American sports coach and administrator (1882–1981)
Frederick William Luehring (1882 – February 1, 1981) was an American football , basketball , baseball , and swimming coach college athletics administrator.[ 1] He served as the head football coach at Ripon College in Ripon, Wisconsin from 1906 to 1909, compiling a record of 20–3–1.[ 2] Luehring was the head basketball coach at Ripon from 1906 to 1910 and at Princeton University from 1913 to 1920, amassing a career college basketball coaching mark of 125–61.[ 3]
Luehring was credited with starting the swim team at the University of Nebraska in 1921 and later served as a committee member of the US Olympic Swimming team .[ 4]
As a college athlete, Luehring excelled at North Central University and then at the University of Chicago under head coach Amos Alonzo Stagg .[ 5]
In addition to his athletic pursuits Luehring also was an art collector. A selection of prints by Honore Daumier of people swimming were exhibited at Lehigh University Art Gallery in 1958 with the assistance of Head Curator Francis Quirk .[ 6]
Luehring died at the age of 99, on February 1, 1981, at Taylor Hospital in Ridley Park, Pennsylvania .[ 7]
Head coaching record
Year
Team
Overall
Conference
Standing
Bowl/playoffs
Ripon Crimson (Independent) (1906–1909)
1906
Ripon
5–0–1
1907
Ripon
5–2
1908
Ripon
5–0
1909
Ripon
6–1
Ripon:
21–3–1
Total:
21–3–1
References
^ "Frederick Luehring" . riponredhawks.com. Retrieved October 18, 2018 .
^ "All-time Ripon College Men's Basketball Coaching Records by Wins" . Ripon College . Retrieved October 18, 2018 .
^ "Fred Luehring" . Sports-Reference. Retrieved October 18, 2018 .
^ "Frederick W. Luehring" . International Swimming Hall of Fame. Retrieved November 28, 2018 .
^ "Frederick Luehring, 99, Is Dead; Coached Basketball at Princeton" . New York Times . February 17, 1981. Retrieved November 28, 2018 .
^ "Library Shows Athletics in Art" . Brown and White . February 14, 1958. Retrieved November 23, 2021 .
^ "Frederick Luehring, 99, devoted to athletics throughout his life" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Philadelphia, Pennsylvania . February 5, 1981. p. 36. Retrieved December 7, 2020 – via Newspapers.com .
External links
# denotes interim head coach.
# denotes acting/interim athletic director
# denotes interim athletic director, * denotes early, part-time athletic director
# denotes interim athletic director