Art "Pappy" Lewis
He
was known as "Pappy," but he will forever be remembered as one of West
Virginia University's most productive football coaches Art Lewis'
association with football spanned four decades, and he left his mark
everywhere he went.
Born February 18, 1911, in Pityme, Meigs County, Ohio, Lewis was a
standout tackle at Middleport High School in Middleport, Ohio. Enrolling
at Ohio University in 1932 as a 21-year-old freshman, Lewis acquired the
nickname "Pappy." Earning Little All-America honors at tackle, Lewis
played in the 1935 East-West Shrine Game. Drafted in the first round by
the New York Giants in 1936 (the Giants' first-ever draft selection),
Lewis played one year in New York.
After coaching one year at Ohio Wesleyan College, Lewis joined the
Cleveland Rams in 1938 as an assistant coach. A year later, he assumed the
head coaching duties on an interim basis in the middle of the 1939 season.
At 27, he was the youngest head coach in NFL history. One of his greatest
professional highlights came when he defeated the great Chicago Bears
twice in the same season.
Following a stint in the Navy from 1942-45, Lewis became the head
football coach at Washington and Lee University. Though going 11-17, Lewis
found his niche as a recruiter and built the Virginia school into a power
by the early 1950s.
Coaching one year at Mississippi State, Lewis was appointed head
football coach at West Virginia University in 1950, a job he said he had
always wanted. After guiding West Virginia to two lackluster seasons, he
steered WVU to a 7-2 record in 1952, including victories over Pitt and
South Carolina. The reason for the turnaround was simple; Lewis could flat
out recruit! Sam Huff, Bruce Bosley, Fred Wyant, Joe Marconi, Chuck Howley,
Tommy Allman, Larry Krutko and Bobby Moss were just a handful of the great
players Lewis attracted to Morgantown.
In 1956, the Saturday Evening Post described Lewis' recruiting tactics.
"With a safety lamp on his cap, he'll go into the belly of a mine to talk
to a coal-digging father about a football son. He'll drink straight vodka
with an immigrant mother, go trout fishing at dawn with a boy who loves
the rod, or seek out a prospect deep in the back woods where modern
transportation couldn't budge. It's not for nothing that Lewis is referred
to in some quarters as `America's No. 1 football recruiter."
Duly noted as a recruiter, he was also an excellent coach who guided
West Virginia to the 1954 Sugar Bowl. The greatest win that season was the
Mountaineers' 19-14 win over Penn State, a team led by future professional
stars Lenny Moore and Roosevelt Grier. Going 8-2 in 1955, his teams began
to fall off after that. In 1960, he resigned his coaching position at WVU
and accepted a position with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The team's top talent scout, Lewis held that post until his death of a
heart attack on June 13, 1962. Winning 58 games as a Mountaineer coach,
including a 30-game Southern Conference winning streak, his win total was
a WVU record that lasted 28 years. Lewis was inducted into the West
Virginia Sports Hall of Fame in 1966.