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Mike DeRisi and
the First Championship
Teams:
1946 and 1947
The Langhorne of 1946 was a town and
culture in change. With America just a
year into the “post-war” celebration
that would continue for half a decade,
the historic, crossroads Lower Bucks
County municipality was straddling the
border between the old and the new. And
just as the region was about to
experience a growth and prosperity boom
through the addition of towns and
locales like Fairless Hills and
Levittown – with school districts set to
explode with baby-boomer students while
also changing their names to fit the
times – a man named Mike DeRisi, a
Bristol son, an athlete and coach who
had bossed the Falcons of Fallsington
through 1945, made his way to the
Redskin reservation for the 1946
campaign. Once there, he found himself
with an abundance of talented, feisty
and eager charges at his disposal. Thus
armed, Coach DeRisi quickly provided a
glimpse of the future of the Tribe’s
grid program as he delivered its first
championship teams during the two short
years he held the reigns.
The Foundation: 1928 through 1945
Although 1946 was DeRisi’s first year at
the helm of the ‘Skins, it was
Langhorne’s 19th with a football team
while he was the team’s fourth head
coach. His very capable predecessors
included William Thomas - who both
started the Moleskinners’ grid program
and then coached the boys during their
initial season of 1928 - followed by
Charlie Beck from 1929 through 1942 and
finally, Johnny Messics who directed the
program from from 1943 to 1945. Coach
Thomas was also Principal Thomas and as
an avid outdoorsman and sports
enthusiast, it was practically
preordained that he would be the fellow
to get a team off the ground and then
serve as the head man on the sidelines
for its first season. A native of Nanicoke in upstate Pennsylvania, he was
particularly fond of football and for a
time he quarterbacked the Langhorne Aces
which was the local semi-pro team during
those more wild and wooly times of
“ballyhoo” and raccoon coats. Charlie
Beck, who took over after that first
season of 1928, was a Bristol native. A
science and chemistry teacher at
Langhorne, he was both well liked and a
capable field mentor during his 14 years
as “chief” of the ‘Skins. With his
somewhat loose and “laid back” style, he
was the right fit for Langhorne and its
players during their embryonic decade of
the 1930s.
Johnny Messics was a Temple graduate who
had played as a lineman for Glenn “Pop”
Warner during Warner’s time as head
coach at the Philadelphia school. Pop’s
tenure produced some of Temple’s best
teams and Messics had the opportunity to
play in the Sugar Bowl on one of those
clubs. Interestingly, Messics was not
teacher at Langhorne nor was he a native
but, instead, he was a salesman for the
Borden Dairy Company who happened to
live in town. Furthermore, his
involvement during the war years of 1943
through 1945 came free of charge as he
helped keep the program intact as many
schools had shut down athletics till the
global conflict was resolved. A capable
“football man” as well, Messics was of
the no-nonsense school of coaching which
included a focus on the fundamentals of
the game. And becoming masters of the
Notre Dame Box formation under Messic’s
direction, the ‘Skins were known as a
disciplined group that announced their
intentions and then followed through.
With the background so established,
anyone surveying the landscape in 1946
would certainly agree that there had
been some solid Redskin teams over those
first 18 seasons. An early example would
include the 1930 team that finished 6-2
with losses only to Bristol and
Morrisville. In addition, several
outfits during the mid-30s featuring
Hall of Fame inductees Chuck Klein and
Bill McCahan stood out as did the 5-2
squad of 1944. Still, the Tribe was as
yet far from being considered one of
Pennsylvania’s premier schoolboy
gridiron programs.
The budding rose bush, though, was about
to display its first blossoms.
Head Coach Mike DeRisi
A Bristol resident, Coach DeRisi had
grown up playing football and baseball
of the sandlot and organized type right
on through to the high school and
college level. An excellent athlete, he
had helped anchor some of the great
Bunnies teams of the 1930s from his
position as a lineman. Attending West
Chester State, he continued his athletic
endeavors there while also earning his
teaching credentials. After graduation
he then returned to Lower Bucks and
began teaching in the Fallsington
district while honing his coaching
abilities as the head man of the Falcons
football program for several seasons.
And he also continued to stay active on
the baseball diamond during that time
too as he played for Bristol’s St.
Anne’s church league team for many
years.
Attracting the attention of the
Langhorne brass after Coach Messics
departure in 1945, DeRisi was enticed
into bringing his imposing six foot, 240
pound frame to Langhorne. Described as
dapper, low key and likable, he was the
type of coach who inspired loyalty and a
desire to perform while also being a
master of the game. And those qualities
and skills would quickly produce solid
results on the football field behind the
old Langhorne-Middletown High School.
The Championship Teams
- 1946 -
In many ways, the 1946 championship team
was not that surprising and nor was the
’47 group. For in addition to the
fundamentals that Coach Messics had
drilled into his players during the
years he was in charge of the Redskins
grid teams, there was a group of solid
athletes reaching high school age in
Langhorne during that mid-40s period
including players on the ’46 club like
George Myers, Don Kaleda, Bob Griffin,
Phil “Doc” Richter, Wayne “Inky”
Schneider, Walt Baumeister, Rich Lukens,
Spanky Peters, Jay Lewis, Armand Fizzano,
Semarian Brown, Bud Lane, Warren Tucker,
Bob Davis, Jim Cameron, George Detweiler,
Al Knox, Bill Fizzano, Jim Connoly, Max
Einekel, George Beswick, Tom Salvadore,
Clarence Myers and Harry Ferrell.
Actually, with the talent then becoming
available, the years of 1944 and 1945
had seen a steady rise in the ‘Skins
fortunes. And considering that 1943 was
the war’s mid-point, and Coach Messics
first as the volunteer boss of the
‘Skins, the 0-3-1 effort during that
purposely shortened season was not that
unexpected. But as the team came in at
9-6 over 1944 and 1945, the Moleskinners
were set to take off when DeRisi arrived
on the scene that following year of ‘46.

With one of his first jobs including
analyzing the “material” he had to work
with, DeRisi decided the Carlisle single
wing might work a bit better than
Rockne’s “square and shift” offensive
scheme. And leaving no doubt they were
for real - and that the single wing was
the right offensive arrangement - the
1946 club opened the campaign by easily
dispatching DeRisi’s previous club, LBC
conference member Fallsington, 26-0, to
start the year and league play off
right. The following week the ‘Skins
then went on a road trip as they took on
Burlington County’s powerhouse Riverside
High School. The Rams, a perennial south
Jersey champ, were huge compared to the
diminutive but lightning fast Langhorne
team. Delivering a Herculean effort, the
Indians surprisingly controlled the line
of scrimmage, only buckling once in the
2nd quarter when they gave up a 60-yard
drive to the home team. Behind the
pounding ground game provided by their
big and bruising fullback, Ken Keibner -
who capped that series by going the
final 12 yards on a bull-like rush
followed by his kick for the point after
- the hosts were the first to inflict
some damage as they took a 7-0 lead.
But not throwing in the towel, and later
that same period, it was a 45-yard pass
from Schneider to Brown that closed the
gap to 7-6. The point after try was no
good, though, as another Schneider pass
to Brown out of a fake kick,
flea-flicker play, slipped through the
receiver’s hands. With the two teams
then locked in a scoreless land war for
the final two quarters (which saw both
clubs get achingly close to the end zone
without putting it away), the Rams
happily took the win while the ‘Skins
just missed banking the upset against
the heavily favored home team.
The physically punishing Riverside game
had clearly left the team drained and
emotionally flat the following week.
Showing it on the field in their next
game, the ‘Skins narrowly escaped with a
6-6 tie against a tougher-than-usual
George School to stand at 1-1-1 after
their first three encounters. With his
club obviously worn down, DeRisi
tirelessly worked with the boys all week
long as he pushed, prodded and coddled
the squad in preparation for Lower
Moreland; however, the first half of
that contest looked like more of the
same as the Lions lead 6-0 at the break.
Sensing his team’s crisis, Coach DeRisi
delivered a stirring halftime speech
which is most remembered for its
disconnect from his normally taciturn
approach. Just the medicine they needed,
the Moleskinners were a different group
in the final 24 minutes as they shut the
Lions offense down while scoring twice
themselves. Brown was first when he took
one across in the third, with Schneider
then finishing it up as he found the
promised land in the fourth. Inky also
toed both PATs to power the
come-from-behind 14-6 victory.
From there on out the team really began
to click as they took 6 in a row
including the Lower Moreland win. First
they romped over another league team,
Newtown, 42-6, before turning back
Trenton, 26-6. Back in conference play
the following two weeks, they first
stopped perennial nemesis Bristol, 14-0,
before dismantling the equally disliked
Morrisville Bulldogs, 46-0, to close out
league play while capturing their
initial LBC title as well. And in
addition to sealing the crown, the win
over Morrisville also marked the first
time the ‘Skins had beaten the Dogs and
Bunnies in the same year. The Tribe then
followed up on their top-o’-the-heap
status by pummeling Southampton, 31-0,
with only Bensalem then remaining on
their schedule. No doubt, as the
conference flag was already stuffed in
their pocket, the ‘Skins were doing some
celebratory dancing even with the season
still underway.
With the closing game against the Owls
set as the traditional Thanksgiving Day
contest, the 3,000 fans in Langhorne
that day represented the largest crowd
of the year as the 7-1-1 ‘Skins hosted a
solid 5-3 Bensalem team. No stranger to
one another, the Owls and the ‘Skins had
first squared off in 1930 and played
continuously since that “kickoff”
contest went to Langhorne, 38-0. A
bitter rivalry, the overall record was
slightly in Bensalem’s favor, 6-8-2,
after those 16 seasons of play. And
showing they deserved to play with the
champs, the Owls kept the ‘Skins offense
throttled in the first half. But the
‘Skins defense returned the favor and it
was only Schneider’s spectacular 75-yard
open field interception return for a
touchdown of an errant pass by the
Bensalem quarterback, Jack Hansen, that
prevented a 0-0 score at the half.
Instead, the teams retired for the break
with the Moleskinners on top, 7-0.
The second half saw the Owls defense
continue to play inspired football while
their offense closed the gap in the
third as Hansen ran one in for a TD;
however, the extra point kick was
blocked and the score still favored the
home team, 7-6. Continuing to trade
missed punches until the last four
minutes of the game, it was then that
Hansen caught the Redskins napping. From
deep in his own territory he spotted a
receiver, Bob Dapp, all alone at the
Owls’ 40-yard line. Firing a direct hit
missile his way, the ball somehow
bounced off Dapp’s hands and then
bounded in the air and down the field.
Looking just like a classic “tip-drill”,
the tumbling pigskin was grabbed from
the sky by George Ashton, also an Owl,
who proceeded to race the remaining 53
yards to pay dirt and a score as
signaled by the trailing officials. With
DeRisi storming on the field to dispute
the “illegal” play, the game was halted
for 45 minutes before the befuddled
zebras finally allowed the touchdown to
stand. With the point after attempt
good, the score spun to 13-7 for
Bensalem and that’s the way the
scoreboard read when the final gun
sounded just minutes later.
While perhaps the end result was not a
complete surprise due to the ‘Skins
“championship” game having been played
two weeks earlier, the Owls clearly
showed they had just enough to get by
the somewhat lethargic Indians as they
handed them their second loss of the
season. But still, and notwithstanding
the Bensalem loss, the Blue and Red had
earned their first championship trophy.
Scoring an all-time team high of 216
points in their ten game season, they
had yielded just 46 with the “average”
score of a game being 21-5. And post
season accolades soon began to pour in
as Langhorne placed four men on the “Big
Three Conference” First Team including
Schneider - he was voted “Captain” as
well - and fellow backfield mate Lukens
along with linemen Tucker and Griffin
(the Big Three was a short lived
separate league that consisted of
Langhorne, Bristol and Morrisville).
Three other ‘Skins made the Second Team
including Armand Fizzano, Kaleda and
Brown. Additionally, three Tribe members
also made the Delaware Valley Advance,
All-District First Team including
Schneider, Griffin and Tucker. Kaleda
and Lukens were named to the Advance’s
Second Team while Fizzano and Brown were
placed on the Honorable Mention squad.
Deserving special nod on the 1946 team
was Schneider who had closed out his
4-year career as a star and starter that
very special year. In fact, of the
Langhorne record 216 points scored by
the ’46 boys (and which, was also second
highest in Lower Bucks at that time with
only the 1936 Bristol team scoring more
at 237 in total), Schneider had tallied
9 six-pointers himself while putting up
8 conversions for a total of 62 points.
He also threw 9 touchdown strikes thus
having a hand in over half the team’s
offensive output with 116 in all.
Additionally, was it not for his
unselfishness he could have scored a few
more by calling his own play near the
goal line after many long runs -
including one against Trenton of 40
yards which ended at the two yard line
and another against Newtown of 42 yards
that also ended at the two. Of
Schneider’s 9 scores, six were on the
ground while two were on aerial grabs
with his other the interception return
against Bensalem. Besides his running
and passing on offense, and defending as
a defensive back, he also punted with
his average being a phenomenal 50 yards
per kick.
A three sport athlete (baseball and
basketball were his other two) most
local followers of the sport of football
rate Schneider among the top three
pre-1950 running backs in Lower Bucks
County. The other two include Bristol’s
immortal Johnny “King” Cole who powered
the great Bunnies squads of the late
‘20s and Morrisville’s big and speedy
Jimmy Yeager who paced the fearsome 1938
Bulldog team. Schneider’s skills were
clearly evidenced by his status as a
four year ‘first teamer” and his
selection to Bucks County grid all-star
teams following his sophomore, junior
and senior years. He also went on to
excel at West Chester playing in several
small college division bowl games.
The Championship Teams
- 1947 -
With the 1946 squad and its
accomplishments already a fading memory
by the fall of 1947, the ‘Skins of that
year’s team still had the taste of
championship meat on their minds - and
it clearly had a delicious flavor. With
a nucleus of “star” players returning
from the 1946 championship team,
including Tucker, Armand Fizzano and
Brown, in addition to some underclassmen
who had spent the off-season filling out
their frames including Salvadore,
Einenkel, Beswick, Cameron, Bill Fizzano
and Knox along with some new faces like
Ray Mongillo, Harry Curtis, Vic Gring,
Calvin Tobias, Robert Davis and others,
the ‘Skins were looking forward to
another run at the flag. In fact,
showing they were every bit as good as
their predecessors, the 1947 players
mirrored the achievements of the ’46
club as they snagged the LBC title once
again while delivering another 7-2-1
effort.

But it didn’t start quite as smoothly as
the boys would have liked as they opened
the campaign by tying Fallsington, 0-0,
followed by another loss to Riverside
and then a strong Ft. Washington team
too. With only a win over the George
School wedged between those two “L”
column entries, prospects for a
championship season looked dim after
those first four contests; however,
despite the rocky start, and not unlike
the ’46 streak, the ‘Skins then pocketed
six straight wins. And looking like an
unstoppable powerhouse once they had
found their footing, they outscored the
opposition 130-25 over that run as they
turned back Newtown, Lower Moreland,
Bristol, Morrisville, Southampton and
the 1946 season ending spoiler,
Bensalem. Actually, the Thanksgiving Day
classic with the Owls of ‘47 had special
significance as they had joined the
conference that year and a loss would
have cost the ‘Skins the trophy. And
just as they had in 1946, the Owls
showed up raring for a fight as they
drew first blood early in the game as
they grabbed a 6-0 lead on a quick
39-yard aerial strike following their
recovery of a Langhorne fumble. Fighting
tenaciously thereafter, the Tribe scored
two touchdowns and earned a safety on a
blocked punt while keeping the Owls off
the board anymore to finish on top,
15-6.
Meanwhile, and just as in 1946, several
Redskin players were accorded
post-season honors by being selected to
all-star teams including repeats in
Fizzano, Tucker and Brown plus some new
ones in Salvadore and Beswick. Notably
too, those great 1946 and 1947 teams
produced 6 Redskin Hall of Famers
including Schneider, Fizzano, Griffin,
Lukens, Tucker and Kaleda. Of course,
the man behind it all, Coach DeRisi, was
also voted into the Hall of Fame. And
although DeRisi moved on to Hammonton
High, NJ the following year of 1948, the
teams he had mentored and the trophies
they had earned were instrumental in
setting the stage for what was to
follow.
Epilogue
Although Coach
DeRisi and the boys of those great
Langhorne-Middletown Redskins squads
of 1946 and 1947 were soon “just”
another few pages in yearbooks of
the day, their efforts and results
on the field were not at all
forgotten. In fact, the teams of the
next four years continued to play
solid, winning football under
DeRisi’s follow-up, Jim Egli. Hard
on his heels, in 1952 a man by the
name of Harry Franks would next set
up shop as the head man of the
Moleskinners which had by then
changed their name to that by which
they are still known today - the
Neshaminy Redskins. Building on the
accomplishments of the DeRisimen,
Franks’ driving personality and
relentless pursuit of perfection
would spur the ‘Skins on a course
that would reach heights probably
not considered during those mid-40s
seasons. In fact, from 1952 through
1965, under Franks and his
replacement, the legendary John
Petercuskie, the Blue and Red
morphed themselves into a state and
regional powerhouse as they spread
their war dance far and wide.
Finally, with
time now providing perfect clarity
of vision as to their importance, it
can be stated without contradiction
that Coach DeRisi and his boys - the
1946 and 1947 Redskins, the first
champions - had clearly raised a
barn on the foundation set in place
by the teams of the “early years”.
And no doubt too, the dynasty thus
born still continues to this day.

Time will never dim the glory of the
Neshaminy Redskins
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