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  1. Illinois. Induction. 1951. Position: Halfback. Years: 1923-1925. Place of Birth: Forksville, PA. Date of Birth: Jun 13, 1903. Place of Death: Lake Wales, FL. Date of Death: Jan 28, 1991. Jersey Number: 77. Height: 5-11. Weight: 175. High School: Wheaton, IL (Wheaton HS)

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Red_GrangeRed Grange - Wikipedia

    In 1950, he was elected as a Republican to the Board of Trustees of University of the Illinois, on which he served from 1951 until 1955. His autobiography, The Red Grange Story, was first published in 1953. The book was written "as told to" Ira Morton, a syndicated newspaper columnist from Chicago.

  3. October 31, 1925, Grange runs 36 times, gains 363 yards and has two 65-yard touchdowns against Pennsylvania. He played only 20 games in college but had 31 touchdowns and 3,362 yards. Grange was born June 13, 1903.

  4. After his retirement from football, Grange became the first well-known athlete to become a successful radio and television broadcaster, with a career that spanned 25 years (1934–69). Grange was a charter member of both the College Football Hall of Fame (1951) and the Pro Football Hall of Fame (1963). John M. Carroll.

  5. Carrera en la NFL. Foto de Grange de 1925. Firmó para Chicago en la NFL un día después de su último juego como colegial; George Halas accedió a contratarlo para una gira de 19 juegos en la cual Grange ganó un salario total de $100,000 dólares, durante una época en la cual los salarios eran de menos de $100/por juego.

  6. Red Grange. Halfback. Inducted 1951. Date of Birth. 6/13/1903. Birthplace. Forksville, PA. School. University of Illinois (1923-1925) Bio. Harold "Red" Grange was the miracle man of the 1920s, picked for the all-century team, named the "Galloping Ghost" because no one could catch him.

  7. 24 de jul. de 2021 · Harold Edward “Red” Grange was born on June 13, 1903 in Forksville, Pennsylvania. Grange’s father, Lyle, was a lumber foreman and Grange’s mother died when he was five. For a while, the Granges’ lived with relatives until Lyle found work in Wheaton, Illinois as a police chief.