In 1920, officials from Boston College and Johnny Evers reached a verbal agreement for Evers to become the school's head baseball coach. however, Evers instead accepted a last minute offer to join the New York Giants as a coach.[8] Reynolds was instead able to sign Tommy McCarthy to a three-year contract, although he left after a year to join the Brooklyn Dodgers coaching staff.[9][10]
After Harvard University athletic director Fred Moore removed Boston College from Harvard's 1920 football schedule, Reynolds canceled Boston College's scheduled baseball and hockey games against Harvard. BC and Harvard would not play each other in any sport again until 1943, when Harvard chose to play an informal schedule against local colleges and military teams due to World War II.[11]
In November 1929, Reynolds left Boston College to enter the business world.[2]
Later life
In 1931 Reynolds opened a travel agency on Beacon Street in Boston.[12] By 1967 he was living at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Brockton, Massachusetts.[7] He died on November 21, 1970, after a long illness.[13]
References
^"Banquet for the Boston College Football Team". The Boston Daily Globe. December 4, 1914.
^ abc"Reynolds to Quit as B.C. Sport Head". The Boston Daily Globe. November 22, 1929.
^De Celles, Francis J. (February 1, 1918). "Alumni". The Styllus. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
^"Alumni". The Styllus. April 1, 1919. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
^"Ceremony in St Paul Church in Roxbury". The Boston Daily Globe. June 24, 1922.