Remembering my father and his team members from a long time ago. Elaine THE MINNEAPOLIS MARINES: MINNESOTA'S FORGOTTEN NFL TEAM By Jim Quirk The Coffin Corner Volume XX, 1998 There are many obscure small town teams that show up briefly in the records of the NFL for the early 1920s, but one of the least well known is the Minneapolis Marines (APFA 1921, NFL 1922-1924). The Marines, owned by locals Johnny Dunn and Val Ness, had a dismal APFA/NFL W-L-T record entirely consistent with the team's obscurity in the annals of pro football: 1921 1-3-0, 1922 1-3-0, 1923 2-5-2, 1924 0-6-0. But the NFL record of the Marines gives a misleading picture of the team's true standing among the earliest pro football teams, because it was in the pre-APFA/NFL years that the Marines reached their peak as a team. The Marines were organized way back in 1905, as a team of working class teenagers, most of whom lived close to the Cedar/Washington avenue district of the near south side of Minneapolis, about a mile or so south of the present-day Metrodome. The team began play in the 115-pound weight class, and by 1907 had moved up to the 145-pound weight class. It was also in 1907 that the Marines acquired the group of players who constituted the core of the team for the next ten years: Rube Ursella (qb), Walt "Big Boy" Buland (t), Clarence "Sheepy" Redeen (e), Arthur "Dutch" Gaustad (g), Harry Wegfors (c), and Johnny Dunn (hb and captain). In 1909, the team added Mike Palmer (t), Harold Selvig (c,g), Oswald Sundby (fb) and Labe Safro, "the Jewish Lion", (hb) to its list of regulars. Rube Ursella was the true super-star of the team, had a long and successful pro football career with the Marines and the Rock Island Independents, and also played several seasons of minor league baseball (Northern League). Despite his size (5'9, 170 pounds), Ursella was both an offensive and defensive standout, but it was his skill as a kicker -- punting and drop kicking -- that highlighted his 22-year pro football career. Johnny Dunn was the breakaway scat back in the Marines' offense, but, as with the other successful ear1y pro teams, it was the Marines rock solid defense that won most of their games, headed by Buland and Gaustad. The Marines were a rather remarkable team. Up to the 1913 season, no players on the team had any high school or college playing experience -- this was truly a blue collar team. The core personnel of the team remained unchanged for almost ten years. And, once the kids forming the team had grown into the unlimited weight category, from 1910 on, the Marines became the best and then the absolutely dominant "independent" team in the upper Midwest region, right up to World War I. Between 1910 and 19l4, the big game of the year in Minneapolis independent football was between the Beavers and the Marines. The Beavers were also a south side team, but from a more affluent area of town. In contrast to the Marines, most of the Beaver players had college playing experience, many at the college of St. Thomas over in St. Paul. The undefeated Marines won the city title in 1910 by beating the Beavers 6-0, and then saw undefeated seasons go by the boards in 1911 and 1912 with upset victories by the Beavers in the title games, 6-0 and 7-3. After the 1912 loss to the Beavers, there were major changes made in the organization of the team. For the first time the Marines hired an outside coach in Ossie Solem, a standout end with Doc Williams' 1912 Minnesota Gophers, and later a coach at Syracuse and then at Iowa. Solem stayed with the Marines through the 1915 season, and introduced the Minnesota shift and the single wing formation to the team, which had played the old fashioned T-formation up to that time. And, again for the first time, the Marines added ex-college players, headed by the best semi-pro player in the Twin Cities, Bobby Marshall, the first great black player at the University of Minnesota (1903-1906). At 6'2" and 195 pounds, Marshall was a big, tough end, who was almost indestructible. He was still playing charity football games in the Twin Cities in the mid-193Os, when he was over 50 years old. The Marines also added ex-collegians Dewey Lyle and Frank Dries, as well as the future pro star, Fred Chicken. The Marines peaked as a team in the pre-World War I years (1913-1917), under the leadership of Johnny Dunn, who combined playing time with time spent in the front office as manager of the team, before retiring from playing in 1920. In 1913, the Marines won their annual battle with the Beavers 33-0, and in 1914 it was another rout, 48-0. The Beavers disbanded after the 1914 season. Until that time, the Marines had played their home games in the North Side Park; from 1915 on, the Marines made the AA Minneapolis Millers' Nicollet Park their home field. With the Beavers out of the picture, the Marines had no strong local opposition. Johnny Dunn began scheduling out of town games with teams from Duluth, Davenport, and Rock Island, to fill in the Marines' schedule. The annual city independent title game was replaced by a Thanksgiving Day game at Nicollet Park against a team of college All-Stars, featuring ex-Gopher players. The Marines played in this game every year from 1913 through 1923, (excluding the war years of 1917 and 1918) against such players as Johnny McGovern, Bert Baston, George Hauser, Paul Flinn, Paul DesJardien, and the like. From 1913 through 1917, the Marines were undefeated and untied in 34 successive regular season games, but lost to the All-Stars twice and tied them once in the Thanksgiving Day game. Independent football shut down completely in 1918, due to the flu epidemic. When the 1919 season rolled around, Johnny Dunn still headed the Marines, but Marshall, Ursella, Buland, Lyle, and Chicken all moved to the Rock Island Independents, which posted a 9-1-0 record for the year, and staked claim to the pro championship of the country. Four ex-Marines were listed as starters or honorable mentions on the the first all-pro team ever compiled (admittedly, by a Rock Island paper). With their core players gone, the Marines never regained their pre-war form, nor did they draw crowds like the pre-war teams. Johnny Dunn tried valiantly to find a way to keep the team solvent, including joining the APFA in 1921 to bring quality competition into the Twin Cities, but the team went under after the 1924 season. Dunn and co-owner Val Ness attempted to resurrect Twin Cities pro football in 1929 with a new version of the Marines, the Minneapolis Red Jackets (the Marines had worn a uniform featuring red jerseys with red and white striped sleeves), but after one and one half seasons, the Red Jackets also went broke, merged with the Philadelphia Yellow Jackets, and went out of existence. Season Records: 1905-1924 1905 3-0-0 42- 0 1906 no record 1907 4-1-1 57-18 Ends: Benson, Redeen Tackles: Buland, Barbour Guards: Gaustad, Lindquist Center: Wegfors Quarterback: Ursella Halfbacks: Nordly, Hoffman Fullback: Larson 1908 6-0-0 92-5 Ends: Benson, Redeen Tackles: Buland, H. Jonassen Guards: Gaustad, Lindquist Center: Wegfors Quarterback: Ursella Halfbacks: Dunn, C. Jonassen Fullback: Larson 1909 4-1-0 68-5 Ends: Redeen, Mullen Tackles: Buland, Palmer Guards: Gaustad, Peterson Center: Wegfors Quarterback: Ursella Halfbacks: Dunn, Larson Fullback: Sundby 1910 4-0-1 51-0 Ends: Redeen, Mullen Tackles: Palmer, Schroeder Guards: Gaustad, Selvig Center: Wegfors Quarterback: Ursella Halfbacks: Dunn, Larson Fullback: Sundby 1911 3-1-1 86-11 Ends: Redeen, C. Jonassen Tackles: Buland, Palmer Guards: Gaustad, Selvig Center: Wegfors Quarterback: Ursella Halfbacks: Dunn, Hoffman Fullback: Sundby 1912 8-2-0 293-37 Ends: Methven, C. Jonassen Tackles: Buland, Palmer Guards: Gaustad, Tallukson Center: Wegfors Quarterback: Ursella Halfbacks: Dunn, Larson Fullback: Sundby 1913 8-1-0 * 254-39 Ends: Redeen, C. Jonassen Tackles: Buland, Palmer Guards: Gaustad, Selvig Center: Wegfors Quarterback: Ursella Halfbacks: Marshall, Safro Fullback: Sundby * Loss to All Star team 1914 5-1-0 * 233-14 Ends: Redeen, Marshall Tackles: Buland, Palmer Guards: Gaustad, Selvig Center: Wegfors Quarterback: Ursella Halfbacks: Costello, Dries Fullback: Sundby * Loss to All Star team 1915 6-1-0 * 134-7 Ends: Redeen, Marshall Tackles: Buland, Lyle Guards: Gaustad, Palmer Center: Selvig Quarterback: Ursella Halfbacks: Safro, Costello Fullback: Chicken * Loss to All Star team 1916 8-0-1 ** 217-3 Ends: Redeen, Marshall Tackles: Buland, Lyle Guards: Gaustad, Selvig Center: Gunderson Quarterback: Ursella Halfbacks: Safro, Chicken Fullback: Sampson **Tied All Star team 1917 7-0-0 239-38 Ends: Redeen, Marshall Tackles: Buland, Halloran Guards: Gaustad, Dunne Center: Gunderson Quarterback: Ursella Halfbacks: Chicken, Novak Fullback: Sampson 1918 No team 1919 5-2-1 104-67 Ends: Redeen, Christiansen Tackles: Erickson, Palmer Guards: Gaustad, Norbeck Center: Gunderson Quarterback: Dunn Halfbacks: Tersch, Jordan Fullback: Sundby 1920 5-1-2 74-3 Ends: Redeen, Christiansen Tackles: Erickson, Palmer Guards: Gaustad, Tersch Center: Nelson Quarterback: Irgens Halfbacks: Cleve, Sampson Fullback: Jordan 1921 3-4-0 53-55 (APFA 1-3-0 37-41) Ends: Redeen, Christiansen Tackles: Erickson, Palmer Guards: Gaustad, Kramer Center: Gunderson Quarterback: Ursella Halfbacks: Regnier, Dvorak Fullback: Sampson 1922 5-3-0 47-40 (NFL 1-3-0 19-40) Ends: Flinn, Kraft Tackles: Erickson, Tersch Guards: Gaustad, Kramer Center: Mehre Quarterback: Norton Halfbacks: Irgens, Cleve Fullback: Sampson 1923 4-5-2 62-87 (NFL 2-5-2 48-81) Ends: Flinn, Mohe Tackles: Baril, Tersch Guards: Gaustad, Tierney Center: Mehre Quarterback: Kaplan Halfbacks: Cleve, Pahl Fullback: Sampson 1924 2-6-0 28-116 (NFL 0-6-0 14-108) Ends: Christiansen, Mohe Tackles: Dunnegan, Scott Guards: Tierney, Kramer Center: Madigan Quarterback: Houle Halfbacks: Norton, Novak Fullback: Simons Red Jackets 1929 1-9-0 48-185 Ends: Haycraft, Lundell Tackles: Franta, Widerquist Guards: Charpe, Lovis Center: Young Quarterback: Willigalle Halfbacks: Nydahl, Erickson Fullback: Joesting 1930 1-7-1 31-165 Ends: Haycraft, Lundell Tackles: Franta, Ward Guards: Gibson, Steponovich Center: Barrager Quarterback: Pederson Halfbacks: Pharmer, Pape Fullback: Joesting