 1992,
--Dr. Henry A. Hardwick--first
African-American cadet chosen to the City of Chicago's Cadet Corps, and served as manager of the State of Illinois Labor Statistics
bureau.
--Rudolph A. James--realtor,
co-founded Ebony Real Estate in Chicago.
--Larry Hudgens--entrepreneur,
CEO & president of Riteway Construction Company, also served as a mentor to Chicago Public Schools.
--Sheila Jefferson-Warfield--CEO
of Educational Computing, Inc.
--Darwin Yarborough--financial
advisor for Waddell & Reed Financial Services
--The Barrett Sisters
(Delores Barrett Campbell, Billie Barrett Greenbey, Rodesa Barrett Porter)--members of the internationally-known gospel
group, "Sweet Sisters of Zion"
--Gwendolyn Brooks--Poet
Laureate of Illinois and writer, was first African-American woman to win a Pulitzer Prize for poetry.
--Oscar Brown, Jr.--singer-songwriter,
also a poet and playwright.
--Etta LaConstance
Davis--international vocalist and activist, served as local school council president for EHS.
--Lorraine Hansberry--playwright
and essayist that wrote "Raisin in the Sun."
--Jeanette K. Wilson
Childress--minister, educator, and guidance counselor.
--Queen Esther Richardson
Crawford--served on National Baptist Convention's Foreign Mission Board. Also served as manager of the Bureau of
Quality Control for the Office of the Inspector General.
--Gloria J. Gibson
Randolph--educator, administrator, and ordained deacon. Founded GGG (Giving God the Glory) Ministries and co-founded
R.A.Y. (Reclaim A Youth).
--Orietha Phillips
Benton--Eductor and reading specialist.
--Dr. Stephen H.
Brown--former EHS principal as well as district and assistant superintendent.
--Edna Alberta Dixon
Bryant--served as educator for the Chicago Board of Education for 31 years.
--Dr. Madie Davis
Canamore--educator, consultant, writer for computer information services.
--Nadine Dillahunty-Dillanado--award-winning
educator, taught at EHS, and was Miss Englewood in 1968-69.
--Dr. Brady J. Fletcher--professional
and government educator that served as supervisor in various organizations related to education, research, and governement.
--Hattie Green--served
EHS for 37 years as school treasurer and payroll clerk.
--Richard Hunt--sculptor
and educator, taught at Illinois-Chicago, Yale, and Northwestern.
--Elaine Ann Hunter--educator
and assistant principal at Coleman Elementary School in Chicago.
--Dr. Paulette Webb
Kidd--served as assistant principal at EHS, and was student advocate.
--Dr. Sarah Kidd-Burton--educator
and compliance monitor for special education students.
--Sherye Garmony
Miller--educator and adminstrator
--Charles Mingo--served
as principal at Chicago schools.
--Nathaniel Richards--educator
& counselor, served on Advisory Board for the City Colleges of Chicago.
--Audrey Hoyle Cooper
Stanton--educator and administrator.
--Dr. Hazel B. Steward--served
as a principal and was a regional education officer for Chicago Public Schools.
--Mark Upchurch--Served
38 years as English teacher at EHS, was department chairman, and was a delegate on the Chicago Teachers' Union.
SPECIAL THANKS....
to Harold Lee Rush for allowing
us to use a couple of photos that are on this page, and well as information that we have been able to find out about Englewood
High School. He has a website that caters to the EHS alumni and gives a great deal of information about the school's history:
http://eagles.whgbetc.com/.
Also, kudos to Tom Sikorski
and Robert Pruter for the information they have compiled on EHS.
OUR WORK MAY HAVE JUST
STARTED...
but we have so much to do
in telling the most accurate story about the history of Englewood High School for generations to come. If you have more information
about the school, whether it be for athletics, academics, the school hall of fame, or others, please contact us. Our email
address is dr.veeman@gmail.com or send it thru the mail to us at:
Illinois High School
Glory Days
6439 North Neva
Chicago, IL
60631