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History
In its earliest days shortly after the Civil War, football little resembled the game played
by the Dayton Triangles, and even less so the modern game. At that time, it was a blend of rugby
and soccer with the kicking game being the primary method of advancing the ball downfield,
which led to the name of the sport. When the game was just beginning in 1869 Boston, the men
who played this disorganized sport carried it with them to college, culminating in what is
recognized as the first collegiate football game in that year between Rutgers and Princeton.
After graduation, many of these early collegiate players wanted to continue playing the
game, which led to the formation of athletic clubs. These clubs were often coached by Ivy
League football coaches and were not attached to cities like most modern NFL teams. Football
eventually spread westward from Ivy League universities in New England to the more industrial
and working-class upper Midwest, particularly Ohio. In this region, company-sponsored teams,
the Dayton Triangles being one such team, were common. Company-sponsored teams drew from
employees, primarily in industrial cities and generated interest through rivalries with other
companies. One modern NFL team, the Green Bay Packers, began as a company team called the
Acme Packers.
The land on which the site is located was part of the Ed Best estate. Prominent Dayton
industrialists Edward Deeds and Charles Kettering purchased the real estate for use by
employees of National Cash Register for a company-sponsored football team.
Teams like the Dayton Triangles and the Acme Packers were a contrast to the Ivy League
players and teams that came before. Players in this region were working-class and few were
college educated, as opposed to the men from wealthy families who could afford to attend
prestigious Ivy League universities. The working-class players were easier for the average
2
football fan to relate to, which helped the early sport to grow, though baseball would continue to
be the dominant spectator sport in the United States.
The beginning of the Dayton Triangles can be traced to 1912 when a group of former
basketball players for St. Mary’s (now called the University of Dayton) organized a football
team called the St. Mary’s Cadets, the same team name they played under as a basketball team.
During the following year, the team would add Lou Clark as its coach, who served in the same
capacity for the University of Dayton team. Another important addition to the team was Carl
Storck, who would be involved with professional football and the future NFL for the remainder
of his life.
After a brief time playing under the name Dayton Gym Cadets, the team settled on the
name of the Dayton Triangles in 1916. It was also a strong showing with a 9-1 record that season
that saw the Triangles defeat teams from Cincinnati, Detroit, Toledo and Pittsburgh. While they
challenged one of the best teams of the time, the Canton Bulldogs, to a game, the Canton team
ignored the challenge.
The 1917 season was the Triangles’ first at what is now Howell Field at Triangle Park.
The Triangles ended the season with a 6-0-2 record and added Dr. Dave Reese and Nelson
Talbott to the team. Reese was a standout athlete at Denison University and was employed by
Delco as the company dentist. Talbott was the new coach of the Dayton team, who was the
captain of the Yale football team in 1914.
The year 1918 saw the entry of the United States into the First World War and the
Triangles’ team secretary Mike Redelle left the team for military service. In his place, Carl
Storck stepped in and was responsible to travel and business arrangements. The war effort and
the resulting draft decimated the ranks of professional football as many players left for military
3
service. The Dayton Triangles, however, were left mostly intact since all of the players were
employees in an industry that was considered essential to the war effort. They were largely
exempted from service in the armed forces for this reason. With their competition severely
depleted, this led to the Dayton team winning its first championship in 1918, though it was not
highly regarded due to the lack of competitive talent.
In July 1920, representatives from professional football teams in Ohio and one in New
York met in Canton, Ohio at Ralph Hay’s Hupmobile auto agency to organize the sport since
until that time, there were very few rules and almost no overall organization. At this meeting,
Carl Storck represented Dayton. These team representatives formed the American Professional
Football Association, which would change its name to the National Football League two years
later. The team representatives named the famous standout athlete and professional football
player Jim Thorpe as the first president of the A.P.F.A. The teams in this fledgling organization
wanted Thorpe as president to lend his fame and legitimacy to the organization and he was
mostly a figurehead. It is because of this first meeting in Canton that is the reason for that city
being chosen as the location for the present-day NFL Hall of Fame and Museum.
That October saw the first game between two teams in this newly-founded A.P.F.A in
Triangle Park between the hometown Triangles and the Columbus Panhandles. The Triangles
posted a record of 5-2-2 that year, though one of the highlights was a game against Canton which
ended in a 20-20 tie. During the game, Canton Bulldogs star player Jim Thorpe drop-kicked two
field goals at 45 and 54 yards to tie the game.
The Triangles began to falter in 1922, which would see the team post its last winning
record of 4-3-1. Professional football was growing rapidly and the competition intensified.
Professional teams were looking for top collegiate talent rather than looking to “homegrown”
4
players. Dayton resisted this trend, though the team had serious financial hardships. They had
difficulty in filling the 5,000 seats at Triangle Park for home games, even with general admission
ticket prices reduced to $1.
By 1927, many of the original members of the Triangles such as Al Mahrt and Dr. Dave
Reese had left. One of the stars of the team at that time was Walter “Sneeze” Aichu, of Hawaiian
and Chinese descent, who was a running back for the team. By this time, most of the Dayton
team’s games were away from Triangle Park due to the poor ticket sales in Dayton.
In 1929, the Triangles posted a record of 0-6 and the team folded. By that time, interest in
the team had greatly waned and there was little mention of the team’s sale to Brooklyn
businessmen.
The Need for Interpretation
Currently, the only historical interpretation at Triangle Park is a sign erected by the Ohio
Historical Society in 2005 that reads:
On October 3, 1920 the first game matching two professional teams of the American
Professional Football Association, a league that would become the National Football
League (NFL), was held on this field within Triangle Park. In that game, the Dayton
Triangles defeated the Columbus Panhandles 14-0. The Triangle’s Lou Partlow scored
the first touchdown and George “Hobby” Kinderdine kicked the first extra point. Three
factories founded by Dayton businessmen Edward Deeds and Charles Kettering
sponsored the Dayton Triangles team. The factories were the Dayton Engineering
Laboratories Company (DELCO), Dayton Metal Products Company, (D.M.P. Co.), and
5
Domestic Engineering Company (DECO), later called Delco-Light. They formed an
industrial triangle of plants in downtown Dayton.
Only current interpretation at the site
While this sign conveys a broad overview of the history of the Dayton Triangles and what is
recognized as the first NFL game held at the site, there is a great deal of information and context
that is left out.
For example, while this sign mentions the first touchdown and extra points scored, there
is no mention how the game was played and how it differs from modern professional football. If
a park visitor interested in the history of professional football or the Dayton Triangles saw only
this sign, he or she would likely assume that the game in 1920 was little different from 21st
century NFL football. This is not the case, as the forward pass was seldom used at the time,
6
though it is common today. The safety equipment was crude and ineffective by modern
standards.
The sign is also missing the broader context of early professional football that played a
significant role in the history of the Dayton Triangles. There is no mention of how the game
developed from its origins in the 19th century nor is there any information regarding the men who
played the game, aside from the two players for the Dayton Triangles who scored the first
touchdown and extra point. Furthermore, there is little information about the important role
played by the Dayton Triangles organization in the formation of the modern NFL.
The Ohio Historical Marker provides the visitor with some information about the origin
of the football team, it fails to mention how and why the team fell apart or how long it lasted.
This is important as the reasons for the folding of the Dayton Triangles in 1929 shed light on the
growth and development of professional football.
Triangle Park is an important part of local history, as well as the history of professional
football in the United States. Without adequate interpretation at the site, this important story will
be forgotten by most people in the local area unless they perform more extensive research. Since
most in the general public will not do so, it is important to preserve and present the story of the
Dayton Triangles and the park to the public.
Vision:
The goal for interpretation is simple. An interpretation of Triangle Park will offer visitors
to the park a history of the site, emphasizing the Dayton Triangles and their role in shaping the
modern NFL. This interpretation will work alongside the existing recreational facilities to
enhance the experience of guests who will be able to use the park for outdoor recreation
7
activities such as tennis, baseball and bicycling but will also be able to form a connection
between this site and the most popular spectator sport in the United States today, NFL football.
Furthermore, the interpretation will foster a greater appreciation for local history,
especially this part of largely-forgotten history that has been overshadowed by more well-known
local figures such as the Wright Brothers.
Major Themes
The Beginning of the NFL
The game mentioned in the existing marker is considered the first game in the league that
would become the modern NFL. The Dayton Triangles was one of the first teams in this league
with a representative present at the first meeting of the American Professional Football
Association in Canton, Ohio on September 17, 1920. The NFL recognizes this as the beginning
of that organization which is why the Hall of Fame is located in Canton.
At this meeting, team owners representing teams from Akron, Canton, Cleveland and
Dayton met with others from the states of New York, Indiana and Illinois. The following year,
Carl Storck of the Dayton Triangles was named secretary-treasurer of the new league and would
go on to become the acting president of the NFL on May 25, 1939 after the death of Joe Carr,
who had served as president since 1921.
The Dayton Triangles History
Important figures from the Dayton area shaped the history of the Dayton Triangles and
professional football. Men like George “Hobby” Kinderdine appear in the existing marker at the
site but the visitor will get a sense of who they were as individuals. They lived and worked in
Dayton and the surrounding communities even after leaving professional football. Giving visitors
an insight into the lives and personalities of the players and others involved with the Dayton
8
Triangles will create a connection between visitors and the history of professional football in
Dayton.
Triangle Park and Audience
The park today is mainly used for outdoor recreation. The site of the football field where
the Dayton Triangles played home games is now a baseball field which was renovated in the
summer of 2015. The funding for the project came from All-Star Community Legacy program
within Major League Baseball, the Cincinnati Reds Community Fund and the city of Dayton.
Several local schools hold baseball games at the field during the spring and summer months. The
park also hosts baseball tournaments and championship games.
Baseball brings a large number of people to Triangle Park, including the players, parents,
coaches and others. This audience should be retained, and the plan seeks to enhance their
experience at the park. Many of these visitors are not from Dayton and as such would not be as
aware of the park’s history as locals. This presents an opportunity for the park to reach a new
audience in a new way. While many of the players, coaches, parents, etc. may only visit the park
now for baseball games, if they were introduced to the football history located there, they would
be inspired to come back another time or to explore more of Dayton’s history at other sites such
as Carillon Historical Park.
Another important audience that currently uses the park is locals who visit to walk their
dogs or visit with their children and families. Interpretation will enhance their experience by
adding a historical aspect to the park that they may not know exists. People will see the park as
both a place for outdoor recreation and a place to learn about an important part of local history.
Learning that Dayton played a significant part in the founding of the NFL will foster a sense of
9
civic pride in people who live in and around Dayton as well as encourage fans of professional
football from elsewhere to visit the city.
The Plan
Interpretive Signs
The interpretation will be concentrated on Howell Field and the surrounding area, where
the historic football games took place. There is an asphalt pathway leading from the parking lot
to the baseball field. Interpretive signs along this path will supplement the existing Ohio
Historical Marker by providing more context and detail about the Dayton Triangles and their
history.
A large sign at the beginning of the path, near the parking lot, will welcome visitors to
Triangle Park and give a broad overview of the history of the team in the form of a timeline of
important events. The timeline will span from the beginning of what would be the Triangles,
then called the Cadets, through the team’s folding in 1929.
10
Proposed site of introductory sign near parking lot
After that there will be signs along the side of the path giving context to the Triangles by
outlining the early history of professional football, about which most people know little. Also,
individual stories about prominent figures on the Dayton Triangles team will be featured on
interpretive signs.
The first sign, nearest to the parking lot will welcome visitors to the site and give a brief
overview of the history that they will learn about during their visit. A draft of the text is as
follows:
Welcome to Triangle Park, home of one of the first charter members of the NFL. Several
former University of Dayton basketball players formed a new football team called the St.
Mary’s Cadets in 1912. The Cadets were an amateur, unorganized “sandlot” team. Such
teams formed all around the Midwest and Northeast United States in the early 20th
11
Century. The Triangles and other teams like them played football primarily for fun and
competition.
As visitors continue along the path towards Howell Field, they will encounter the current
Ohio Historical Marker. On the other side of the path from the marker, an interpretive sign will
give more detail about one of the figures mentioned, George Kinderdine. A sample of the text for
this panel is:
Many Triangles players, since they worked for a Dayton company, came from Dayton
and the surrounding area. One such player was George “Hobby” Kinderdine from
Miamisburg, Ohio. Hobby got his unusual nickname from an ankle injury he suffered
during practice which caused him to hobble. His teammates started to call him “Hobby”
which stuck for the rest of his career. Despite his injury, he continued to play for the
Triangles until the team was sold in 1929.
This will help the visitor relate to one of the important figures in the history of the team as well
as provide a unique, memorable detail about him that will lead some visitors to want to learn
more about the Dayton Triangles.
Furthermore, other interpretive signs along this asphalt path will give visitors the context
in which the Dayton Triangles existed. They will make the team relevant to visitors by relating
the game that the Triangles played to the modern NFL, of which the majority of park visitors will
at least be familiar.
In its early years, football more resembled rugby than the popular college and
professional game today. Even though the forward pass was legalized in 1906, it was still
seldom used until much later. Most players and owners regarded the forward pass as a
“gimmick play” and preferred simple, fast, aggressive rushing to advance the ball.
12
Interpretation such as this draws a connection between the professional football game of the
Dayton Triangles and the professional game of today. This also allows visitors to see the Dayton
team and others like it as an integral part of the evolution of the game they know today.
Other interpretive panels will inform visitors of the relationship that existed between
professional football and college football in this early time. In the early 20th century, universities
and professional teams grappled with issues of amateurism that are still controversial today. A
sample of this interpretation will include:
As professional football grew and became more competitive, teams tried to entice the
best college players to their ranks. While other professional teams at the time disregarded
the rules against college athletes taking money to play football, the Dayton Triangles
never recruited collegiate talent.
Finally, the sign along the path nearest to the entrance to Howell Field will tell visitors
about the end of Dayton’s time with a professional football team:
In Dayton, interest in the Triangles declined as the 1920s wore on. Home games often
failed to fill the 5,000 seats available at Triangle Park at the time even with ticket prices
reduced to $1. Finally, in 1929, the team was sold to Brooklyn businessmen William B.
Dwyer and John C. Depler who moved the team there and renamed it the Dodgers.
For the visitor reaching this panel, if he or she has read them all to this point, will have learned
about the entire history of the Dayton Triangles. Upon reaching the end of the path, along with
the end of Dayton’s professional football team, visitors will see the modern baseball field at the
site. This will create a sense of the past and the present meeting since even though the Dayton
Triangles no longer exist, the place where they played is still maintained and used for sports and
recreation. The visitor will also understand the important role that Dayton played in the
13
formation of what would become today’s NFL and will gain an appreciation for the men who
played the game at great personal risk for a paltry amount of money compared to modern NFL
athletes.
In addition to interpretive text, these panels will include period photographs taken at the
park or of the individuals mentioned. Using photographs will help visitors to visualize what
Triangle Park looked like during the 1920s as well as what the players would have looked like at
that time. Photographs like this will help the visitors connect the ground on which they are
standing to people and events that occurred on that ground decades earlier. In the holdings of
Dayton History, several photographs exist, some of which have been digitized, which will be
used to enhance the interpretive panels at the park.
Live Interpretation
Since football is an active, fast-paced and dynamic sport, there will be live interpreters to
bring the game of the 1920s to life for visitors. A small group of men in period football uniforms
will visit the park to talk with visitors about the Triangles and their history. They will
demonstrate the equipment as it was used in the early years of professional football and show
visitors how it was the same, and how it was different from the modern game.
For safety concerns, game action would have to be carefully scripted and slowed.
However, the baseball field will be marked in the gridiron pattern for football to help visitors
visualize what a football game at the park would have looked like. Since Howell Field is
currently used for baseball games in the spring and summer, these demonstrations would take
place at times coinciding with the football season in the fall and early winter.
14
These demonstrations will be scheduled in advance with city officials working with local
schools to organize field trips to Triangle Park for students to learn about local history in a
dynamic and unique way. Using sports such as football to teach history will reach students in a
way that makes the past relevant to them by linking it to something many, if not all, of them are
already familiar with, NFL football.
An example of re-enactments of early football exists today in Mansfield, Pennsylvania in
which the first night football game was played on September 28, 1892. About 100 years later, the
town started a tradition every fall in which volunteers re-enact that game as closely as possible
with uniforms and equipment from 1892. While the form of football re-created in Mansfield is
different from the game the Triangles played, it provides a useful example. Scripted plays are
used and, while the action is still physical, it is greatly slowed down to prevent injury.
Demonstrations at Triangle Park will take the form of team practice sessions in which the
team will run plays from the 1920s. As the forward pass was rarely used in the time of the
Dayton team’s existence, most of the plays would be rushing. An example of a common play run
during this time period was the Double-Wing. This was a “deep” formation in which the center
snapped the ball directly to a receiver or running back rather than the quarterback. While the
direct snap is still used today, there were still some rule differences in the game that few people
today would be familiar with. Passing plays could be run in which the ball lands incomplete in
the end zone, resulting in the defense taking possession of the ball. Also during passing plays,
any offensive player could go downfield so the defense was responsible for determining who the
eligible receivers were. Gameplay and rule differences such as these could be demonstrated to
visitors in a scripted, slowed down way to help visitors understand what is happening as well as
to minimize the likelihood of injury.
15
Period costumes and equipment will be another significant part of the live interpretation
at Triangle Park. During the 1920s, there were few regulations around uniforms in professional
football. Teams issued wool jerseys and socks to their players who had to supply their own
protective equipment. As such, the type and amount of protective equipment varied widely
among players with some opting to wear leather helmets while others grew out their hair to
protect their heads from impacts. Pants worn during games were usually plain brown canvas.
Leather shoulder pads and rubber nose guards were also sometimes used. The football itself was
also very different at that time. Compared to modern footballs, the ball during the 1920s was
shorter and wider and also made of leather.
Also, individual interpreters, costumed or not, will lead group tours of the park, which
could be either adult visitors or students from local schools. The city should charge a nominal fee
to help with the associated costs but this would attract new users to the park who have an interest
in local history as well as the history of professional football.
Volunteers will be well-suited to the task of live interpretation with the Dayton
Clodbusters Base Ball Club serving as an excellent example of volunteers interpreting a sport
with historic rules and equipment. They will require training as would volunteer interpreters in
any other area. Dayton History as an organization has extensive experience in training
interpreters and would be able to assist in training any volunteers.
Since Howell Field is currently used for baseball, no football demonstrations would take
place during the baseball season in the spring and summer months. When baseball season ends,
however, the field will be marked with the “gridiron” pattern for football demonstrations in the
fall and early winter which will be removed when baseball season resumes. An example of
baseball and football teams sharing a field can be found at the professional level with the
16
Oakland Athletics of Major League Baseball and the Oakland Raiders of the National Football
League.
The Coliseum in Oakland used for baseball and football
In keeping with historical accuracy, Howell Field would look different from the modern
example pictured above. The markings on football fields of the 1920s were much simpler, with a
chalk outline of the field and lines on a regular interval with no numbers or hash marks as are
seen on modern NFL fields. Goal posts were also set in front of the end zone and were wider at
that time. Should issues such as cost or safety concerns prohibit this, the goal posts could be
omitted from the park without significantly impacting the historic interpretation.
Using Howell Field for football demonstrations will ensure that the field, and Triangle
Park, will be put to use during a larger portion of the year. Due to cooler weather, most people do
not use outdoor parks as much during the fall and winter. Historic football demonstrations and
tours will entice people to visit the park during these usually slow times of the year.
17
Another benefit of holding these live re-creations during the fall is that it coincides with
the current football season so there will already be widespread interest in football. This will
make it easier for interpreters to draw connections between professional football as played by the
Dayton Triangles and modern NFL.
Development and Recommendations
Generally, Triangle Park is exceptionally well-maintained. There are, however, some
facility improvements to be made in order to draw in more visitors and enhance their experience.
The first such improvement is simple. The lines in the parking lot at the park have been worn
away so that they are nearly invisible. This makes a poor first impression upon the visitor,
especially for someone who has never before been to Triangle Park. The solution is to paint new
lines for parking in yellow paint. This is an easy, inexpensive way to improve the visitor
experience as soon as he or she arrives at the park.
18
Current parking lot, no lines visible
Another area that is of greater concern is the aging brick walkway located above the
bleachers.
19
Large hole in walkway presents hazard to visitors
While the example of the disrepair of the brick walkway pictured is the most severe, there are
other cracks and uneven areas that are potentially hazardous to visitors. The walkway will need
to be replaced both for safety concerns and for aesthetics. The brick walkway will continue to
deteriorate as time passes, increasing the safety risk to visitors, therefore, this is an important part
of the interpretation at Triangle Park.
Installing a new brick walkway and removing the current one will prove one of the more
costly areas of improvement. In order to defray these costs, the city can “sell” new bricks to
members of the community and engrave a custom message that will become a permanent part of
the park. Not only will this provide financial benefits, allowing people in the community to leave
a lasting mark will foster a sense of ownership of Triangle Park by the people who use it and
lead to them feeling invested in its success.
20
Furthermore, the restroom facilities near Howell Field are located at the top of a steep hill
which is only accessible by a long set of stairs. Some visitors with physical impairments will find
it difficult or impossible to reach these facilities. Therefore, a ramp will be built extending from
the brick path to the top of the hill to extend access to the park to a broader audience.
Long, steep staircase to restroomfacilities
Potential Future Development
During the Dayton Triangles’ existence as a professional football team, Triangle Park
could accommodate up to 5,000 spectators. While it is unlikely that the park will be able to hold
that number of spectators again, there is room for expansion of the bleachers if it becomes
necessary, while leaving the existing seating intact.
21
Existing seating with room for more if necessary
If the demonstrations held at Triangle Park prove successful, other cities in Ohio may re-
create their own long-defunct professional football teams. If this were to happen, the Dayton
Triangles could participate in competitive games with other teams of the period. Safety concerns
would dictate that the game action be slowed but having the Dayton re-enactors participate in
games against teams from elsewhere rather than demonstrating 1920s football plays would add a
unique, competitive dimension to the game that would be otherwise impossible. Such games
would not be scripted and as such would more closely resemble actual football games.
22
Appendix
Bair, Nick. “Wednesday Night Lights: The Birth of Night Football.” Fall 2010.
<http://pabook2.libraries.psu.edu/palitmap/NightFB.html>
Becker, Carl M. Home and Away: The Rise and Fall of Professional Football on the Banks of the
Ohio, 1919-1934. Athens, Ohio: Ohio UP, 1998.
Before the League, Time Warner Cable Sports Channel, November 2015.
Collett, Ritter. Sports in Dayton: A Bicentennial Retrospective. Dayton, Ohio: Landfall Press,
1996.
<http://www.daytontriangles.com/>
“From Rugby to Wrigley.” <http://www.profootballhof.com/football-history/history-of-
football/>
Harrigan, Joe and John Thorn eds. The Pro Football Hall of Fame 50th Anniversary Book: Where
Greatness Lives. New York: Grand Central Publishing, 2012.
McDonough, Will, Peter King, Paul Zimmerman, Vic Carucci, Greg Garber, Kevin Lamb, Joe
Gergen, Harold Rosenthal, C.W. Nevius, Ed Bouchette, Ted Brock, Tom Barnidge, Phil
Barber. 75 Seasons: The Complete Story of the National Football League 1920-1995.
Atlanta: Turner Publishing, 1994.
Oriard, Michael. King Football: Sport and Spectacle in the Golden Age of Radio and Newsreels,
Movies and Magazines, the Weekly and the Daily Press. Chapel Hill: North Carolina UP,
2001.
Professional Football Researchers Association Research. “Associating in Obscurity: 1920,”
PFRA.
Professional Football Researchers Association Research. “A War Year: 1918,” PFRA.
23
Willis, Chris. The Columbus Panhandles: A Complete History of Pro Football’s Toughest Team,
1900-1922. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2007.
Willis, Chris. Old Leather: An Oral History of Early Pro Football in Ohio, 1920-1935. Lanham,
Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2005.
24

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Interpretive Plan Triangle Park

  • 1. 1 History In its earliest days shortly after the Civil War, football little resembled the game played by the Dayton Triangles, and even less so the modern game. At that time, it was a blend of rugby and soccer with the kicking game being the primary method of advancing the ball downfield, which led to the name of the sport. When the game was just beginning in 1869 Boston, the men who played this disorganized sport carried it with them to college, culminating in what is recognized as the first collegiate football game in that year between Rutgers and Princeton. After graduation, many of these early collegiate players wanted to continue playing the game, which led to the formation of athletic clubs. These clubs were often coached by Ivy League football coaches and were not attached to cities like most modern NFL teams. Football eventually spread westward from Ivy League universities in New England to the more industrial and working-class upper Midwest, particularly Ohio. In this region, company-sponsored teams, the Dayton Triangles being one such team, were common. Company-sponsored teams drew from employees, primarily in industrial cities and generated interest through rivalries with other companies. One modern NFL team, the Green Bay Packers, began as a company team called the Acme Packers. The land on which the site is located was part of the Ed Best estate. Prominent Dayton industrialists Edward Deeds and Charles Kettering purchased the real estate for use by employees of National Cash Register for a company-sponsored football team. Teams like the Dayton Triangles and the Acme Packers were a contrast to the Ivy League players and teams that came before. Players in this region were working-class and few were college educated, as opposed to the men from wealthy families who could afford to attend prestigious Ivy League universities. The working-class players were easier for the average
  • 2. 2 football fan to relate to, which helped the early sport to grow, though baseball would continue to be the dominant spectator sport in the United States. The beginning of the Dayton Triangles can be traced to 1912 when a group of former basketball players for St. Mary’s (now called the University of Dayton) organized a football team called the St. Mary’s Cadets, the same team name they played under as a basketball team. During the following year, the team would add Lou Clark as its coach, who served in the same capacity for the University of Dayton team. Another important addition to the team was Carl Storck, who would be involved with professional football and the future NFL for the remainder of his life. After a brief time playing under the name Dayton Gym Cadets, the team settled on the name of the Dayton Triangles in 1916. It was also a strong showing with a 9-1 record that season that saw the Triangles defeat teams from Cincinnati, Detroit, Toledo and Pittsburgh. While they challenged one of the best teams of the time, the Canton Bulldogs, to a game, the Canton team ignored the challenge. The 1917 season was the Triangles’ first at what is now Howell Field at Triangle Park. The Triangles ended the season with a 6-0-2 record and added Dr. Dave Reese and Nelson Talbott to the team. Reese was a standout athlete at Denison University and was employed by Delco as the company dentist. Talbott was the new coach of the Dayton team, who was the captain of the Yale football team in 1914. The year 1918 saw the entry of the United States into the First World War and the Triangles’ team secretary Mike Redelle left the team for military service. In his place, Carl Storck stepped in and was responsible to travel and business arrangements. The war effort and the resulting draft decimated the ranks of professional football as many players left for military
  • 3. 3 service. The Dayton Triangles, however, were left mostly intact since all of the players were employees in an industry that was considered essential to the war effort. They were largely exempted from service in the armed forces for this reason. With their competition severely depleted, this led to the Dayton team winning its first championship in 1918, though it was not highly regarded due to the lack of competitive talent. In July 1920, representatives from professional football teams in Ohio and one in New York met in Canton, Ohio at Ralph Hay’s Hupmobile auto agency to organize the sport since until that time, there were very few rules and almost no overall organization. At this meeting, Carl Storck represented Dayton. These team representatives formed the American Professional Football Association, which would change its name to the National Football League two years later. The team representatives named the famous standout athlete and professional football player Jim Thorpe as the first president of the A.P.F.A. The teams in this fledgling organization wanted Thorpe as president to lend his fame and legitimacy to the organization and he was mostly a figurehead. It is because of this first meeting in Canton that is the reason for that city being chosen as the location for the present-day NFL Hall of Fame and Museum. That October saw the first game between two teams in this newly-founded A.P.F.A in Triangle Park between the hometown Triangles and the Columbus Panhandles. The Triangles posted a record of 5-2-2 that year, though one of the highlights was a game against Canton which ended in a 20-20 tie. During the game, Canton Bulldogs star player Jim Thorpe drop-kicked two field goals at 45 and 54 yards to tie the game. The Triangles began to falter in 1922, which would see the team post its last winning record of 4-3-1. Professional football was growing rapidly and the competition intensified. Professional teams were looking for top collegiate talent rather than looking to “homegrown”
  • 4. 4 players. Dayton resisted this trend, though the team had serious financial hardships. They had difficulty in filling the 5,000 seats at Triangle Park for home games, even with general admission ticket prices reduced to $1. By 1927, many of the original members of the Triangles such as Al Mahrt and Dr. Dave Reese had left. One of the stars of the team at that time was Walter “Sneeze” Aichu, of Hawaiian and Chinese descent, who was a running back for the team. By this time, most of the Dayton team’s games were away from Triangle Park due to the poor ticket sales in Dayton. In 1929, the Triangles posted a record of 0-6 and the team folded. By that time, interest in the team had greatly waned and there was little mention of the team’s sale to Brooklyn businessmen. The Need for Interpretation Currently, the only historical interpretation at Triangle Park is a sign erected by the Ohio Historical Society in 2005 that reads: On October 3, 1920 the first game matching two professional teams of the American Professional Football Association, a league that would become the National Football League (NFL), was held on this field within Triangle Park. In that game, the Dayton Triangles defeated the Columbus Panhandles 14-0. The Triangle’s Lou Partlow scored the first touchdown and George “Hobby” Kinderdine kicked the first extra point. Three factories founded by Dayton businessmen Edward Deeds and Charles Kettering sponsored the Dayton Triangles team. The factories were the Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company (DELCO), Dayton Metal Products Company, (D.M.P. Co.), and
  • 5. 5 Domestic Engineering Company (DECO), later called Delco-Light. They formed an industrial triangle of plants in downtown Dayton. Only current interpretation at the site While this sign conveys a broad overview of the history of the Dayton Triangles and what is recognized as the first NFL game held at the site, there is a great deal of information and context that is left out. For example, while this sign mentions the first touchdown and extra points scored, there is no mention how the game was played and how it differs from modern professional football. If a park visitor interested in the history of professional football or the Dayton Triangles saw only this sign, he or she would likely assume that the game in 1920 was little different from 21st century NFL football. This is not the case, as the forward pass was seldom used at the time,
  • 6. 6 though it is common today. The safety equipment was crude and ineffective by modern standards. The sign is also missing the broader context of early professional football that played a significant role in the history of the Dayton Triangles. There is no mention of how the game developed from its origins in the 19th century nor is there any information regarding the men who played the game, aside from the two players for the Dayton Triangles who scored the first touchdown and extra point. Furthermore, there is little information about the important role played by the Dayton Triangles organization in the formation of the modern NFL. The Ohio Historical Marker provides the visitor with some information about the origin of the football team, it fails to mention how and why the team fell apart or how long it lasted. This is important as the reasons for the folding of the Dayton Triangles in 1929 shed light on the growth and development of professional football. Triangle Park is an important part of local history, as well as the history of professional football in the United States. Without adequate interpretation at the site, this important story will be forgotten by most people in the local area unless they perform more extensive research. Since most in the general public will not do so, it is important to preserve and present the story of the Dayton Triangles and the park to the public. Vision: The goal for interpretation is simple. An interpretation of Triangle Park will offer visitors to the park a history of the site, emphasizing the Dayton Triangles and their role in shaping the modern NFL. This interpretation will work alongside the existing recreational facilities to enhance the experience of guests who will be able to use the park for outdoor recreation
  • 7. 7 activities such as tennis, baseball and bicycling but will also be able to form a connection between this site and the most popular spectator sport in the United States today, NFL football. Furthermore, the interpretation will foster a greater appreciation for local history, especially this part of largely-forgotten history that has been overshadowed by more well-known local figures such as the Wright Brothers. Major Themes The Beginning of the NFL The game mentioned in the existing marker is considered the first game in the league that would become the modern NFL. The Dayton Triangles was one of the first teams in this league with a representative present at the first meeting of the American Professional Football Association in Canton, Ohio on September 17, 1920. The NFL recognizes this as the beginning of that organization which is why the Hall of Fame is located in Canton. At this meeting, team owners representing teams from Akron, Canton, Cleveland and Dayton met with others from the states of New York, Indiana and Illinois. The following year, Carl Storck of the Dayton Triangles was named secretary-treasurer of the new league and would go on to become the acting president of the NFL on May 25, 1939 after the death of Joe Carr, who had served as president since 1921. The Dayton Triangles History Important figures from the Dayton area shaped the history of the Dayton Triangles and professional football. Men like George “Hobby” Kinderdine appear in the existing marker at the site but the visitor will get a sense of who they were as individuals. They lived and worked in Dayton and the surrounding communities even after leaving professional football. Giving visitors an insight into the lives and personalities of the players and others involved with the Dayton
  • 8. 8 Triangles will create a connection between visitors and the history of professional football in Dayton. Triangle Park and Audience The park today is mainly used for outdoor recreation. The site of the football field where the Dayton Triangles played home games is now a baseball field which was renovated in the summer of 2015. The funding for the project came from All-Star Community Legacy program within Major League Baseball, the Cincinnati Reds Community Fund and the city of Dayton. Several local schools hold baseball games at the field during the spring and summer months. The park also hosts baseball tournaments and championship games. Baseball brings a large number of people to Triangle Park, including the players, parents, coaches and others. This audience should be retained, and the plan seeks to enhance their experience at the park. Many of these visitors are not from Dayton and as such would not be as aware of the park’s history as locals. This presents an opportunity for the park to reach a new audience in a new way. While many of the players, coaches, parents, etc. may only visit the park now for baseball games, if they were introduced to the football history located there, they would be inspired to come back another time or to explore more of Dayton’s history at other sites such as Carillon Historical Park. Another important audience that currently uses the park is locals who visit to walk their dogs or visit with their children and families. Interpretation will enhance their experience by adding a historical aspect to the park that they may not know exists. People will see the park as both a place for outdoor recreation and a place to learn about an important part of local history. Learning that Dayton played a significant part in the founding of the NFL will foster a sense of
  • 9. 9 civic pride in people who live in and around Dayton as well as encourage fans of professional football from elsewhere to visit the city. The Plan Interpretive Signs The interpretation will be concentrated on Howell Field and the surrounding area, where the historic football games took place. There is an asphalt pathway leading from the parking lot to the baseball field. Interpretive signs along this path will supplement the existing Ohio Historical Marker by providing more context and detail about the Dayton Triangles and their history. A large sign at the beginning of the path, near the parking lot, will welcome visitors to Triangle Park and give a broad overview of the history of the team in the form of a timeline of important events. The timeline will span from the beginning of what would be the Triangles, then called the Cadets, through the team’s folding in 1929.
  • 10. 10 Proposed site of introductory sign near parking lot After that there will be signs along the side of the path giving context to the Triangles by outlining the early history of professional football, about which most people know little. Also, individual stories about prominent figures on the Dayton Triangles team will be featured on interpretive signs. The first sign, nearest to the parking lot will welcome visitors to the site and give a brief overview of the history that they will learn about during their visit. A draft of the text is as follows: Welcome to Triangle Park, home of one of the first charter members of the NFL. Several former University of Dayton basketball players formed a new football team called the St. Mary’s Cadets in 1912. The Cadets were an amateur, unorganized “sandlot” team. Such teams formed all around the Midwest and Northeast United States in the early 20th
  • 11. 11 Century. The Triangles and other teams like them played football primarily for fun and competition. As visitors continue along the path towards Howell Field, they will encounter the current Ohio Historical Marker. On the other side of the path from the marker, an interpretive sign will give more detail about one of the figures mentioned, George Kinderdine. A sample of the text for this panel is: Many Triangles players, since they worked for a Dayton company, came from Dayton and the surrounding area. One such player was George “Hobby” Kinderdine from Miamisburg, Ohio. Hobby got his unusual nickname from an ankle injury he suffered during practice which caused him to hobble. His teammates started to call him “Hobby” which stuck for the rest of his career. Despite his injury, he continued to play for the Triangles until the team was sold in 1929. This will help the visitor relate to one of the important figures in the history of the team as well as provide a unique, memorable detail about him that will lead some visitors to want to learn more about the Dayton Triangles. Furthermore, other interpretive signs along this asphalt path will give visitors the context in which the Dayton Triangles existed. They will make the team relevant to visitors by relating the game that the Triangles played to the modern NFL, of which the majority of park visitors will at least be familiar. In its early years, football more resembled rugby than the popular college and professional game today. Even though the forward pass was legalized in 1906, it was still seldom used until much later. Most players and owners regarded the forward pass as a “gimmick play” and preferred simple, fast, aggressive rushing to advance the ball.
  • 12. 12 Interpretation such as this draws a connection between the professional football game of the Dayton Triangles and the professional game of today. This also allows visitors to see the Dayton team and others like it as an integral part of the evolution of the game they know today. Other interpretive panels will inform visitors of the relationship that existed between professional football and college football in this early time. In the early 20th century, universities and professional teams grappled with issues of amateurism that are still controversial today. A sample of this interpretation will include: As professional football grew and became more competitive, teams tried to entice the best college players to their ranks. While other professional teams at the time disregarded the rules against college athletes taking money to play football, the Dayton Triangles never recruited collegiate talent. Finally, the sign along the path nearest to the entrance to Howell Field will tell visitors about the end of Dayton’s time with a professional football team: In Dayton, interest in the Triangles declined as the 1920s wore on. Home games often failed to fill the 5,000 seats available at Triangle Park at the time even with ticket prices reduced to $1. Finally, in 1929, the team was sold to Brooklyn businessmen William B. Dwyer and John C. Depler who moved the team there and renamed it the Dodgers. For the visitor reaching this panel, if he or she has read them all to this point, will have learned about the entire history of the Dayton Triangles. Upon reaching the end of the path, along with the end of Dayton’s professional football team, visitors will see the modern baseball field at the site. This will create a sense of the past and the present meeting since even though the Dayton Triangles no longer exist, the place where they played is still maintained and used for sports and recreation. The visitor will also understand the important role that Dayton played in the
  • 13. 13 formation of what would become today’s NFL and will gain an appreciation for the men who played the game at great personal risk for a paltry amount of money compared to modern NFL athletes. In addition to interpretive text, these panels will include period photographs taken at the park or of the individuals mentioned. Using photographs will help visitors to visualize what Triangle Park looked like during the 1920s as well as what the players would have looked like at that time. Photographs like this will help the visitors connect the ground on which they are standing to people and events that occurred on that ground decades earlier. In the holdings of Dayton History, several photographs exist, some of which have been digitized, which will be used to enhance the interpretive panels at the park. Live Interpretation Since football is an active, fast-paced and dynamic sport, there will be live interpreters to bring the game of the 1920s to life for visitors. A small group of men in period football uniforms will visit the park to talk with visitors about the Triangles and their history. They will demonstrate the equipment as it was used in the early years of professional football and show visitors how it was the same, and how it was different from the modern game. For safety concerns, game action would have to be carefully scripted and slowed. However, the baseball field will be marked in the gridiron pattern for football to help visitors visualize what a football game at the park would have looked like. Since Howell Field is currently used for baseball games in the spring and summer, these demonstrations would take place at times coinciding with the football season in the fall and early winter.
  • 14. 14 These demonstrations will be scheduled in advance with city officials working with local schools to organize field trips to Triangle Park for students to learn about local history in a dynamic and unique way. Using sports such as football to teach history will reach students in a way that makes the past relevant to them by linking it to something many, if not all, of them are already familiar with, NFL football. An example of re-enactments of early football exists today in Mansfield, Pennsylvania in which the first night football game was played on September 28, 1892. About 100 years later, the town started a tradition every fall in which volunteers re-enact that game as closely as possible with uniforms and equipment from 1892. While the form of football re-created in Mansfield is different from the game the Triangles played, it provides a useful example. Scripted plays are used and, while the action is still physical, it is greatly slowed down to prevent injury. Demonstrations at Triangle Park will take the form of team practice sessions in which the team will run plays from the 1920s. As the forward pass was rarely used in the time of the Dayton team’s existence, most of the plays would be rushing. An example of a common play run during this time period was the Double-Wing. This was a “deep” formation in which the center snapped the ball directly to a receiver or running back rather than the quarterback. While the direct snap is still used today, there were still some rule differences in the game that few people today would be familiar with. Passing plays could be run in which the ball lands incomplete in the end zone, resulting in the defense taking possession of the ball. Also during passing plays, any offensive player could go downfield so the defense was responsible for determining who the eligible receivers were. Gameplay and rule differences such as these could be demonstrated to visitors in a scripted, slowed down way to help visitors understand what is happening as well as to minimize the likelihood of injury.
  • 15. 15 Period costumes and equipment will be another significant part of the live interpretation at Triangle Park. During the 1920s, there were few regulations around uniforms in professional football. Teams issued wool jerseys and socks to their players who had to supply their own protective equipment. As such, the type and amount of protective equipment varied widely among players with some opting to wear leather helmets while others grew out their hair to protect their heads from impacts. Pants worn during games were usually plain brown canvas. Leather shoulder pads and rubber nose guards were also sometimes used. The football itself was also very different at that time. Compared to modern footballs, the ball during the 1920s was shorter and wider and also made of leather. Also, individual interpreters, costumed or not, will lead group tours of the park, which could be either adult visitors or students from local schools. The city should charge a nominal fee to help with the associated costs but this would attract new users to the park who have an interest in local history as well as the history of professional football. Volunteers will be well-suited to the task of live interpretation with the Dayton Clodbusters Base Ball Club serving as an excellent example of volunteers interpreting a sport with historic rules and equipment. They will require training as would volunteer interpreters in any other area. Dayton History as an organization has extensive experience in training interpreters and would be able to assist in training any volunteers. Since Howell Field is currently used for baseball, no football demonstrations would take place during the baseball season in the spring and summer months. When baseball season ends, however, the field will be marked with the “gridiron” pattern for football demonstrations in the fall and early winter which will be removed when baseball season resumes. An example of baseball and football teams sharing a field can be found at the professional level with the
  • 16. 16 Oakland Athletics of Major League Baseball and the Oakland Raiders of the National Football League. The Coliseum in Oakland used for baseball and football In keeping with historical accuracy, Howell Field would look different from the modern example pictured above. The markings on football fields of the 1920s were much simpler, with a chalk outline of the field and lines on a regular interval with no numbers or hash marks as are seen on modern NFL fields. Goal posts were also set in front of the end zone and were wider at that time. Should issues such as cost or safety concerns prohibit this, the goal posts could be omitted from the park without significantly impacting the historic interpretation. Using Howell Field for football demonstrations will ensure that the field, and Triangle Park, will be put to use during a larger portion of the year. Due to cooler weather, most people do not use outdoor parks as much during the fall and winter. Historic football demonstrations and tours will entice people to visit the park during these usually slow times of the year.
  • 17. 17 Another benefit of holding these live re-creations during the fall is that it coincides with the current football season so there will already be widespread interest in football. This will make it easier for interpreters to draw connections between professional football as played by the Dayton Triangles and modern NFL. Development and Recommendations Generally, Triangle Park is exceptionally well-maintained. There are, however, some facility improvements to be made in order to draw in more visitors and enhance their experience. The first such improvement is simple. The lines in the parking lot at the park have been worn away so that they are nearly invisible. This makes a poor first impression upon the visitor, especially for someone who has never before been to Triangle Park. The solution is to paint new lines for parking in yellow paint. This is an easy, inexpensive way to improve the visitor experience as soon as he or she arrives at the park.
  • 18. 18 Current parking lot, no lines visible Another area that is of greater concern is the aging brick walkway located above the bleachers.
  • 19. 19 Large hole in walkway presents hazard to visitors While the example of the disrepair of the brick walkway pictured is the most severe, there are other cracks and uneven areas that are potentially hazardous to visitors. The walkway will need to be replaced both for safety concerns and for aesthetics. The brick walkway will continue to deteriorate as time passes, increasing the safety risk to visitors, therefore, this is an important part of the interpretation at Triangle Park. Installing a new brick walkway and removing the current one will prove one of the more costly areas of improvement. In order to defray these costs, the city can “sell” new bricks to members of the community and engrave a custom message that will become a permanent part of the park. Not only will this provide financial benefits, allowing people in the community to leave a lasting mark will foster a sense of ownership of Triangle Park by the people who use it and lead to them feeling invested in its success.
  • 20. 20 Furthermore, the restroom facilities near Howell Field are located at the top of a steep hill which is only accessible by a long set of stairs. Some visitors with physical impairments will find it difficult or impossible to reach these facilities. Therefore, a ramp will be built extending from the brick path to the top of the hill to extend access to the park to a broader audience. Long, steep staircase to restroomfacilities Potential Future Development During the Dayton Triangles’ existence as a professional football team, Triangle Park could accommodate up to 5,000 spectators. While it is unlikely that the park will be able to hold that number of spectators again, there is room for expansion of the bleachers if it becomes necessary, while leaving the existing seating intact.
  • 21. 21 Existing seating with room for more if necessary If the demonstrations held at Triangle Park prove successful, other cities in Ohio may re- create their own long-defunct professional football teams. If this were to happen, the Dayton Triangles could participate in competitive games with other teams of the period. Safety concerns would dictate that the game action be slowed but having the Dayton re-enactors participate in games against teams from elsewhere rather than demonstrating 1920s football plays would add a unique, competitive dimension to the game that would be otherwise impossible. Such games would not be scripted and as such would more closely resemble actual football games.
  • 22. 22 Appendix Bair, Nick. “Wednesday Night Lights: The Birth of Night Football.” Fall 2010. <http://pabook2.libraries.psu.edu/palitmap/NightFB.html> Becker, Carl M. Home and Away: The Rise and Fall of Professional Football on the Banks of the Ohio, 1919-1934. Athens, Ohio: Ohio UP, 1998. Before the League, Time Warner Cable Sports Channel, November 2015. Collett, Ritter. Sports in Dayton: A Bicentennial Retrospective. Dayton, Ohio: Landfall Press, 1996. <http://www.daytontriangles.com/> “From Rugby to Wrigley.” <http://www.profootballhof.com/football-history/history-of- football/> Harrigan, Joe and John Thorn eds. The Pro Football Hall of Fame 50th Anniversary Book: Where Greatness Lives. New York: Grand Central Publishing, 2012. McDonough, Will, Peter King, Paul Zimmerman, Vic Carucci, Greg Garber, Kevin Lamb, Joe Gergen, Harold Rosenthal, C.W. Nevius, Ed Bouchette, Ted Brock, Tom Barnidge, Phil Barber. 75 Seasons: The Complete Story of the National Football League 1920-1995. Atlanta: Turner Publishing, 1994. Oriard, Michael. King Football: Sport and Spectacle in the Golden Age of Radio and Newsreels, Movies and Magazines, the Weekly and the Daily Press. Chapel Hill: North Carolina UP, 2001. Professional Football Researchers Association Research. “Associating in Obscurity: 1920,” PFRA. Professional Football Researchers Association Research. “A War Year: 1918,” PFRA.
  • 23. 23 Willis, Chris. The Columbus Panhandles: A Complete History of Pro Football’s Toughest Team, 1900-1922. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2007. Willis, Chris. Old Leather: An Oral History of Early Pro Football in Ohio, 1920-1935. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2005.
  • 24. 24