Walter Thomas "Tiger" Mayberry (March 14, 1915 – by March 5, 1944) was an American college football player, and later a U.S. Marine Corps fighter pilot. Mayberry was a casualty of World War II; dying in a Japanese prisoner of war camp after his plane was shot down.[1]
Mayberry was born on March 14, 1915, in Daytona Beach, Florida, and attended Mainland High School in his hometown.[8] His father Tom operated a small grocery store.[9] His mother was Helena Marie Murphy of Lewiston, Maine. He played for the Mainland Buccaneers high school football team, and suffered a broken neck while playing.[10]
University of Florida
In the fall of 1934, Mayberry enrolled as a freshman and attended the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida. He was a member of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.[11]
Football
After playing freshman football for a season, he played for the varsity Florida Gators football team from 1935 to 1937.[12] His first coach head coach was Josh Cody, and his next was Dutch Stanley. Stanley called Mayberry the best player he ever saw.[13] In three seasons of college football, he amassed 2,019 yards of total offense, including 713 yards passing and 1,306 yards rushing; on defense, he accumulated eleven interceptions.[n 1]
As a junior in 1936 Mayberry played at halfback and substitute quarterback.[14] He returned a kick for 75 yards for a touchdown in a victory over the Stetson Hatters.[5] Mayberry also provided most of the yardage in an 18–7 win over the Sewanee Tigers.[15] He earned second-team All-Southeastern Conference honors at the conclusion of the season.[16]
As the senior team captain in 1937, Mayberry ranked second in the country with 818 rushing yards; only Byron White exceeded Mayberry's rushing total that year.[n 2] During the 1937 season, Mayberry also intercepted six passes when the Gators' opponents only threw 57 balls,[9][18] and was a first-team All-SEC selection by the conference coaches and sportswriters on behalf of the Associated Press.[19][20] The 1937 team defeated the Georgia Bulldogs in their annual rivalry game for the first time in eight years.[21][22] Mayberry rushed for 83 yards against Georgia.[13] He also starred in a close loss to coach Pop Warner's Temple Owls,[23] keeping the 10,000 spectators "in an uproar for nearly three periods."[24]
In fall 1937, scout Henry McLemore of the United Press wrote in a piece on Southern football: "And when the time comes to pick the outstanding players of the year it wouldn't be a bad idea to mention "Tiger" Mayberry, captain and halfback of Florida's team . . . given a stronger eleven to work with, and Mayberry would be in the headlines Saturday after Saturday."[25] McLemore later added: "I have not seen a better back in six years than Mayberry . . . Wallace Wade, Bernie Moore, and Harry Mehre all told me that Mayberry was the best back in the South, one of the best they have seen in half a dozen years and certainly the best that Florida has produced in a decade."[26] Another sportswriter quipped, "The south says: All-America scouts should keep an eye on "Tiger" Mayberry, Florida back ... The guy has it."[27]
NFL
In the 1938 NFL draft, Mayberry was taken with the 61st overall pick, the first of the eighth round, by the Cleveland Rams.[28] He said he would play professional football if the Rams made him an offer he considered "worthwhile."[29] He went on to say: "If the offer is right I will sign to play pro football next year."[29] After entertaining an offer, and another for a potential coaching position at Florida,[30] he declined both.[31] During this same time he was a tire salesman[31] and District Commissioner of the National semi-pro Baseball Congress.[32]
Mayberry last radioed as he piloted his aircraft over a stretch of water between two Solomon Islands,[11] and was shot down near Bougainville Island on August 30.[33] He was subsequently captured by Japanese forces, and died in a Japanese prisoner of war camp at Rabaul in New Britain of Papua New Guinea sometime after September 6, 1943.[9][37] Japanese records indicate that he died in an Allied air raid on March 5, 1944, but other records suggest he was executed by the Japanese at an earlier date. He was buried at the Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery.[8]
Carlson, Norm (2007). University of Florida Football Vault: The History of the Florida Gators. Atlanta, Georgia: Whitman Publishing, LLC. ISBN978-0-7948-2298-9.