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Springfield College Gymnastics Team Records

 Record Group — Container: RG 162 All boxes
Identifier: RG-162

Collection Scope and Contents

Materials in this collection include newspaper clippings, magazine articles, news releases, manuscripts, scripts (including notecards), printed materials, correspondence, tickets, artwork, posters, memorandums, newsletters, notes, flyers, brochures, programs, schedules and rosters from performances, photographic prints, slides, negatives, film (16mm and various video formats), VHS videos, uniforms and other clothing and memorabilia having to do with the Springfield College Men’s & Women’s Varsity Gymnastics teams, the Springfield College Exhibition Team, and the Springfield College annual Gymnastics Homeshow. Materials date from the 1890s into the 2010s, with the bulk of the materials coming from the 1960s to the early 2000s. There are many documents and manuscripts that talk about the history of the Springfield College Gymnastics Team. These include a thesis written in 1922 by Arthur F. Schaefer, letters and materials written by Gymnastics Head Coach Frank Wolcott, and a 1971 history called the “Joy of Effort”. The history of the Gymnastics Exhibition Team and the Homeshow is told in a booklet that was created for the 100th annual Homeshow in 2009. Of special import to the history of Gymnastics are the published manuscripts titled “Roots of Gymnastics, 3rd edition” written by International Gymnastics Hall of Fame curator, A. Bruce Frederick.

Materials regarding the Men’s Varsity Gymnastics team go all the way back to the start of the program in 1904 and continue through the 2000s. The bulk of the material falls from 1960 through 2015. Statistics and individual/team match scores or results make up the majority of materials within this series. These include packets of scores for the gymnasts & teams who participated in major championship matches such as the EIGL (Eastern Intercollegiate Gymnastics League), NCAA, USAG (USA Gymnastics), New England Championships, and ECAC (Eastern College Athletic Conference). There are also many programs and brochures for championships and multiple team meets. Other documents include photographic prints and slides of team photographs, individual gymnasts, coaches, and action shots (both staged and not-staged) taken from meets and practices starting in 1904. Of interest, are photographs of Tim Daggett, 1984 Gold Medalist from Springfield, Massachusetts. There are also some 16mm films and VHS video tapes. Most of the VHS tapes contain films from championship competitions beginning in the early 1970s through the late 1980s.

Materials with the Women’s Varsity team begin with the first full entering class of Women at Springfield College in 1951 and continue through the late 2010s, with the bulk of the materials beginning around 1968. Most of the materials are team rosters, team or meet statistics, individual statistics, overall team records, and information on the championships for the EAIAW (Eastern Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women) conference, DGWS (Division for Girls’ and Women’s Sport), AIAW (Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women), the ECAC (Eastern College Athletic Conference) conference, the NCAAA (including the USFG championships, USA Gymnastics championships, and NCGA championships). Photographs include team photos, individual gymnastics, and action shots (both staged and not staged) taken from meets and practices from around 1974-1975 school year through the modern era. Most of the films are of competitions or dual matches, but there are also many of the championship matches Springfield College participated in over the years. Of importance is a film of the first DGWS Women’s Collegiate Championships in 1969 that was won by Springfield College. Finally, there are also various memorabilia, posters, and trophies, mostly from various championships participated in by Springfield College.

Within the Springfield College Exhibition team materials, including tour performances and the annual Homeshow, materials start in the 1920s and continue through the 2010s. Photographs within the series go all the way back to the 1930s, with the bulk coming from the 1960s onward. Much of the undated photographs have been divided by the type of activity, including Tableaux, clowns, dancing, triple and double balance teams, pyramid building, stacking of gymnasts, performances with parachutes and trampolines, and all the official gymnastics events. In addition to scenes from the exhibitions, photographs include some behind the scene shots and group photos. There are two series of photographs that depict the Exhibition Team during their tours. Additionally, there are photographs from the 1965 World’s Fair performances at Shea Stadium and photographs of Olympic Gold Medalist Jeff Blatnik and Tim Daggett during the 100th anniversary celebration performance in 1984. Most of the films are of the Springfield College Homeshow beginning in the late 1970s. Of interest are also a few films of exhibitions and special performances, including a 1979 ESPN performance, 2002 Basketball Hall of Fame performance, and an undated Fleet Center performance. Of importance are various scripts for the program, including note cards with changes made by MC of the shows Art Linkletter. Finally, there are materials from other exhibition performances, including at the 1965 World’s Fair, and the 1966 Montreal Expo. These exist alongside posters, flyers, schedules, memorabilia, and planning documents on the exhibition team tours.

Dates

  • Creation: 1890-2018
  • Creation: Majority of material found within 1960-2010

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Unrestricted, except where noted. Please check Series and Sub-series note for restricted materials. At the time of processing, only the following folder was restricted:

Series 3: Women’s Gymnastics Team, Sub-series a: Miscellaneous, Box 2, Folder 10: 1970-1971: Correspondence (between family and school)

Conditions Governing Use

Rights status not fully evaluated.

Read our full copyright statement.

Historical Note

The early history of gymnastics at Springfield College goes all the way back to 1891 when Dr. Henry F. Kallenberg, an expert gymnast in the German tradition of the Turnvereins, arranged a competitive gymnastic meet for his athletes with the 23rd St. YMCA Leaders Corps in New York City. Gymnasts who participated included James Naismith, the creator of basketball, Amos Alonzo Stagg, Luther Halsey Gulick, and Frank Seerley. In 1904, John H. Scott (class of 1904) was elected the first captain and manager of the exhibition team, formally beginning the start of the Springfield College gymnastics team. That year they scheduled visits in Springfield, Holyoke, Pittsfield and Windsor Locks.

Information mostly retrieved from:

The Joy of Effort: The Story of Gymnastics at Springfield College

100 Years of Gymnastics Exhibitions

Springfield College Athletic Department Gymnastics Team Website

- Written by Shelby Redman, Spring 2016 with revisions and additions by Jeffrey Monseau in Spring 2018

Exhibition/Homeshow History

August E. Metzdorf (class of 1905) was named as the team's leader in the 1904-1905 school year. He was responsible for the organization of the first “circus” or Homeshow which took place in May of 1905. Always a tradition to describe the gymnastics activity being performed, the Springfield College Gymnastics team exhibitions had more of a show like feel when preforming on the road for others. They would recreate this atmosphere when, once a year, they returned “home” and put on a show for the college community, a tradition that continues throughout the history of the Springfield College Gymnastics team.

Perhaps the most famous exhibition team tour was in 1925 when the team performed twenty-six exhibitions in the USA and ten in Mexico. The presidents from both countries honored the team with personal receptions in their respective capitals. The team also performed at many special functions including in July of 1965, when the exhibition team was invited to put on an exhibition in the United States Pavilion at the New York World's Fair. They also performed an exhibition at Shea Stadium, home of the Mets, before fifty thousand fans during the break of a double-header between the Mets and the Cincinnati Reds.

In 1980, the last exhibition team tour took place. After this tour, a moratorium was placed on both the Exhibition Team tour and its annual Homeshow. When finally lifted in 1982, only the Homeshow continued; the days of touring were over. The last major change to the exhibition performances, came in 2005, when an NCAA Division III rule changed to reduce the amount of time athletes could train as a team. Due to the rule, participants in the Homeshow now had to be enrolled in one of four academic courses designed to engage them in various aspects of the show's production; performance, marketing, technical staging, and costuming/choreography.

Information mostly retrieved from:

The Joy of Effort: The Story of Gymnastics at Springfield College

100 Years of Gymnastics Exhibitions

Springfield College Athletic Department Gymnastics Team Website

- Written by Shelby Redman, Spring 2016 with revisions and additions by Jeffrey Monseau in Spring 2018

Men’s Varsity Gymnastics History

The first full-time Varsity Men’s Gymnastics coach was Louis C. Schroeder (class of 1912). He was appointed in 1915. Schroeder was succeeded five years later, in 1921, by Leslie J. Judd; a position he held until 1956. Judd (class of 1921) was a member of the team prior to and immediately following World War I. Judd is widely considered a father of modern Gymnastics. Under his leadership, the varsity gymnastics team attained international fame. In fact, just prior to World War II, the Springfield gymnastic team won the New England AAU Gymnastic Championship eight time (after World War II much of the teams’ collegiate competition ended until Coach Wolcott restarted it in 1956). A true innovator, Judd used dance; including Morris dances, sword dances, and various kinds of national dances from Russia, Spain, the Philippines, and Hungary; numerous types of team drills such as glittering wands, fundamentals of fencing, judo, balancing trios, Indian club swinging, clown acts, among rigorous gymnastics routines in their exhibition performances. Perhaps the greatest contribution Coach Judd made to the team was the world-famous Living Statuary of Youth or the Tableaux. The first tableaux was performed in 1934 in connection with Commencement Weekend and the College’s annual canoe carnival.

In 1955, Frank Wolcott (class of 1952) began coaching the men’s gymnastics team. Coach Wolcott went on to coach until 1981, finishing his coaching career with an overall record of 94 wins and 52 losses, a winning percentage of .644. While a student at Springfield College, Wolcott was captain of the Springfield College gymnastics team and a two-time New England champion on the pommel horse and flying rings. During Wolcott’s time at Springfield college, his men’s gymnastics teams placed in the top four at the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Nationals eleven times and won eight individual national titles, sixty-two All-American Awards, five New England Team Championships which was then discontinued with fifteen individual even championships, two Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference Gymnastic Team Championships (with eight individual champions), nine Eastern League Titles, and in 1977 won the NCAA National Men’s Gymnastics Team Championship.

Bob Cargill followed up Wolcott, and coached the team for 1 season from 1981-1982. After coach Cargill, Stephen E. Posner, an All-American Gymnast from the University of California at Berkeley, was the head coach. He coached the team from 1982 to 2017. Under Posner's direction during his 34 years as head coach (during the 1990-1991 season, Eric Weiskopf took over as head coach), the Springfield College men's gymnastics program produced 171 All-America honors, 23 National Champions, and won three-consecutive USA Collegiate Gymnastics (USAG) Championship from 1991-1993. Some of the gymnasts included Jeff Coelho, Rick Hoag, Ron Spinelle, James Mylnarski, Ty Evans, Jimmy Pezzino, and Ryan Ponce. In 1995, Rick Hoag was selected to represent Puerto Rico in the World Championships held in Japan. In 2017, coach Posner was replaced by Matt Davis.

Information mostly retrieved from:

The Joy of Effort: The Story of Gymnastics at Springfield College

100 Years of Gymnastics Exhibitions

Springfield College Athletic Department Gymnastics Team Website

- Written by Shelby Redman, Spring 2016 with revisions and additions by Jeffrey Monseau in Spring 2018

Women’s Varsity Gymnastics History

It was not long after Springfield College became co-educational in 1951 that Leslie Judd invited female gymnasts to perform at the Homeshow and with the exhibition team. In 1954, Leslie Judd and Ruth Evans included women on the parallel bars and trampoline routines. And in 1956, Betty Weisner founded the women’s gymnastics club, an exhibition team that held its own shows and performed as part of Home Show. Finally, with Frank Wolcott and Betty Wiesner '58 setting the pace, in 1958 a small group of girls become a part of the varsity exhibition team. However, they were given the privilege of performing at Winter Homecoming only. The girls became a part of the traveling exhibition team in 1962 under the coaching of Diane Potter. The honor of being the first woman captain of a Springfield College varsity exhibition team belongs to Katie (Wallace) Tetreault, of the Class of 1963.

Women’s gymnastics became an intercollegiate team in the 1963-64 school year, and was coached by Diane Potter until 1968. Two members of that inaugural team made an impact on the greater world of American gymnastics: Linda Metheny won four medals for Team USA at the 1963 Pan-American Games and Kathy Corrigan competed with the 1964 Olympic team at the Tokyo Games. Corrigan went on to become the first female inductee in the Springfield College Athletic Hall of Fame.

Arguably, some of the team’s greatest successes came under Mimi Murray, who transitioned from assistant to head coach in 1968. In her first year, the team went 7-0 and hosted and won the first National College Women’s Championship. Murray would coach the team until 1974, amassing a 37-0 record, and was named coach of Team USA for the World Games in Moscow and the USA Women’s Gymnastics Coach of the Year by Champion Athletic Company.

After a series of head coaches in the late seventies, Cheryl Raymond took over the reins in 1980 and coached to 2015, amassing a 187-244 coaching record. One of the highlights of her career was the 1996 NCGA Championship Team that won with a team score of 143.525. In addition to her coaching duties, Raymond has served meet director for several national meets, including the 2000 NCGA Championship and the 1988, 1992, and 1993 USGF National Collegiate Championships. She was also one of the original members of the NCAA Women's Gymnastics Committee. In 2016, Jenn Najuch took over as head coach of the Women’s Varsity Gymnastics Team.

Information mostly retrieved from:

The Joy of Effort: The Story of Gymnastics at Springfield College

100 Years of Gymnastics Exhibitions

Springfield College Athletic Department Gymnastics Team Website

- Written by Shelby Redman, Spring 2016 with revisions and additions by Jeffrey Monseau in Spring 2018

Chronology

1891: First SC competitive gymnastics exhibition meet with the New York 23rd Street YMCA. James Naismith, Luther Gulick, Amos Alonzo Stagg and Frank Seerley were gymnasts.

1904: Official start of Gymnastics team, John H. Scott first captain and manager. Beginning of “Homeshow.”

1915: First full-time coach, Louis C. Schroeder '12, appointed.

1921: Leslie Judd appointed head coach (1921-1955).

1925: Exhibition team performed twenty-six exhibitions in the USA and ten in Mexico. The presidents from both countries honored the team with personal receptions.

1934: Leslie Judd presents the tableaux for the first time at the College’s annual canoe carnival.

1937: In February 1937, the gymnastic exhibition team performed at Madison Square Garden between a doubleheader basketball game.

1939: January 1939 when Life Magazine published a five-page feature story about Springfield College and the tableaux.

1951: Women enter Springfield College and start to perform with the exhibition team

1954: Dr. Ruth Evans, Director of Women’s PE, worked with Coach Leslie Judd request to include women performing on parallel bars and trampoline in Gymnastics exhibitions.

1955: Frank Wolcott (1955-1981; 94-52) begins coaching the Men’s Varsity Gymnastics team.

1956: New women’s gymnastics club begins under direction of Betty Wiesner

1956: Men’s Gymnastics Team re-enters collegiate competition after hiatus starting during World War II.

1963: Diane Potter (1963- 1968; 12-2) appointed 1st coach of Women’s Varsity Gymnastics Team. Women’s team performs in all exhibitions, home and away.

1963: Coach Frank Wolcott premiers the use of the parachute as a gymnastics act.

1964: SC gymnast, Kathy Corrigan ’66, member of the 1964 USA Olympic Team, as well as Pan America’s, drew female gymnasts to the college and fans to the show

1965: The gymnastic exhibition team appeared in the United States Pavilion at the World’s fair.

1968: Mimi Murray (1968-1974; 37-0) takes over as new head coach of Women’s Varsity Gymnastics Team.

1969: The first annual DGWS National Intercollegiate Gymnastics Championship held at Springfield College. SC become first National Champions with a score of 98.45.

1971: Women’s Varsity Gymnastics Team - National Championship Team

1972: Women’s Varsity Gymnastics Team - National Championship Team

1974: Inez Rovengo (1974-1975; 5-1) takes over as head coach of Women’s Varsity Gymnastics Team.

1975: Carolynn Cross (1975-1976; 4-3) takes over as head coach of Women’s Varsity Gymnastics Team.

1976: Leslie Henry (1976-1978; 7-8) takes over as head coach of Women’s Varsity Gymnastics Team.

1977: Men’s Gymnastics Team - NCAA Division II National Champions.

1979: Terry Pasqua (1979-1980; 13-12) takes over as head coach of Women’s Varsity Gymnastics Team.

1980: Cheryl Raymond (1980-2015; 187-244) takes over as head coach of Women’s Varsity Gymnastics Team.

1980: Last Gymnastics Exhibition Team tour.

1981: Bob Cargill (1981-1982; 4-5) coaches Men’s Gymnastics Team.

1982: Steve Posner (1982-2017 except 1990-1991; 143-227) becomes the Men’s Gymnastics Team head coach.

1984: 100th birthday of Springfield College and 75 years of the exhibition show performed at the Springfield Civic Center. This Frank Wolcott’s final show as director.

1990: Eric Weiskopf coach (1990-1991; 3-7) coaches Men’s Gymnastics Team.

1991: Men’s Gymnastics Team - USAG National Championship Team.

1992: Men’s Gymnastics Team - USAG National Championship Team.

1992: First-year women were included in tableaux performances.

1993: Men’s Gymnastics Team - USAG National Championship Team.

1996: Women’s Gymnastics Team - NCGA Championship Team.

2005: NCAA Division III rules changed to reduce the amount of time athletes could train as a team. Participants in the Homeshow are now enrolled in academic courses designed to engage them in various aspects of the show's production.

2009: 100th annual Homeshow.

2016: Jenn Najuch (2016- ) takes over as Women’s Varsity Gymnastics Team.

2017: Matt Davis (2017- ) takes over as head coach of Men’s Varsity Gymnastics Team.

Information mostly retrieved from:

The Joy of Effort: The Story of Gymnastics at Springfield College

100 Years of Gymnastics Exhibitions

Springfield College Athletic Department Gymnastics Team Website

- Written by Shelby Redman, Spring 2016 with revisions and additions by Jeffrey Monseau in Spring 2018

Extent

74 Linear Feet (126 boxes)

Main collection: 35 Linear Feet (84 boxes)

Oversized materials: 9 Linear Feet

Memorabilia: 12 Linear Feet (30 boxes)

Audiovisual: 18 Linear Feet (12 boxes)

Language of Materials

English

Metadata Rights Declarations

Abstract

The early history of gymnastics at Springfield College goes all the way back to 1891 with a gym meet with the 23rd St. YMCA Leaders Corps in New York City. Dr. James Naismith, the creator of basketball, participated. The first exhibition Homeshow, an exhibition show that took place after the team put on shows in other communities around the Northeast, took place in May of 1905. The touring and the Homeshow is a tradition that continues throughout the history of the Springfield College Gymnastics team. The first full-time Varsity Men’s Gymnastics coach was Louis C. Schroeder (class of 1912), in 1915. Schroeder was succeeded five years later, in 1921, by Leslie J. Judd; a position he held until 1956. Judd is widely considered a father of modern Gymnastics. Under his leadership, the varsity gymnastics team attained international fame. Perhaps the greatest contribution Coach Judd made to the team was the world-famous Living Statuary of Youth or the Tableaux. Women’s gymnastics became an intercollegiate team in the 1963-64 school year, and was coached by Diane Potter. Arguably, the team’s greatest successes came under Mimi Murray. In her first year, 1969, the team went 7-0 and hosted and won the first National College Women’s Championship.

Materials in this collection include newspaper clippings, magazine articles, news releases, manuscripts, scripts (including notecards), printed materials, correspondence, tickets, artwork, posters, memorandums, newsletters, notes, flyers, brochures, programs, schedules and rosters from performances, photographic prints, slides, negatives, film (16mm and various video formats), VHS videos, uniforms and other clothing and memorabilia having to do with the Springfield College Men’s & Women’s Varsity Gymnastics teams, the Springfield College Exhibition Team, and the Springfield College annual Gymnastics Homeshow. Materials date from the 1890s into the 2010s, with the bulk of the materials coming from the 1960s to the early 2000s.

Arrangement

Since materials came from different sources at different times, there is no original arrangement inherent in the collection.

The collection is organized into 4 series with sub-series:

Series 1: Combined Men’s and Women’s Materials

Sub-series 1a: Miscellaneous

Sub-series 1b: Photographs

Series 2: Men’s Team Materials

Sub-series 2a: Miscellaneous

Sub-series 2b: Programs and Brochures

Sub-series 2d: Photographs

Sub-series 2e: Audiovisual materials

Series 3: Women’s Team Materials

Sub-series 3a: Miscellaneous

Sub-series 3b: Programs and Brochures

Sub-series 3d: Photographs

Sub-series 3e: Audiovisual materials

Series 4: Homeshow/Exhibition Team Materials

Sub-series 4a: Miscellaneous

Sub-series 4b: Programs and Brochures

Sub-series 4d: Photographs

Sub-series 4e: Audiovisual materials

Note: All Athletic Collections have the same series and sub-series structure except for variations in Gymnastics Collections. Where an Athletic Team does not have materials in a series or sub-series, the series number or sub-series letter is skipped, allowing for continuity between all collections.

In the Gymnastics Collection, the following variants are used:

Series 1 has two sub-series only: Sub-series a: Miscellaneous and Sub-series b: photographs

Series 4: Homeshow/Exhibition team was added. Series 4 follows the standard Sub-series pattern of the Athletic Department Collections.

History of the Collection

There was no formal acquisition of the materials for this collection. The collection is artificially created. Materials were received from different places at different times.

Digitized Materials

Browse digitized materials from this collection. This collection is partially digitized.

Related Materials: Records Within Springfield College Collections

  1. For all materials digitized on Gymnastics within the Springfield College Archives and Special Collections
  2. RG110 – Springfield College General Building and Grounds Records
  3. RG127 – Judd Gymnasia Records
  4. RG135 - Physical Education Complex Records
  5. MS514 - Frank Wolcott Papers
  6. The Springfield Student
  7. Springfield College Alumni Magazines
  8. RG179 - SC Dancers and SC Exhibition Dancers Records
  9. Dr. Mimi Murray Records
  10. Leslie J. Judd Records
  11. Springfield College Marketing and Communication Records--Scrapbooks and News Clippings
  12. Springfield College General Athletic Department Records
  13. Springfield College faculty and staff newspapers and magazines (including communication, News Sheet, and Massasoit Monthly)
  14. Springfield College Faculty and Staff Files
  15. Springfield College Student Files
  16. See all other Springfield College Sport Team Records (RG153 through RG176)

Processing Information

Materials were minimally processed in 2010 and again in the spring of 2014 with the receipt of new materials from the Athletic Department. Duplicates were removed where found, and materials were minimally arranged and verified. All materials were rehoused and some basic preservation of materials was undertaken, such as putting photographs into plastic sleeves and separating newsprint and acidic papers. Original materials had no or very little original order; therefore, original order has not been maintained.

Title
Springfield College Gymnastics Team Records
Status
Completed
Author
Jeffrey Monseau
Date
2018-07
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Revision Statements

  • 2022-08: Transferring information from the original Word document to ArchivesSpace.

Repository Details

Part of the Springfield College Archives and Special Collections Repository

Contact:
Springfield College
Judd Gymnasia
263 Alden Street
Springfield Massachusetts 01109 U.S.A. US
413-748-3309