Wallace Winter


Wallace Charles Winter Sr. was an American college football player and coach and railroad executive. He played tackle at Yale University from 1890 to 1892 and was selected to the 1891 [College Football All-America Team].
After graduating from Yale, Winter became a competitive golfer.
Winter served as the head football coach at the University of Minnesota for the 1893 [Minnesota Golden Gophers football team|1893 Golden Gophers season], leading the team to a 6–0 overall record including a 3–0 mark in Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the Northwest league play. He was known for working the players extremely hard, to the point that "they considered the actual games to be breathers compared to the scrimmages." but agreed to the conditions as long as he could act as the referee.
Winters's son, Wallace C. Winter Jr., was a back for the Yale football team, but quit the team to serve as an aviator in France during World War I. The younger Winter was killed in action in March 1918 while flying behind enemy lines in Germany. Winter had earlier been reported missing, but survived that episode to receive the Croix de Guerre in February 1917.
A native of Marinette, Wisconsin, Winter grew up in Saint Paul, Minnesota. He later served as director of the Burlington Railroad and superintendent of the Omaha Railway. Winter died on May 10, 1947, at his home in Chicago.