Thursday, April 28, 2022

Photo of Arthur M. Brumback, A. M., President of McMinnville College, July 1, 1903 to July 1, 1905


Photo of Arthur M. Brumback, A. M., President of McMinnville College, July 1, 1903 to July 1, 1905, from Baptist Annals of Oregon Volume II, 1913, by Rev. Charles Hiram Mattoon.
As a Linfield faculty member, Brumback organized Linfield’s first football team in 1896. He was the team’s coach/player for five seasons before being appointed college president in 1903.


More about Linfield's Lakamas Lane/Brumback Street, camas, Linfield Camasfest









Linfield University renames street in honor of Native American first food

Story by Danielle Harrison, Smoke Signals staff writer, 7/8/2021

Photo by Timothy Sofranko, Linfield photographer

(Smoke Signals is the independent Tribal newspaper of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde. It publishes twice a month, as well as on the Internet.)

McMINNVILLE -- After learning that a private two-block street on its campus was named after a former science professor who had stolen Native American burial artifacts, Linfield University chose to right a wrong.

In November 2020, the Board of Trustees recommended removing the name of A.M. Brumback from the campus street and creating a commission to discuss replacement names.

The committee, which included students, faculty and staff, invited Cultural Resources Department Manager David Harrelson to join the group in proposing a new name centered on the Indigenous people who had been there since time immemorial. Specifically, Linfield University is located on what is the traditional territory of the “Yam Hill” band of the Kalapuya people.

The committee considered six possible names and unanimously voted to support Lakamas Lane as the new street name.

“It has been a privilege to support members of the renaming committee … with this effort,” Harrelson wrote in a letter to Linfield University President Miles K. Davis. “Their commitment to learning and inclusion was always at the forefront of our conversations. After much thoughtful deliberation, the committee has selected Lakamas Lane. I am writing to enthusiastically support the recommendation of the committee to rename Brumback Street to Lakamas Lane.

“Lakamas is the Chinuk Wawa name for the blue-flowered camas plant that was and continues to be an important food of our people. At the time of early Euro-American settlement of the Willamette Valley, camas was so thick in areas that the patches of blooming flowers were confused as lakes from a distance. This name honors the people and lifeways of the Kalapuya people who are the Indigenous people of the Willamette Valley.”

While the word “lacamas” exists in other parts of the Pacific Northwest, such as Lacamas Lake in Clark County, Wash., “lakamas” is unique to Chinuk Wawa and makes Linfield University the only place in the world where one can find Lakamas Lane.

The Board of Trustees unanimously approved the name change at its May 1 meeting. Since then, signage has been updated and all students living on campus will have their mail delivered to the new address.

“David was instrumental in providing leadership, guidance and knowledge, and was generous with his time,” a committee statement said. “His willingness to engage with the university in this renaming effort has led us to envision a fruitful and collaborative future between Linfield and the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde.”

Linfield’s McMinnville campus also is home to large remnant patches of camas that, under intentional management, thrive around Cozine Creek.

Photo: (Linfield) University Facilities Department employee Darrell Driver recently erected a new street sign after the school decided to rename a street that was named after a former science professor who stole Native American burial artifacts. The new name, Lakamas, means “camas,” which is a traditional Native American first food.

Story includes information from Linfield News.

::::::::::::::::::::

LINFIELD UNIVERSITY BOARD OF TRUSTEES MEETING

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

NOVEMBER 13, 2020

RESOLUTION

WHEREAS, A.M. Brumback, a science professor and later president (1903-1905) at then McMinnville College, engaged around the year 1900 in desecration and theft of burial artifacts and human remains from Native American burial mounds in the region.

WHEREAS, Linfield University is currently engaged in the inventory of these and other artifacts to help facilitate communication with and repatriation to the relevant tribes impacted.

WHEREAS, Brumback Street, named for A.M. Brumback, is a private road connecting Renshaw Avenue and Lever Street near the Observatory on Linfield University’s McMinnville campus.

Be it therefore resolved that the Linfield University Board of Trustees recommends the removal of A.M. Brumback’s name from the campus street. A small commission shall be convened to discuss potential replacement names before the Board convenes in February 2021.

::::::::

Lakamas Lane on the McMinnville campus

 Posted at Linfield website on May 3, 2021, by Jill King

 Soon, a two-block private road on the Linfield University McMinnville Campus will have a new name. What has been known as Brumback Street will instead become Lakamas Lane in an effort to better honor the history of Linfield, the surrounding area and the Native American community.

The Board of Trustees approved the resolution to change the name on May 1, 2021.

A committee of students, faculty and staff has been working through the spring semester to consider a new name for the road. After months of meetings and research, the group proposed the new name.

The committee sought guidance and support from the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde to consider a name of historic significance to the geography and indigenous peoples of the McMinnville area. A representative from Grand Ronde worked closely with the committee to help determine six possible names, and ultimately the committee voted unanimously on Lakamas Lane.

In the Chinuk Wawa language, “Lakamas” is the word for camas. Camas is a primary historic food staple of the Kalapuya, the indigenous people of the Willamette Valley. While the word Lacamas exists in other parts of the Northwest, Lakamas (with a “k”) is unique to Chinuk Wawa, a language spoken by the Kalapuya people, and would therefore be unique to Linfield and the only place in the world where one would find a Lakamas Lane.

Camas is an edible tuber with a blue or purple flower that blooms annually. While camas is an important traditional food to the Kalapuya, it is also broadly significant across the Pacific Northwest, California and inter-mountain west. This is a traditional food that is broadly recognizable to many native peoples who are or may become students at Linfield. Additionally, Linfield’s McMinnville campus is home to large remnant patches of camas that, under intentional management, continue to thrive around Cozine Creek.

Find out more information and background on the renaming of Lakamas Lane.

https://inside.linfield.edu/lakamas-lane/index.html

The New Lakamas Lane On the McMinnville Campus

The Linfield University Board of Trustees passed a resolution in November 2020 requesting a committee of students, faculty and staff to consider a new name for a two-block private road on the McMinnville campus. The committee assembled and began meeting early the following year, eventually voting unanimously that the road should be known as Lakamas Lane. The Board of Trustees approved that recommendation in a second resolution on May 1, 2021.

The committee reached out to the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde early in its deliberations, asking for guidance about whether Linfield might consider a name of historic significance to the geography and indigenous peoples of the McMinnville area. A representative from Grand Ronde then worked with the committee through the spring to consider six alternatives, before the group eventually settled upon Lakamas Lane.

In the Chinuk Wawa language, “Lakamas” is the word for camas. Camas is a primary historic food staple of the Kalapuya, the indigenous people of the Willamette Valley. It’s an edible tuber with a blue or purple flower that blooms annually, and there are remanent patches that bloom to this day on the McMinnville campus.

The new name will take effect as soon as is reasonably possible, before July 1, 2021. The campus post office is on Lakamas Lane, so all student correspondence will go to that address beginning with the 2021-22 academic year.

The committee would like to extend its heartfelt appreciation to the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde. In particular David Harrelson, Cultural Resources Department Manager and Tribal Historic Preservation Officer. David was instrumental in providing leadership, guidance and knowledge, and generous with his time. His willingness to engage with the university in this renaming effort has led us to envision a fruitful and collaborative future between Linfield and the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde.

Lakamas Lane Renaming Committee Members

Kathy Cook, Administrative Assistant

Isis Hatcher ’21, student

Scott Nelson ’94, Associate Vice President

Gerardo Ochoa, Special Assistant to the President

Rich Schmidt, Director of Archives

Michayla Sponsel ’21, Student Trustee

Leslie Walker, Instructional Associate SOAN

Natalie Welch, Assistant Professor of Business

Sam Williams, Chief Information Officer

Keaton Wood ’21, student

 

::::::::::::::::::::

Guest writer Sal Peralta: Event an invitation to lean in and learn

McMinnville N-R/News-Register 4/22/2022

With so much recent controversy over how and whether critical issues related to U.S. history should be taught, I’m glad to live in a community where institutions are open to revisiting their historical mistakes and taking steps to correct them.

On May 6, Linfield University, the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde and the Greater Yamhill Watershed Council are hosting McMinnville’s first ever Camas Festival from 1 to 2 p.m. in Linfield’s Oak Grove.

Camas lilies were one of the main food sources and chief agricultural commodities for native tribes, ranging from the Pacific Northwest to Montana. At one time, they were so plentiful settlers coming west on the Oregon trail wrote in their journals that they would mistake the blue camas meadows for lakes in the distance.

The event will honor the work of Linfield faculty and students, Watershed Council staff and community volunteers in restoring legacy camas patches on the college campus and neighboring properties. During the past several years, thousands of hours have gone into restoring areas along the Cozine creek, leading to discovery of some sites that were likely significant to people who lived here prior to Oregon’s colonial settlement.

The festival will also take another step toward making amends for former university president and science professor A.M. Brumback, who, according to the university’s executive board, “engaged in desecration and theft of burial artifacts and human remains from Native American burial mounds in the region.”

The university is in the process of cataloging these artifacts with the intent of repatriating them to the tribes from which they were stolen.

Last fall, the school took a first step toward acknowledging these harms when it worked with the city of McMinnville to rename Brumback Street to Lakamas Lane, Lakamas being the Chinuk Wawa word for camas. This renaming honors both the heritage of this place and community efforts to restore camas along the Cozine and Yamhill watersheds.

The event also gives us an opportunity to think more deeply about America’s history in relation to the tribes, which is not something most of us reflect on very often.

I first learned about the nation’s western expansion in first or second grade, watching a Saturday morning Schoolhouse Rock cartoon called “Elbow Room.”

It covered the Louisiana Purchase, bravery of westward settlers, expanding rail system, Sacagawea and even “fights for property rights.” But it did not explain how the French came to “own” the land in question when it was already inhabited, or what happened to those who were summarily displaced.

I never learned in public schools about the court cases brought by Native tribes from 1823 to 1831, in which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that members of native tribes could not own land. The ruling was based on the “doctrine of discovery,” a 15th century idea that European monarchies used to justify claiming “heathen” lands in the name of Christ. Living in Yamhill County, the shunting aside of Native American tribes is also hard to ignore. The evidence is all around us.

Fort Yamhill, just a stone’s throw from Spirit Mountain Casino, enabled local militias to keep watch on the Confederated Tribes of  Grand Ronde after Gen. Phil Sheridan left with his garrison to fight in the Civil War.

Prior to moving here in 2002, I had never heard the term “Confederated Tribes.” That term was coined in the period between 1855 and 1857, when the US government forced an array of tribes in Western Oregon and Northern California — more than 30 tribes speaking more than a dozen different languages — to relocate to Grand Ronde.

On the longest of these marches, the Rogue River Trail of Tears, the Shasta and Rogue River tribes were forced to march 263 miles in 33 days from Klamath Falls to Grand Ronde.

The mistreatment of Oregon tribes continued well into the 1980s.

In 1954, the federal government passed Public Laws 587 and 588, which terminated federal recognition of all tribes west of the Cascades and seized their land. It incorporated some of the land into national forests and sold the rest to timber companies and land speculators for $1 an acre.

Reservations like the Klamath, originally more than 1 million acres, were reduced to a few hundred acres of remnants.

The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde did not have tribal recognition restored by the federal government until 1983, at which time 9,811 acres were returned. The last element of the restoration was completed in 1986.

None of us today is responsible for things our ancestors have done. But we are responsible for finding ways to live up to our ideals, recognize where we have fallen short, and work to remedy the injustice where we can.

By those measures, all of us can be proud of the inaugural Camas Festival. We improve as a society, and develop more resilient communities, when we lean into the truth of our history and learn from it.

Sal Peralta maintains an enduring interest in public policy, reflected in a long record of civic involvement. He helped found the Independent Party of Oregon and has long served as party secretary. He ran unsuccessfully for state representative and county commissioner before winning appointment, and later election, to the McMinnville City Council. He shares his home in McMinnville’s Ward 1 with his wife, Tanya, daughter, Bella, and two dogs. In his leisure time, he enjoys playing the violin.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Plans to create the first Camas Fest on the Linfield campus  (May 6, 2022) began in November 2020 “when the university began investigating a new name for a two-block street on the McMinnville campus. The search led the university to the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde, and together, the groups chose Lakamas Lane, located a block north of Keck Drive. Lakamas is the word for camas in the Chinuk Wawa language. Plans soon developed to celebrate camas, which grows in large numbers on campus.” – 4/29/2022 McMinnville N-R/News-Register

For more information visit information (URL link below) posted at Wildcatville on Sept. 6, 2021:

Linfield's Lakamas Lane succeeded Brumback Street on Mc Minnville campus

https://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2021/09/signage-at-corner-of-brumback-street.html

#

Photo of Arthur M. Brumback, A. M., President of McMinnville College, July 1, 1903 to July 1, 1905, from Baptist Annals of Oregon Volume II, 1913, by Rev. Charles Hiram Mattoon

Linfield chose Lakamas Lane as new name of a campus street named for Arthur Marion Brunback, Linfield president 1903-1905


Plans to create the first Camas Fest on the Linfield campus  (May 6, 2022) began in November 2020 “when the university began investigating a new name for a two-block street on the McMinnville campus. The search led the university to the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde, and together, the groups chose Lakamas Lane, located a block north of Keck Drive. Lakamas is the word for camas in the Chinuk Wawa language. Plans soon developed to celebrate camas, which grows in large numbers on campus.” – 4/29/2022 McMinnville N-R/News-Register

For more information visit information (URL link below) posted at Wildcatville on Sept. 6, 2021:

Linfield's Lakamas Lane succeeded Brumback Street on Mc Minnville campus

https://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2021/09/signage-at-corner-of-brumback-street.html


Monday, April 25, 2022

Larry Ward, former Linfield Wildcats radio play-by-play ‘voice’ to be enshrined in Tennessee Radio Hall of Fame



Photo--Larry Ward (right) and Dave Hansen (left) broadcasting, for McMinnville’s KMCM-AM radio, a Linfield men's home basketball game in Riley Gym. Photo appeared (or was supposed to appear) in the 12/31/1975 McMinnville N-R/News-Register. Photo by McMinnville News-Register's Tom Ballard courtesy of the N-R.

 ..................

Larry Ward, former Linfield Wildcats radio play-by-play ‘voice’ to be enshrined in Tennessee Radio Hall of Fame

 
Larry Ward is a former radio play-by-play “voice” of Linfield College Wildcats football and men’s basketball. And, he broadcast some 'Cat baseball games, too. 
 
That was in 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976 and 1977 on McMinnville radio station KMCM, which is now KLYC.
 
His McMinnville radio broadcast partner was color commentator Dave Hansen, a member of the Linfield Athletics Hall of Fame.
 
Now living/working in Chattanooga, Tennessee, Ward will be inducted into the Tennessee Radio Hall of Fame along with other members of the “Class of 2022,” They will be enshrined into the “Hall” on Aug. 6 in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.

He is radio “voice” of the professional baseball Chattanooga Lookouts and the Chattanooga 'Mocs' women’s basketball team of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga.

In his 50-year broadcasting career he has done play-by-play for 40 years in professional baseball.

Saturday, April 23, 2022

SODA POP PLAYED A ROLE IN LINFIELD FOOTBALL 1965 BACK-TO-BACK END OF SEASON GAMES




SODA POP PLAYED A ROLE IN LINFIELD FOOTBALL 1965 BACK-TO-BACK END OF SEASON GAMES

Soda pop played a role in back-to-back end of 1965 season games for Linfield College football.

Those games were in the 1965 NAIA national championship football playoffs:

COCA-COLA

11/27/1965 vs. Sul Ross State -- Win 30-27 Midland, Texas

(Sul Ross is in Alpine, Texas, but the game was played in Midland.)

--After winning the semi-final game in an upset, the Linfield football players enjoyed drinking Coca-Cola from glass bottles in its locker room. The win advanced Linfield to the NAIA championship game.

ROYAL CROWN COLA

12/11/1965 vs. St. John's (Minn.) -- Loss 33-0 Augusta, Ga.

--This was the NAIA “Champion Bowl.” NFL Baltimore Colts quarterback Johnny Unitas is/was pictured on the front page of the game’s printed program. He's holding a glass bottle of Royal Crown Cola.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Yes! In 1965 in Midland, Texas: Things (did) Go Better with Coca-Cola for football ‘Cats after upsetting Sul Ross

https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/17663360/1116872531708850342

 

1965 in Midland, Texas: Things (did) Go Better with Coca-Cola for football ‘Cats after beating Sul Ross

https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/17663360/1967585057622437204


Thursday, April 21, 2022

ESTHER M. WRIGHT, LINFIELD CLASS OF 1925, WROTE LINFIELD ALMA MATER MUSIC, LYRICS


ESTHER M. WRIGHT, LINFIELD CLASS OF 1925, WROTE LINFIELD ALMA MATER MUSIC, LYRICS

(Also known as Esther Margaret Wright and Esther Margaret Erickson.)

Born 1901 in Madison, South Dakota.

Died 1942 in North Bend, Washington.

== Oregonian June 18, 1921: Esther Margaret Wright graduated from Lincoln High School, Portland, Oregon

== When she wrote the Linfield College Alma Mater music and lyrics she was attending McMinnville College. It became Linfield College in January 1922, during the 1921-1922 academic year. That was her freshman year at the college. Perhaps it happened soon after the college name change?

==Sunday Oregonian, July 22, 1924, story includes info about Miss Esther Margaret Wright offering two vocal numbers at an event. “Miss Wright is a senior in the Linfield college of music, and is regarded as one of the most promising students, artistically, of that institution. Her voice is fresh and clear, and she has never failed to make a profound impression.”

==Sunday Oregonian, March 8, 1925, reports on Esther Margaret Wright of Portland giving her senior vocal recital at the music hall of Linfield. “Miss Wright is active in student activities, being a member of the women’s glee club and the college octet, also a member of the Kappa Alpha Phi sorority. She will receive a bachelor of music degree with the graduating class in June, having been a vocal student of Anna Lavinia Beebe, instructor of voice, during the past four years.”

==Sunday Oregonian,March 29, 1925, photo of Linfield Octet with cutline showing Esther Wright, an alto singer, in the octet. Cutline says the octet made of tour of eastern and western Washington with stops in Yakima, Kennewick, Sunnyside, Puyallup and Olympia.

==Sunday Oregonian, June 17, 1928, wedding story includes that the Rev. Harris David Erickson’s hometown is Mount Vernon, Wash. The wedding was held in First Baptist church, presumably in Portland. After August 1, the Rev. and Mrs. Erickson will be at home at Sunnyvale, California, where Rev. Erickson is pastor of the Baptist church.

==Oregonian, Aug. 5, 1931, said Esther lives in Los Angeles where her husband is pastor of the Atherton Baptist church.

==Seattle Times, May 21, 1942, includes obituary headlined, “Mrs. Erickson’s Funeral Will Be Tomorrow.” Funeral services for Mrs. Ether Wright Erickson, wife of the Rev. Harris David Erickson, professor of philosophy at Seattle Pacific College, will be held at 3 o’clock tomorrow in Queen Anne Baptist Church. She died in North Bend Sunday. Since coming to Seattle five years ago, Mrs. Erickson has been an active member of the University Baptist Church, the Philomel Singers, Seattle Pacific College Faculty Wives Club, the Seattle and the college’s Red Cross chapter. She also was a member of Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary music society. She composed many sacred solos for contralto voice, her chorus “Heritage” being presented by the Philomel Singers at their 1941 winter concert. She also wrote the Alma Mater song for Linfield College, McMinnville, Oregon. Before her marriage, she was music supervisor for public schools in Heppner, Oregon. She lived at 3210 Fourth Ave. W. Surviving besides her husband are twin sons, Claiborne Reed Erickson and James Wright Erickson, 13 years old; a brother, C. C. Wright, Burlingame, Calif., and her father, D. C. Wright, Portland, Or., who for 21 years was executive secretary of Oregon Baptist State Convention.

==Eugene (Oregon) Guard, May 24, 1942, headline “Mrs. Esther Wright Erickson Dies.” Text: Mrs. Harris Erickson (Esther Wright) of Seattle, daughter of Dr. O.C. Wright, former pastor of the Eugene Baptist church died Sunday, May 17, at North Bend, Wash., while assisting her husband, Rev. Harris Erickson, with church services. She died from a heart attack. Mrs. Erickson was born in Madison, S. D., lived in Eugene as a child, graduated from Linfield College in 1925 and the University of Oregon in 1926 with the B.A. degree in music. She was supervisor of music in the Heppner schools for two and a half years and married Mr. Erickson in 1928. Besides her husband she leaves twin sons James Wright Erickson and Claiborne Reed Erickson, age 13. Services were held May 22 in Seattle from Queen Anne Baptist church with the president of Seattle Pacific College in charge, Mr. Erickson being a teacher at that institution.

==Info elsewhere: Esther Margaret Wright was born October 9 1901, in Madison, Lake County, South Dakota. She died May 17, 1942 in North Bend, Wash. Thus, she was 40 years old. She and Harris David Erickson, also a member of Linfield Class of 1925, married in 1928. He died at age 93 in 1996.

https://youtu.be/Gsf3rPLgZD8

:::::::

Linfield's Alma Mater
"We’ll Be Loyal"

We’ll be loyal to old Linfield

With her backing never yield

Each day will bring some vict’ry

One more honor for her shield.

The Old Oak gives us courage

Keeps us steadfast in our way

For her we’ll fight will all our might

Alma Mater, we’re loyal to you!

You may search all Linfield’s hist’ry

For one more of disloyalty

Each student upholds her spirit

With her loyal faculty

Linfield’s friendships are the truest

They’ll back you in each test

For her we’ll fight will all our might

Alma Mater, we’re loyal to you!

::::::

Based on an Aug. 24, 2018, posting at Wildcatville:

Linfield Alma Mater lyrics include “The Old Oak gives us courage…”

The Old Oak fell on Jan. 8, 2008. A newspaper story at the time said the Old Oak, an 80-foot tall white oak, “stood majestic when Linfield was founded 150 years ago.” It was estimated to be 200-250 years old when disease caused its death.

Debbie Harmon Ferry of Linfield College said the Linfield Alma Mater “still references the Old Oak, but we now tend to use ‘the old oaks give us courage’ – referring to the oaks in the Oak Grove, not the Old Oak itself.”

Wednesday, April 13, 2022

THE HISTORY OF LINFIELD FOOTALL: A STREAK OF GREATNESS

 



(Note: The story says the Seattle Ramblers semi-pro football team "dominated the conference titles over the last 14 seasons." That might/does imply the Ramblers were a member of the NWC/Northwest Conference. The Ramblers were not in the NWC.)

THE HISTORY OF LINFIELD FOOTALL: A STREAK OF GREATNESS

By Robert Matsumura, Contributing Writer, McMinnville Community Advantage Magazine, April-May 2022

If you're a fan of college football, doubtless names like the "Crimson Tide," "Fighting Irish," and "Buckeyes" require no explanation. They speak for themselves. However, if you don't follow NCAA Division III football, you might not realize that one of the nation's most successful football programs resides right down the street in McMinnville, Oregon. None of the haloed Division I teams cited above can match the accomplishments of the Linfield University Wildcats.

It started on an autumn day, October 6, 1956. Great things often have humble beginnings, and for Linfield football this was certainly the case. While it would have been more dramatic if the Wildcats' win that day had been defined by a scintillating highlight moment—a miraculous last minute catch in the end zone, or a gutty goal line stand—such was not the case.

Linfield had just suffered back-to-back losing seasons, and the 1956 campaign looked like more of the same. The opponent that Saturday was the Seattle Ramblers, a semi-pro team on a tear, who had defeated the Wildcats the previous year, and dominated the conference titles over the last 14 seasons. Against the odds, Linfield managed to defeat the Ramblers 13-7. From that game on, the Wildcats wouldn't lose another game that season. This win over the Ramblers marked the beginning of what has become known as the "Streak."

Paul Ward, who played guard on the '56 team, recalled: "Once we had a winning season, we knew we could win. We had to experience it and build up over the years."

For a team composed of small town kids and Korean War veterans attending college on the GI Bill, they had no idea that their victory over the Ramblers that fateful October day would be the start of the "Streak."

The "Streak," which has now extended to 65 consecutive winning seasons as of 2021, is the longest active winning streak in NCAA history at any level. No other team is even close to this record, with the next in line coming in at 42.

In retrospect, Ward admits no one at the time had any idea of what was to come. "I guarantee you that in 1956, nobody had any idea there would be any kind of streak," he said. "We were just happy that we could get through the season with a win.

"It was coach Paul Durham's team that started the "Streak," but it is a testament to the pride, tradition, and dedication to excellence, fostered by successive coaches over the last six decades, that is responsible for Linfield's relentless march through the NCAA history books.

Looming at the forefront of the Mount Rushmore of Linfield football coaches is Ad Rutschman. Hired as head football coach in 1968, Rutschman continued the winning tradition until his retirement in 1991. Rutschman not only coached football, but baseball as well. Rutschman is still the only coach at any level to win national titles in both football and baseball. In his 24 seasons as Linfield's head football coach, Rutschman won three NAIA national championships (1982, 1984, 1986), and 15 Northwest Conference titles.

Perhaps Rutschman's most epic victory occurred in the 1984 national championship game, where Linfield trailed Northwestern of Iowa 22-0 with just over three minutes left in the third quarter. Against all odds, the Wildcats roared back to win the game 33-22. In addition to coaching football and baseball, Rutschman also served as Athletic Director for 25 years, during which time the school's athletic facilities were greatly improved. Among these improvements were two new gymnasiums, a baseball stadium, and the 26,600 square foot field house named in honor of Rutschman and his wife Joan, for their dedication and service over 27 years to Linfield University.

From 1992 to 2005, Linfield's football program was led by Ed Langsdorf (1992-95) and Jay Locey (1996 -2005). Both coaches kept up the winning tradition. Langsdorf's brief tenure resulted in a record of 32-9-1 and three championships. Locey's tally at the end of his Linfield career was a stellar 84-18 and six championships, including one NCAA Division III title. During one stretch of his impressive career, Locey coached the team to a 41-game win streak.

In 2006, the future of Linfield football was turned over to Joseph Smith, and he has not only continued the "Streak" but pushed the school into the NCAA record books. Under Smith's leadership Linfield has amassed an incredible record of 138-27, with a .836 win percentage, the highest percentage of any coach in Linfield history.

When Smith, a former defensive back for Linfield in the 90s, took over in 2006, he was well aware of the legacy he was responsible for and described his role as that of a "caretaker." With Locey's departure, Smith understood that the decision to hire him had been carefully considered. "It couldn't be someone from the outside to come in and run the program," Smith explained. "We had to maintain who we are. If we lost that, we're just another school."

The Smith era at Linfield has been nothing short of remarkable. For a school that offers no football scholarships, a modest budget for athletics, and typically doesn't attract big time recruits with NFL aspirations and talent, the question remains: "How does Linfield do it?" How do the Wildcats continue to churn out victories, winning seasons, and championships? Ultimately, how do they keep the "Streak" alive?

Smith credits a number of factors, foremost of which is the sense of family that permeates the entire Wildcat program. Caring for one another. This intense trust that grows from respect and brotherhood is interwoven with a blue-collar work ethic of toughness and a thirst for excellence.

 

Ryan Carlson, a defensive star on the 90s era teams, sums it up beautifully: "Once you're in our Linfield family, you're connected to 60 years of people who have had those core principles shape their young lives. Those life experiences continue to breed an incredible amount of love and loyalty towards the program." As inspiration to his players, Smith periodically invites guest speakers to address the team. One of the speakers, Bretton Brown, an Army Ranger and a friend of Smith's, imparted words from the Rangers' credo that resonated with the team: "We are Men of Action. We do the heavy lifting. We are the walls, and we are the hammer.”

 

So next fall, as Linfield continues on its historic march through the NCAA record books, take a moment to appreciate what six decades of commitment to family, grit, and excellence can achieve. As Coach Smith reflected, "From Coach Durham to Coach Rutschman, to now, the secret to this place has been that we have really good people coming and being part of a really good program. When you focus on excellence and put the team first and you're a man of your word, great things happen." The "Streak" lives on!

 

#