Hood County Texas Genealogical Society
GLENN DAVIS
1924 – 2005
Glenn Davis in 1944
A Note From Tim Sears: Glenn
Davis was the son of Ralph and Ima Sears Davis. He grew up in
California. He was the grandson of Walter Glenn Sears and
Mary Florence Rippetoe Sears who married and lived at Lipan before moving
to West Texas. Walter Glenn Sears was the brother of my grandfather George T. Sears.
Mary Florence Rippetoe Sears was the sister of Hite Rippetoe
and daughter of John W. and Eliza Welch Rippetoe. Glenn's
widow, Yvonne Davis, claims the distinction of being the only woman in the
world who was married to two Heisman trophy winners, Glenn Davis and Alan
Ameche. Glenn
will be buried at West Point. |
by Jeremiah Marquez, Saturday, March 12, 2005
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES
-- He was a college football phenomenon who dated movie stars, won the Heisman
Trophy in 1946 and helped lead Army to three championships but failed to
blossom as a professional.
Glenn
Davis starred as a halfback for Army when it won national titles in 1944 and
1945 under the legendary Col. Earl (Red) Blaik.
Mr. Davis teamed with
fullback Felix (Doc) Blanchard as one of the most heralded backfields in the
history of college football. He was known as "Mr. Outside" to Felix
Blanchard's "Mr. Inside." Mr. Davis scored 59 touchdowns and gained
4,129 yards in rushing and receiving in his college career.
He still holds NCAA records
for most yards gained per play in one season, averaging 11.5 yards per carry in
1945; 8.3 career yards per carry; and he and Mr. Blanchard share the record for
most touchdowns (97) and points (585) scored by teammates in a career.
In 1946, Mr. Davis won the Heisman and was voted male athlete of the
year by The Associated Press.
After serving his military
obligation, he joined the Los Angeles Rams, and helped win the 1951 NFL
championship before a knee injury ended his career.
After giving up football,
Mr. Davis became an executive with the Los Angeles Times. Three times at the
altar, Mr. Davis first dated actress Elizabeth Taylor and then married the
Oscar-nominated actress Terry Moore. That ended in divorce and he wed Harriet
Slack, who died in 1995. A year later, he met Yvonne Ameche at a Heisman dinner
and they soon married. Previously, she had been married to 1954 Heisman winner
Alan Ameche.
Glenn Davis spent his early
years in Claremont, Calif., where his father was a bank manager. He first
demonstrated brilliance on the football field at Bonita High School in La
Verne, near Los Angeles, playing alongside his twin, Ralph, who later also
attended West Point and became a star shot-putter. After scoring an amazing 256
points during his senior year, Mr. Davis was persuaded to play for Army in
1943.
The 5-foot-9-inch,
170-pounder became an instant star. Mr. Davis scored his first Army touchdown
on a four-yard run in a 27-0 season-opening win over Villanova College, threw a
touchdown pass in a 42-0 win over Colgate, ran 82 yards for a score in a 52-0
shellacking of Columbia, and returned a kick 75 yards for a touchdown in a 39-7
victory over Yale.
In his memoir, You Have
to Pay the Price, coach Blaik paid Mr. Davis a ringing compliment:
"Anybody who ever saw Davis carry the football must realize there could
not have been a greater, more dangerous running back in the history of the
game… He was emphatically the greatest halfback I ever knew. He was not so much
a dodger and sidestepper as a blazing runner who had a fourth, even fifth gear
in reserve, could change direction at top speed, and fly away from tacklers as
if jet-propelled."
Glenn Davis was born in
Claremont, Calif., on Dec. 26, 1924. He died of prostate cancer at his home in
La Quinta, Calif., on March 9. He was 80. He will be buried at West Point, near
the grave of his former coach. He is survived by his wife, Yvonne and son,
Ralph. His twin brother Ralph died in January.
by Mike Kupper, Los Angeles
Times Staff Writer
Glenn
Davis, the Heisman Trophy-winning "Mr. Outside" on Army's national
championship football teams of the mid-1940s, died today [March 9, 2005], his
son Ralph told The Times. Davis was 80.
Davis, generally recognized as one of the finest all around athletes ever to
come out of Southern California, died of complications from prostate cancer at
his home in La Quinta.
A
5-foot-9, 170-pound halfback, Davis teamed with fullback Felix "Doc"
Blanchard, "Mr. Inside," when the U.S. Military Academy dominated
college football during and just after World War II.
Army, going undefeated, won national titles in 1944 and '45, then finished a
close second to Notre Dame after those teams had played to a 0-0 tie at Yankee
Stadium in 1946.
Davis and Blanchard, also widely known as "the Touchdown Twins,"
remain to this day college football's most famous combination of running backs.
Davis was the speed merchant around end, Mr. Outside, and Blanchard the
batterer between tackles, Mr. Inside. They were honored as recently as a year
ago, co-winners of the Doak Walker Legends Award at Southern Methodist
University in Dallas. Blanchard remains the oldest living Heisman winner.
The two were All-Americans all three seasons they played together and each won
the Heisman Trophy as college football's outstanding player, Blanchard in 1945
and Davis in 1946, when Davis also was voted Associated Press male athlete of
the year, the first football player to be so honored. Davis' career average of
8.3 yards a carry remains the major college record. In 1945, he carried the
ball only 82 times but gained 944 yards, an 11.5-yard average.
Davis' speed made him the perfect complement to the bigger, hard-running
Blanchard.. Davis finished his career with 2,957 yards, Blanchard with 1,908,
as Army posted a 27-0-1 record during their time as teammates. Davis scored 59
touchdowns, Blanchard 38.
They did more than just run with the ball. Both blocked and both, as was
customary then, played on defense as well as offense; Davis as a defensive
back, Blanchard as a linebacker. In his final game for Army - against Navy -
Davis made a leaping, left-handed interception and returned it for a touchdown.
Blanchard also was a good pass receiver, which worked out well, because Davis was
a good passer. Blanchard caught eight touchdown passes at Army, five of them
thrown by Davis.
A teammate, Bill Yeoman, former coach at the University of Houston, told The
Times in 1983: "There are words to describe how good an athlete Doc
Blanchard was. But there aren't words to describe how good Davis was."
Time magazine wrote in 1945: "Davis carries a special kind of speed that
is all his own. After a brief show of hippiness, enough to get around the end,
he simply leans forward and sprouts wings."
Davis' Army coach, the legendary Earl "Red" Blaik, once declared,
"Glenn Davis could do anything you asked, and he did it better than almost
anyone else. He's the best halfback I've ever seen."
He was the best athlete many ever saw.
Davis was born in Claremont the day after Christmas in 1924, the son of Ralph
and Ima Davis. After a standout prep career at Bonita High, where he earned 13
letters in four sports, he went to West Point along with his twin brother,
Ralph, Glenn's high school teammate who played junior varsity football for
Army. Ralph, of Joshua Tree, died in January.
In 3½ years at West Point, Davis won 10 letters - four in football, three in
baseball, two in track and one in basketball. In 51 baseball games for Army, he
batted .403, stole 64 bases in 65 attempts, including second, third and home in
an exhibition against the Brooklyn Dodgers. Branch Rickey, then-Dodger
president who had already signed Jackie Robinson, another of Southern
California's elite all-around athletes, offered Davis $75,000 to sign,
heavy-duty money in the '40s.
With his speed, track probably would have been Davis' best sport, had he
concentrated on it. In 1947, he ran a 6.1-second 60-yard dash at Madison Square
Garden, beating Barney Ewell, who the next year won the silver medal in the 100
meters at the London Olympics.
The track story everyone likes to tell about Davis occurred later that spring,
after an Army-Navy baseball game. Davis played nine innings in center field,
getting, as he later recalled, "a couple of hits," then, although he
had not run an outdoor meet that season, was rushed to the track because Army
was short of sprinters. In borrowed shoes, he won the 100-yard dash in 9.7
seconds, then later won the 220 in academy-record time, 20.9.
As good an athlete as he was, however, Davis was no whiz as a student. He
graduated 305th in a class of 310 and mathematics nearly did him in during his
first term at the Point. It was 1943, the war was raging and officers were in
critical demand, so at the academy, courses were accelerated. Cadets were
expected to do four years' work in two or three - and athletes caught no
breaks. Davis, who that season rushed for 1,028 yards, took to getting up at 4
a.m. to have 90 minutes of study time before reveille, but still flunked his
math course.
"I just couldn't do it all," he told Sports Illustrated in 1988.
"I was taking five classes every day. I'd get out of the last one at 3:30
and be on the football field at 4. I wouldn't get home until 6:30, then I'd
have dinner and study."
So in December, he was sent home, with instructions to study hard, make up his
deficiencies and apply for reappointment in 1944.
He did all that and when he returned, Blanchard was arriving as a plebe - a
freshman - and the sports world was about to experience thunder and lightning
in human form.
After their three glorious seasons together, the war fading into memory, Army's
dazzling duo was in high demand. Davis was drafted by the Detroit Lions of the
National Football League, Blanchard by the Pittsburgh Steelers. The San
Francisco 49ers of the upstart All-America Football Conference acquired that
league's rights to both, however, and offered them $130,000 each, $10,000 in
signing bonuses and $40,000 a year for three seasons. At the time, pro football's
best players were making about $20,000.
Problem was, both were newly commissioned second lieutenants with three-year
military obligations.
They appealed to West Point's superintendent, Maj. Gen. Maxwell Taylor, for a
two-month extension of their 60-day postgraduate furlough, hoping to play the
'47 season with the 49ers. They also asked for four-month leaves in each of the
next four years, in return promising 20-year military commitments.
Taylor agreed, but terms of the deal were leaked and irate congressmen and
indignant columnists, charging special treatment, prompted him to renege. Both
Davis and Blanchard prepared to report for active duty.
First, though, there were the duly authorized furloughs and a chance for some
seemingly easy money. Hollywood had come calling, offering $20,000 apiece for
Davis and Blanchard to star in a movie, "The Spirit of West Point."
It was easy money for Blanchard. It was traumatic for Davis. Filming a football
scene at UCLA, he cut, as he had cut hundreds of times before, twisted his
right knee and collapsed with what he later said were torn ligaments.
"It was the end of me," he said.
Davis eventually had the reconstructive surgery available at the time, but the
knee didn't heal right and was wobbly ever after.
Still, he was deemed fit enough to fulfill his military commitment and was
assigned to the infantry. Blanchard was assigned to the Air Force, then
beginning as a separate branch. He became a jet pilot and served until 1971,
retiring as a colonel.
On furlough in 1948, Davis met a young starlet, Elizabeth Taylor, and romance
blossomed, a highly publicized romance. The next year, when Davis returned from
Korea for his annual leave, he was met by Taylor at the Miami airport, a
reunion covered by Life magazine, which ran a photo of Taylor wiping lipstick
from "the handsome lieutenant's" face.
Davis, however, did not become the first of Taylor's many husbands, although he
later was married, briefly, to another actress, Terry Moore.
After fulfilling his military commitment, only two months before the Korean War
broke out, Davis, hoping to resume his football career, resigned his commission
- he later was criticized for that - hoping to rekindle his football career.
By then, what was left of the All-America Conference had merged with the NFL
and the Los Angeles Rams had acquired the rights to Davis.
He played with them for two seasons, taping and bracing his shaky knee, but he
was never the running back he had been at West Point.
Still, his pro career was hardly a bust. In 1950, the Rams advanced to the
championship game - they lost to the Cleveland Browns, one of those AAFC
transplants - and Davis led the team in rushing, gaining 416 yards, averaging
4.7 a carry. He also caught 42 passes for 592 yards - for a team that boasted
eventual Hall of Famers Tom Fears and Elroy "Crazylegs" Hirsch in its
receiving corps.
Injuries nagged Davis in 1951 and he rushed only 64 times for 200 yards, then
sat out the '52 season. He hoped to come back in 1953, but his knee wouldn't
let him make the cuts a running back had to make and his football career ended
in an exhibition game against the Philadelphia Eagles at Little Rock, Ark., in
September of that year.
Davis took a job with The Times in 1954, as assistant director of special events,
then moved up to director in 1960, spearheading the paper's many charity
sporting events until his retirement in 1987.
Following his marriage to Moore, he married Harriett Lancaster Slack in 1953
and, after her death in 1995, married Yvonne Ameche, widow of 1954 Heisman
winner and NFL great Alan Ameche, in 1996.
Davis gave his Heisman Trophy to Bonita High School several years ago. The
athletic field at the school is named after Davis, and each year The Times
gives the Glenn Davis Award to the top high school football player in Southern
California.
In addition to his son Ralph of Van Nuys, survivors include his wife Yvonne of
La Quinta, and stepson John Slack III of Baton Rouge, La.; a sister, Mary
Gammons of Pomona, and several grandchildren.
Funeral arrangements are pending.
He married a war widow, Harriett Lancaster Slack, in 1953 and, after her death
in 1995, married Yvonne Ameche, widow of 1954 Heisman winner Alan Ameche, in
1996.
The athletic field at Bonita High is named after Davis, and each year The Times
gives the Glenn Davis Award to the top high school football player in Southern
California.
Survivors include Yvonne of La Quinta, son Ralph of Van Nuys, stepson John
Slack III of Baton Rouge, La., sister Mary Gammons of Pomona and several
grandchildren.
2005 HOOD COUNTY TEXAS
GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY