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Harry Franks
The Father of Neshaminy Football
It
was a time when giants first walked the
earth of a small town in Bucks County.
They had names like Faunce, Cloak,
Conroy, Cummings, Moronese, Cameron,
Stricker, Schuh, Covington, Fisher and
Rumsey. It was also a time when great
men named Petercuskie, Swartz, Allison,
Cordelli and others would descend on
that same community to forge steel out
of the bones, muscles and sinews of the
young men who became those titans.
It was a time when a senior high
school’s competence on the gridiron
would change from occasional displays of
greatness into season after season of
championships. It was a time when its
opponents would shift from neighborhood
rivals to regional powerhouses and a
schoolboy football dynasty would be
established that still flourishes to
this day.
It was the 1950s. It was the beginning
of the Golden Age of Neshaminy High
School football - a period that would
last for over two decades. And its grand
architect was a man whose powerful
shadow and dominant personality still
cover those who follow in his footsteps
and play in his stadium.
His name is Harry Franks. This is his
story.
Reading, Pennyslvania Builds the Man
Growing
up in Reading, Harry Franks came from a
large family of nine children. Despite
the “size” of the Franks’ household,
they were a close knit group that would
always be an important part of each
others lives. And with Franks’ Dad
involved in sports - including owning
the local minor league baseball club -
it was only natural that young Harry
would first find his way in the world as
an athlete himself. Excelling at
baseball and soccer in his sophomore
year at Wilson High (now Wilson West
Lawn), he looked ready to become a star;
however, household finances and a
national economy beyond his control
thrust more important obligations on the
young Franks. Accordingly, he left
school for work in the mills of Reading
after the tenth grade to help provide
for the family that was in need of his
help.
Then, as if a world economic situation
didn’t demand enough of him (and as was
the case with many men of his age at
that time), Uncle Sam also asked for his
help as World War II erupted into its
full fury. Answering the call, Franks
soon found himself in the Marine Corp
where he was to serve a four year hitch.
But the poor economy and global war
eventually ended and Franks then found
himself back home in Reading. Picking up
where he had left off - now at an
accelerated pace - Franks finished two
years of high school in just months.
With college studies and a career in
teaching on his mind, Franks went off to
East Stroudsburg State for the next few
years as he pursued a Bachelor of
Science in Education. And as an aside,
while earning his undergraduate degree,
Franks befriended a fellow ex-Marine
attending school, and playing football,
at “State” by the name of John
Petercuskie. It was a friendship that
would blossom and grow in more ways than
the two young men could possibly imagine
when they first met.
Maintaining
a full dance card, during college Franks
found time to work at the Ronson Lighter
Company in East Stroudsburg while also
serving as an electricians’ helper for
the Fred Waring Band and Choral Group
which was a centerpiece of the popular
culture of the area (Franks still helped
provide for his family and the two jobs
served that goal). In addition, Franks
spent Sundays playing semi-pro football
(his introduction to the sport) for a
number of “clubs” including the Glenside
Bulldogs, the Franklin Football Club,
Genzell’s Green Jackets and the VVVs.
Just as was the case with his new
acquaintance, Petercuskie, Franks was as
yet unaware of how the sport of football
would eventually play such a large part
of his life.
Meanwhile, with nary a spare moment
available to him, Franks’ time at East
Stroudsburg soon came to an end. Barely
pausing for a breath, he took a sales
job with the Curtis Publishing Company
of Reading while commuting to
Philadelphia and Temple University to
secure a Masters in Health and Physical
Education. Once again, time flew and by
1951 Franks had completed his schooling
and was ready for his calling as a
teacher and coach. Hearing of an opening
for a position in sports and teaching at
his high school alma mater, Wilson, he
applied for the job. One of the final
two men in the running, Franks was
passed over - fortunately for another
school district as would be revealed. In
fact, he quickly learned of that other
school in Lower Bucks by the name of
Neshaminy High that was looking for a
teacher and a junior varsity football
coach too. Bidding for both openings,
this time Franks landed the positions.
Also, although not yet known, 1951 would
come to be seen as the time when the
foundations for several of Franks’ most
enduring relationships were put in
place.
Langhorne and Neshaminy Welcome Franks
Arriving in Langhorne with all the shine
and promise of a newly minted silver
dollar, that first year at Neshaminy was
to prove to be prophetic for the now
Coach Franks. A machine shop fit, Franks
settled nicely into his teaching role
while he also directed his junior
varsity Redskins squad of that year to
an unblemished 7-0-0 record (which was a
sign of things to come for those ninth
graders as they would later prove in
1954, their senior year). And as if that
wasn’t enough, Coach Franks also spied
an attractive and charming, young music
teacher at Neshaminy by the name of Joan
Mattern. With fortune surely smiling on
him, Harry and Joan “hit it off” and Ms.
Mattern became Mrs. Franks the following
year.
Then
as if following a pattern, as 1952
rolled around another opportunity
presented itself to Franks as the head
football coaching position at a nearby
high school, Pennsbury, opened up for
applicants. Ironically, among those
competing for the job with Franks was
Jim Egli who was Neshaminy’s head coach
at that time. As it turned out, Egli was
hired for the job and with the Redskins
suddenly in need of a head man for its
varsity grid squad, Franks was moved up
to the position. With the stage now set,
the time had arrived for Franks to
fulfill his destiny as the man who would
be credited with building the Redskins
football program into what it is to this
day.
Starting with a clean sheet of paper,
Franks designed an offense from the
ground up modeled on the single wing as
then run by the Princeton Tigers (Franks
had developed a friendship with the
Tigers’ head man and after a few skull
sessions, the single wing would be
Neshaminy’s for the next 12 seasons).
Meanwhile, on the field Coach Franks
also started with a clean sheet of paper
as players were told that all positions
were open to the highest bidder. No
slouch as a conditioning master, by the
end of that first summer of two-a-day
practices just 19 candidates remained.
And what a group they were, for after
losing the opener to Ambler (call it
first-game jitters) the 1952 ‘Skins
reeled off 9 straight wins to close out
Franks’ first season at 9-1 (the best
Redskin season record up to that year).
Not missing a beat, that effort was
followed by the 1953 season which saw
the Tribe win their first 9 in a row
before Bensalem upset the Langhorne
boys, 7-6, (it was to be Bensalem’s last
win against the Redskins for some 20
years) as Franks’ charges posted their
second straight 9-1 record.
Hitting
their stride, next up was the 1954 club
- a team that would go down in the
annals of Neshaminy history as one of
its greatest. Paced by Errol Faunce, Don
Cameron, Earl “Shorty” Moronese and a
host of others, the Redskins of that
year would finish the season 10-0-0
while scoring 349 points and yielding
just 83 (the offensive output was a then
Lower Bucks record with that nearly 35
point a game average quite a feat in
those days of lower scoring teams). All
in all, Franks’ first three years saw
his clubs go 28-2.
Not resting on their laurels, over the
next 5 years (through 1959) Franks’
Redskins would continue to deliver on
the field as they fashioned a 41-8-2
record. Two standout seasons in that
group were the 9-0-1 1956 team and the
1959 group that was tagged just once as
they finished 10-1 (that one loss was to
the defending Pennsylvania state champs
Easton, 13-7, with Neshaminy giving up a
score - and the lead - with just seconds
to go on a “Hail Mary” pass play by the
Red Rovers). And so it wouldn’t be said
that the Franks coached clubs simply
overwhelmed the local competition, he
aggressively scheduled the toughest and
best high schools throughout eastern
Pennsylvania and New Jersey (no matter,
though, as Neshaminy’s dominance on the
gridiron was unquestioned).
Finally, with his transformation of
Neshaminy football complete, in 1960
Franks handed the reins to John
Petercuskie (whom he had brought onboard
as an assistant coach in 1954) and
retired with 8 straight LBC titles under
his belt. His accomplishments on the
field unchallenged, Franks’ final
overall record came in at 69-10-2 which,
to this day, is second only to
Petercuskie’s 59-1-5 record when
considered from a winning percentage
standpoint. And although his day-to-day
head coach responsibilities were behind
him, equally important tasks still
remained.
‘Skins Athletic Director and Maple Point
Following his last year as head coach of
the Redskins football team, Coach Franks
became Mr. Franks again as well as
Neshaminy’s Athletic Director and
Administrator of Co-Curricular
Activities too. Holding that position
until the mid-70s, he rode herd over
Neshaminy’s diverse and successful
athletic program and many of the schools
other activities (in fact, it was Franks
who had started Neshaminy’s long running
and still very popular “Gym Night”
student sports spectacular in the
mid-1950s).
Always
keeping his eye on the football squad’s
accomplishments, he was instrumental in
keeping the program at the top of its
form during his tenure as the AD.
Watching from the top spot, Franks had a
bird’s eye view of not only Petercuskie
but Pete Cordelli, Sr., Jack Swartz and
Pal Allison as they all had their
opportunity as the head coach of the
‘Skins as well (and they were all
Neshaminy coaches in the first place due
to Franks’ ability to spot talent on the
field and in the coaching box too as he
had brought them all into the program
during his tenure as the head man during
the 1950s). Supporting that thesis,
those four men had a combined coaching
record of 122-35-6 during the 15 years
they collectively bossed Neshaminy’s
grid clubs. That’s a winning percentage
(without the ties) of just about 80%.
Factoring in Franks’ 69-10-2 record,
simple math then reveals that his
contribution to the school is 23 years
of glory as demonstrated by the group’s
overall record of 191-45-8 (just about
81% to the good side over almost a
quarter-century).
Then in the mid-70s when the Neshaminy
brass decided two schools were needed to
serve the District and its growing
population, it was Franks that was given
the job of creating a brand new sports
program from a cornfield in the farm
area northeast of Langhorne. Thus it
came to pass that Franks would guide
Maple Point High School during it’s 8
years of life as he relied upon the same
philosophies that had brought
Neshaminy’s athletics to the top of the
heap. And as evidence he hadn’t lost his
Midas touch, his new football coach was
John Chaump who would not only forge a
winner out of the Cougar’s teams but
later - in the 1980s - it was Chaump
that helped resurrect the Redskin
football program after it had suffered a
few moribund years. In fact, Chaump’s
1988 ‘Skins team not only finished
11-0-0 (the third “perfect” team in the
school’s history) but that year’s club
participated in the first PIAA statewide
playoff. Chaump also remained active in
coaching until the mid-2000s as the
defensive coordinator for Head Coach
Mark Schmidt’s juggernaut clubs of the
new millennium - an exclamation point on
the influence wielded by Franks on the
Neshaminy program.
Constantly motivated, and believing in
“giving back” too, it should be pointed
out Franks also started and then headed
the Lower Southampton Recreation
Association from the mid-50s until 1963.
Considering the number of young Redskins
who grew up participating in that
program it’s no wonder that the football
teams - as well as many of Neshaminy’s
sports teams - were so dominant during
that time. And no slouch in the
classroom, Franks undertook advanced
studies in academia throughout his
career with course work at Temple and
Lehigh Universities as he secured
certificates in a number of areas
crucial to his chosen field of education
(in fact, Franks was within a whisker of
earning his doctorate before the time
constraints of his many endeavors
prevented taking some final credits).
The Imprint
If there is one man that might be
permanently wreathed with the title “Mr.
Redskin” it would be Harry Franks.
Taking the helm of a small club team
that had first played football less than
a quarter century before he arrived,
Franks quickly took the program to the
top of the class. Then along the way he
hired the men that would still be
exerting influence on the field over a
half-century later. Always the
innovator, and among so many other
things, Franks instituted the team’s
awards programs which honor each year’s
“best” players, built the new football
field in 1956 and then had the concrete
stands installed in 1960. Modifying its
uniforms to fit the times, he also
expanded the quality of the schools on
Neshaminy’s schedule while he was
instrumental in the creation of the LBC
Section I and II leagues in addition to
the East Penn League which later became
the Big 5. And perhaps most importantly,
it was Franks who penned and gave
Neshaminy High School those simple and
stirring words:
Time will never dim the glory of the
Neshaminy Redskins.
Finally
retiring in 1983 after providing over 30
years of unwavering and unselfish
service to the Redskin family, Franks’
contributions did not go without notice
when, in 1985, the Neshaminy School
District appropriately renamed its
athletic venue in his honor as Harry
E. Franks Stadium. Additionally,
Franks’ name was the first to be lauded
when he was included in the inaugural
class of the new Neshaminy High School
Football Hall of Fame that same year
too. And with time now serving as the
looking glass, it couldn’t be clearer
that the Neshaminy football program of
today is a direct result of the work,
vision and guidance of the man who
towers above all others as a giant among
Redskin giants - Harry E. Franks. |