Thursday, June 27, 2013

Two notes about the 15th Alabama


          The hand-scribbled note and pre-printed memorial sheet are among the heart-wrenching items you sometimes see at a National Military Park like the one here in Gettysburg.

          This week, with the crowds growing ever larger in advance of the looming 150th anniversary commemoration of the Battle of Gettysburg, more are likely to pop up. You have to be careful; these things can sneak up on you. Were this one a snake, I’d be dead.

          I had decided not to return to the 20th Maine area on Little Round Top because I am unhappy with the paved walking paths the National Park Service (I assume it was the NPS) installed in the area. But, while visiting General Warren on Little Round Top, I decided to return to the 20th’s area anyway.

          The two notes, which you can see here, sat side-by-side.  I admit to moving a
stone away from the printed list of names so as to include the final name in the image. I then rolled the stone back to keep the thing standing.

          It was hard to photograph the notes in a way that shows where the notes stood when I saw them, so all I could do was shoot the goofy image you see that includes the 20th Maine Regiment’s marker. The image also includes the idiotic paved path recently installed.

        The first note says 15TH ALABAMA NEEDS A MONUMENT.
 
         It so happens that I agree the 15th Alabama should have a marker near the 20th. We are not likely to see one erected. Remember Elder’s Rule regarding National Military Parks: Battle winners get to locate and install the markers, not to mention determine the wording for the markers in National Military Parks. Losers are allowed to visit National Military Parks.

          At one time, there might have been a marker installed for the 15th. William
Notes below center,
20th Maine monument
upper left-center.
Oates, who commanded the 15th at Gettysburg, was the Governor of Alabama at the same time that J.L. Chamberlain, who commanded the 20th at Gettysburg, was the governor of Maine. Oates inquired of Chamberlain whether the Maine man would support the idea of some sort of memorial for the 15th.

          As I understand the story, Chamberlain initially supported the idea until the matter of placement came up. Oates wanted to place the memorial on the location where Oates recalled his beloved brother was felled in the close fighting for the left flank of the 20th Maine and, indeed, the entire Army of the Potomac on July 2, 1863. Oates described the location.

          Chamberlain, the governor of Maine, disagreed with the idea that the younger Oates advanced as far as the elder Oates, by then the governor of Alabama, believed. The men never came to an agreement and the matter died. In essence, two politicians agreed on something but two old soldiers did not.

          In the spirit of, uh, whatever, your loyal blogger did a very brief check on the Alabama soldiers listed on the pre-printed list shown in the photograph.

          John Robert Woodham did serve in Company H of the 15th. Born in South Carolina, he was married when he enlisted in the Confederate Army July 3 of 1861. He is listed as severely wounded and captured at Gettysburg. He eventually returned to the 15th.

          Cornelius Vertilus Atkinson served in Company E of the 15th. Born in Georgia, Atkinson was a farmer when he enlisted at age 16. He was captured at Gettysburg. He remained a POW until the end of the war.

          Manly Scott Anderson was born in South Carolina and was an 18-year-old farmer when he enlisted at 18. A member of Company K, he was captured on July 5th, during the Army of Northern Virginia’s retreat from Gettysburg.

          Carnes Pattillo Anderson enlisted at Newton, Alabama on August 21, 1862 and served in Company K.

          William Harris was an unmarried farmer living in Daleville, Alabama when he enlisted at age 21. A member of Company K, he was killed at Chickamauga in September of the same year.
 
          Thanks for reading.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

A man, a battlefield and time to see it


Across the valley in front of this cannon is the Lutheran Seminary, which
you can see by looking for the steeple-like structure in the center of the image.
               
          Today was a busy day on the battlefield here at Gettysburg, two shifts with time off in the middle to avoid the worst of the heat. There was a big storm here last night, a real windbag that knocked down trees and at least one monument in the battlefield park. We did not notice much of the storm in our hotel room, except for two momentary power losses.

          Out the door at 7:30 this morning and off to the location of the big Peace Monument on Oak Hill. This was really the kickoff area for the heavy fighting on July 1, 1863. I was there earlier this week but I spent time by myself today with a map and the Nikon, not to mention the compass my son and daughter gave me some years back.

          From where I stood today you can see a valley to your left, where one
Monument to Iron
Brigade near
Willoughby Run.
Confederate force rolled into the fight that morning. You look to your right to see where another group of Confeds headed toward the fight. Looking more or less straight ahead shows you where the Federal army intercepted those forces.

          If you use the Lutheran Seminary for an aiming point, you can see the direction the Confeds where headed. The Union guys actually headed there first, but they were retreating and couldn’t take the time to enjoy the view.

          I drove down to the railroad cut, where a lot of soldiers on both sides lost their lives. I was following a map and some notes I had taken during an earlier tour and, since I have a few hundred frames shot inside the cut, I did not shoot there today.

Willoughby Run #1.
          Eventually I made it over to the Willoughby Run area where I watched very carefully for poison ivy, poison oak and poison snakes. Seeing none, I shot a few images of the Run. I was not sure which I liked best and I have included two for you readers to observe and rate. I also paused to record the monument to the Iron Brigade as seen here.

          I made several other stops without recording images, as I have shot those
Willoughby Run #2.
areas on previous visits and today was mostly about the history.

          This afternoon was mostly about recording a sunset image. I decided to try using the monument to the 72nd Pennsylvania Infantry, which faces mostly West along the famed Cemetery Ridge section of the park.

          The monument had been through a tough night. It was knocked from its perch by the high winds. The amazing National Park Service staff was on the ball and a crane lifted the heavy statue off the ground and back up in the air early in the day.

          I tried to hide the fact that the rifle the soldier holds was bent when the statue
Bent rifle #1.
crashed to the ground overnight, but you can notice it if you really try.

          I’ve been coming to Gettysburg for five years and tonight’s conditions were the best I’ve seen at sundown. I used my new tripod (a gift from Mrs. Leeway), my monopod (which I call my pogo stick) and two lenses during the three hours I was on station.

It turns out that, in Pennsylvania, when you see dark clouds heading for the western sky in order to give you a chance for nice sunset images, the clouds frequently drop raindrops on your head as a sort of revenge for withholding a share of the royalties from the big money earned from the photo shoot.

I will admit to sitting in the car during the rain shower, but that was mostly to
Bent rifle #2.
 protect the photo equipment. The shower was that oddest of things, a warm rain.

I’ve included three images of the monument to the 72nd here. They are all fun and slightly different.

While shooting these sure-to-be award winning photographs, I was joined by another photog and we chatted as we moved around the area. I mentioned my years as an assistant photography instructor and he asked, “Well, are we doing this right?”

I replied, “I said I was an assistant instructor,” and he laughed. Clearly, it was my line of the day.
Bent rifle #3.

Tomorrow calls for a visit to the Visitor Center bookstore, a drive down Seminary Ridge and, eventually, some time on Little Round Top with General Warren. My Nikon and I visit the General anytime we are in Gettysburg.

I visited the 20th Maine portion of Little Round Top last week and I was angered by the addition of asphalt to that area. I wrote an angry blog about the asphalt addition, which I eventually deleted. I’ll spend my time elsewhere on LRT in the future.
 
           I hope you enjoy these images. Thanks for reading.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Walking the walk and hearing the talk


                The Civil War Institute at Gettysburg College offers an opportunity to immerse yourself into the Civil War for five days, a chance to really commit to the study of the era. If you enjoy history, particularly the history of the Civil War, this is a grand chance to learn.

          One of the events on Saturday was a walk of the distance between the
A monument along Cemetery Ridge.
Confederate positions on Seminary Ridge toward the Union positions on Cemetery Ridge along the path of a unit involved in Pickett’s Charge. We walked with experts in the field (sorry for the pun) who stopped us at various locations along the way to explain what was happening at each point in the Charge.

          This was an extraordinary event for your loyal blogger. The walk along the path was not a new experience and the story is a familiar one, but the addition of the mini lectures made the evening walk unique.

          We walked from the Virginia Memorial statue to the Bloody Angle and the Copse of Trees. It’s about a mile from Ridge to Ridge and the undulating terrain was a little bit of a test for irregular walkers.

          When you turn to your right, see Little Round Top in the distance and understand that the Union artillery troops up there fired at the Confederates with terrific effect during the Charge, you suddenly get a new feel for the difficulty the Confederate infantry faced that day.

          If you go to Little Round Top and look in the distance, you can see the same area where we walked last night. But without a large group of people walking toward the Union position, there is a disconnect from what the Union artillerymen saw and felt. Walking across the fields and looking at Little Round Top, where those Union men had their artillery pieces working well on July 3, 1863, you get a very different feeling. You understand the feeling of being a target.

          Five years ago, when this writer visited Gettysburg for the first time, I walked the same approximate pathway twice (once in the wrong direction in order to get to the starting point and then back with the correct bearing). When I returned to the Visitors Center, where my wife and daughter were soaking up the air conditioning, I told them, “I know what they did. I don’t know how or why they did it.”

          Since then, this blogger has read several books on the subject. I have attended lectures and talked to experts.

          And I still don’t know how those Confederate soldiers got as far as they did before the Charge failed in the face of a determined Union defense.

          Why do we study history? To answer that question.

          Thanks for reading.

 

Friday, June 21, 2013

Images from a restless Nikon


          A few hours before the start of this year’s Civil War Institute, your loyal blogger
Back lighting provides a nice image.
took to the battlefield with a camera, a tripod and a dream.

          The camera was the trusty Nikon D90 DSLR, just a terrific platform. The tripod was the nifty 58-inch, dual-bubble gizmo my wife bought the night before for just such contingencies.

          The dream was to get a decent image.

          The first two shots in this sure-to-be award-winning collection come from the Devils Den area of the battlefield, the memorial to the 4th New York Battery that served the Union cause so well during the second day of the battle of Gettysburg, July 2, 1863.

          There are a lot of possibilities with this statue, but this was a morning shoot and the backlight shot simply instructed the photographer to forget everything else on the morning’s list and begin working right there.

       
The business end of the canon provides
a nice addition to the image here.
  
Backlight images are fun to produce and this one works very well because the sun is obviously behind the subject and the background is clear.

          Another image from the same area shows an attempt to get creative, using the barrel of a cannon to help frame the statue. Right, re-read the previous sentence. This was an attempt to be creative, not a promise to be creative.

          The next two images show two views of one of the more popular stops for this particular photographer: The memorial to the Andrew Sharpshooters on the Loop near the Rose Farm.

The Andrew Sharpshooters.
          The first image is a generic view. The second image is from in front of the monument. Take a look at the nice detail on this monument and the placement within the trees. This is a superior location and your loyal blogger has many hundreds of
Note the damage to the neck area. The
National Park Service has a group of
dedicated men and women who spend
their time repairing cases like this.
images of the monument.

          The last image in this collection shows a position marker neat the crest of Culp’s Hill. The marker details the position of the 60th New York regiment on the side of the hill.

          The positioning leads me to believe the Federal breastworks that were put up to help stop the charging Confederates may have been lodged in this general area. A little investigation is in order next week be accurate on that suggestion.

          Either way, the setting is very nice.

          Getting back up the slope was a challenge, but life never promised to be easy.
         
          Thanks for reading.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

CWI time: Gettysburg bound


          The 2013 Civil War Institute begins Friday at Gettysburg College and this year’s conference will be very special. This year’s CWI begins less than two weeks before the beginning of the 150th anniversary of the battle of Gettysburg.

          This year’s CWI will cover the entire year of 1863 but it will include a special concentration on the fight at Gettysburg.

          Some of the top Civil War scholars of the day will speak at the 2013 CWI. They
Right flank marker for the 16th
Michigan regiment on Little
Round Top.
include Gary Gallagher, Peter Carmichael and Carol Reardon. Conference attendees have the opportunity for US Army Staff Rides on the battlefield at Gettysburg and at Chancellorsville. There are guided walks of Pickett’s Charge and other locations at Gettysburg.

          Attending the CWI is an extraordinary experience. You can meet and interact with the foremost experts on the subject. You are thrown together with attendees who share your interest in the war and the war’s era and you end up making friends with folks from all walks of life.

          I typically fill a legal-sized notebook with notes and thoughts gathered during the CWI. While I spend much of the year doing my own research, the CWI is a chance to gather a lot of information in a short time. If you came to your interest in the War late, the CWI represents a chance to accelerate your learning curve.

          The Civil War is a very complex subject. Learning what happened and why is an amazing journey through time and the CWI is one of the best parts of the journey. I recommend attending the event to anyone interested in history.

          Where else can you gather lots of different viewpoints from the top people in the field in a short period of time?

          You might consider getting ahead of the pack for next year’s conference and look at the CWI website online. The topic, I think, will be the war in 1864. If history is your interest, you’ll want to be there.
 
          Thanks for reading.

Friday, June 14, 2013

One word: Bristol


           There are race tracks and then there is the Bristol Motor Speedway. No matter how many tracks a race fan visits, an opportunity to visit BMS is a special thing.

          We had that chance yesterday. We’re here for the NHRA Thunder Valley Nationals at Bristol Dragway, which is on the same property as the famous half-mile oval.

          There simply isn’t any way to describe the place so that someone who has not been there can understand it. The track holds better than 155,000 fans, according to the track’s website. It looks really huge when you are one of two people who have the place to themselves.

          That was us.

          Here are two images from that visit. My wife stands in front of the grandstands
"Wow."
outside turn three with all the seats around her in the first image. The banking is evident in the distance (those are turns one and two behind Amy) but the eye-catcher is the immensity of the multiple-layer grandstands.

          If you know the sport, you understand what you are looking at. The great stock car drivers have raced and won there: Richard Petty, Little Joe Weatherly, Fireball Roberts, Junior Johnson, Ned Jarrett, David Pearson, Bobby and Donnie Allison, Cale Yarborough, Dale Earnhardt, Bill Elliott and lots of others.

          We stood there in awe of the history.

          We’ve both been to tracks all around the country and each of them left us with a memory. Other than the sheer size of the place, the memory we’ll take home from Bristol is the steepness of the banking.

          You’ve probably seen races at BMS on television but there isn’t any chance that you can understand the impact the banking of the corners makes upon your senses until you see the place in person. It’s simply awesome.

          And that’s when the joint is empty. When the grandstands are jammed full of people and the infield is crammed full of racecars, haulers, officials and the two pit roads, it must be difficult for the claustrophobic.

          The second image shows the back straightaway. A gate was open and we asked
The back straight.
permission to lean out the opening and snap this image.

          We owe thanks to the nice folks who allowed us to visit the empty facility.

          The dragway was full of busy people preparing that part of the facility for this weekend’s event. We visited the strip so Amy could see Thunder Valley and understand the name. It is easier for her when she has seen where my office will be for the weekend.

          Lot of nice people pointed us around here as well, understanding what we were doing.
 
          So, thanks to all the nice folks here at the two speedway properties and thanks to all of you for reading.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

The walking photographer


          The Goodyear Metro Park in Tallmadge, Ohio is a splendid example of what can be done and maintained in an urban area. The park includes ball fields, miles of walking trails, hills for sledding and a pond rife with waterfowl, fish and turtles. The trails allow the alert visitor to see squirrels, deer, rabbits and other wildlife roaming free.

          The park is a glorious place to be. On any given weekend day you are likely to see barbecuers, ball players, hikers, fishermen and women (the rule is that you have to release what you catch) and joggers

          Given all that, the park is a neat place to have a camera.

          As you walk the trails, the trees arch overhead to provide shade from the sun and cover from the rain. Those arching branches and spreading leafs darken the paths in some places and your loyal blogger set out recently to capture the tunnel effect those overhead coverings afford.

          The equipment, as usual, started with the Nikon D90 digital SLR camera. The decision about which lens to bring was complicated by the desire to travel light, as the photographic search would double as the day’s walk. Eventually the choice was the Nikor 70-300 mm. Although this lens is relatively slow (f4-5.6), the idea was to capture the effectiveness of the shade provided from above anyway and so, what the heck, that’s the lens that came along.

          Most of the images among the trees were shot at ISO 200, although a few were taken one setting lower. Most of the images were taken at f4 and at shutter speeds around 1/60 of a second.

          The first image here shows an area very early in the excursion. There is more light here than other places, but look at how the trees seem to reach for each other overhead to cover the pathways. The deeper you get into the park, the more the city seems to be closed out by the protective trees.

          Next is an image showing a gradual uphill slope peaking just ahead and then declining. But forget the path, look at the trees. The walker is closing in on the inner peace that is this park and the wild growth leads one onward.

          Alder Pond is home to the above-mentioned waterfowl. Here is a goose shaking
its head after picking under its wing for some reason, probably to clean itself of insects. The same goose prefers to stand on one for some reason.

          There was a heron in the pond (a heron herein?), as you can see. The lens was not big enough to really zero in on the floating bird, but sometimes you just do what you can. The reason for including the pond in the jaunt was the idea of capturing the reflection of the surrounding plant life on the still water’s surface.


The reflection of the plant life on the surface of Alder Pond.
The bird is floating in the center of this image.

          Free from the shady trees, most of the images at the pond were captured with shutter speeds at 1/125 of a second or better and at f11 or faster. The ISO remained at 200 while at the pond.

          The walking paths in the park include changes in elevation. While not overly challenging, these hills will get your legs in shape. The next challenge, photographically, will be to capture these jumps and drops in elevation.
   
          Thanks for reading.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

The Secretary of Defense


                David ‘Deacon’ Jones passed away this week. The words were hard to read this morning but they are even harder to write.

          For football fans of a certain age, particularly pro football fans from the Los Angeles area in the 1960s, there was no more recognizable name or player than Deacon Jones.

          There was no better player at his position, either. A defensive end, he was known as the Secretary of Defense. Jones was a member of the Rams’ Fearsome Foursome, possibly the greatest of all defensive lines.

          Jones may or may not have invented the term ‘quarterback sack,’ and he certainly did not invent the head slap. But he popularized the term and used the slap to terrorize offensive linemen all over the National Football League.

          If the offensive linemen were worried, how do you think the quarterbacks felt?

          Jones was a big man but he had an even bigger personality and today, roughly 40 years after he played his final pro game, it is that personality that we miss. He never tired of telling his stories and we never tired of hearing them.

          Somewhere, the late quarterbacks John Unitas and Don Meredith are huddling together and they are asking each other this question: “He can’t bother us here, can he?”

          Probably not, guys. But, just to be safe, I’d put on a Rams helmet if I were you.
 
          Thanks for reading. And Deacon, thanks for the memories.

Monday, June 3, 2013

Hall of Very Good voting announced

Readers: As a proud member of the PFRA, I am happy to present in this blog the 2013 class of the Hall of Very Good. Interested in more information on the PFRA? Scroll on down.

In the meantime, read on and enjoy the memories.


Media contact:

Ken Crippen

(215) 421-6994


 

PFRA ANNOUNCES THE HALL OF VERY GOOD CLASS OF 2013

 

WARMINSTER, Pennsylvania (June 3, 2013) – The Professional Football Researchers Association (PFRA) announced today the Hall of Very Good Class of 2013. The inductees are (in alphabetical order):

 

Erich Barnes

Position: Defensive Back

Teams: 1958-60 Chicago Bears, 1961-64 New York Giants, 1965-71 Cleveland Browns

 

Mike Curtis

Position: Linebacker

Teams: 1965-75 Baltimore Colts, 1976 Seattle Seahawks, 1977-78 Washington Redskins

 

Roman Gabriel

Position: Quarterback

Teams: 1962-72 Los Angeles Rams, 1973-77 Philadelphia Eagles

 

Cookie Gilchrist

Position: Fullback

Teams: 1962-64 Buffalo Bills, 1965 Denver Broncos, 1966 Miami Dolphins, 1967 Denver Broncos

 

Bob Kuechenberg

Position: Guard-Tackle

Teams: 1970-83 Miami Dolphins

 

Daryle Lamonica

Position: Quarterback

Teams: 1963-66 Buffalo Bills, 1967-74 Oakland Raiders

 

Lemar Parrish

Position: Defensive Back

Teams: 1970-77 Cincinnati Bengals, 1978-81 Washington Redskins, 1982 Buffalo Bills

 

Donnie Shell

Position: Defensive Back

Teams: 1974-87 Pittsburgh Steelers

 

Jim Tyrer

Position: Tackle

Teams: 1961-73 Dallas Texans/Kansas City Chiefs, 1974 Washington Redskins

 

 

Begun in 2003, the Hall of Very Good seeks to honor outstanding players and coaches who are not in the Hall of Fame.

 

The Professional Football Researchers Association was founded in 1979 as a 501(c)(3) educational organization dedicated to research into and the preservation of the history of pro football. The membership includes many of the foremost football historians and authors. The PFRA publishes a magazine, The Coffin Corner, six times each year. More information is available at www.profootballresearchers.org.

 

Previous Hall of Very Good enshrines are:

Class of 2012

Bill Bergey, 1969-80 – LB

Curley Culp, 1968-81 – DT

Kenny Easley, 1981-87 – DB

L.C. Greenwood, 1969-81 – DE

Lester Hayes, 1977-86 – DB

Jack Kemp, 1957-69 – QB

Eddie Meador, 1959-70 – DB

Ray Wietecha, 1953-62 – C

Swede Youngstrom, 1920-27 – G , T, E, C

 

Class of 2011

Ken Anderson, 1971-86 – QB

Cliff Branch, 1972-85 – WR

Bobby Dillon, 1952-59 – DB

Cliff Harris, 1970-79 – FS

Harold Jackson, 1968-83 – WR

Andy Russell, 1963-76 – LB

Lou Saban, 1960-65, 1967-76 – Head Coach

Tom Sestak, 1962-68 – DT

Jerry Smith, 1965-77 – TE

Class of 2010
Robert Brazile, 1975-84 – LB 
Ed Budde, 1963-76 – G
Don Coryell, 1972-86 – Head Coach
Ox Emerson, 1931-38 – G, C, LB
Chuck Foreman, 1973-80 – RB
Bob Gain, 1952, 1954-64 – T, MG, E
Riley Matheson, 1939-48 – G, LB
Jimmy Patton, 1955-66 – DB
Drew Pearson, 1973-83 – WR
Ken Riley, 1969-83 – CB

Class of 2009
Bruno Banducci, 1944-54 – G 
Harold Carmichael, 1971-84 – WR
Blanton Collier, Browns assistant coach 1946-53 and 1962 and head coach 1963-70
Boyd Dowler, 1959-69, 71 – WR
Claude Humphrey, 1968-74, 1976-81 – DE
Ken Kavanaugh, 1940-41, 1945-50 – E
Verne Lewellen, 1924-32 – HB
Walt Sweeney, 1963-75 – G

Class of 2008
Dick Barwegen, 1947-54 – G
Randy Gradishar, 1974-83 – LB
Bob Hoernschmeyer, 1946-55 – HB
Cecil Isbell, 1938-42 – TB
Buddy Parker, 1951-64 – Coach
Spec Sanders, 1946-50 – TB
Jim Ray Smith, 1956-64 – G
Billy Wilson, 1951-60 - WR

Class of 2007:
Frankie Albert, 1946-1952 - QB
Roger Brown, 1960-1969 - DT
Timmy Brown, 1959-1968 - RB
Marshall Goldberg, 1939-1948 - B
Jim Lee Howell, 1937-1947, 1954-1960 - E
Glenn Presnell, 1931-1936 - B
Dick Schafrath, 1959-1971 - T
Jake Scott, 1970-1978 - DB
Ed Sprinkle, 1944-1955 - DE
Tank Younger, 1949-1958 - HB-FB

Class of 2006:
Charley Conerly, 1948-1961 - QB
John Hadl, 1962-1977 - QB
Chuck Howley, 1958-1973 - LB
Alex Karras, 1958-1970 - DT
Eugene Lipscomb, 1953-1962 - DT
Kyle Rote, 1951-1961 - E-HB
Dick Stanfel, 1952-1958 - G
Otis Taylor, 1965-1975 - WR
Fuzzy Thurston, 1958-1967 - G
Deacon Dan Towler, 1950-1955 - FB

Class of 2005:
Maxie Baughan, 1960-1974 - LB
Jim Benton, 1938-1947 - E
Lavvie Dilweg, 1926-1934 - E
Pat Harder, 1946-1953 - FB
Floyd Little*, 1967-1975 - RB
Tommy Nobis, 1966-1976 - LB
Pete Retzlaff, 1956-1966 - HB-E
Tobin Rote, 1950-1966 - QB
Lou Rymkus, 1943, 1946-1951 - T
Del Shofner, 1957-1967 - E

Class of 2004:
Gene Brito, 1951-1960 - DE
John Brodie, 1957-1973 - QB
Jack Butler*, 1951-1959 - DB
Chris Hanburger*, 1965-1978 - LB
Bob Hayes*, 1965-1975 - SE-WR
Billy Howton, 1952-1963 - E
Jim Marshall, 1960-1979 - DE
Al Nesser, 1920-1928, 1931 - G
Dave Robinson, 1963-1974 - LB
Duke Slater, 1922-1931 - T

Class of 2003:
Gino Cappelletti, 1960-1970 - E-K
Carl Eller*, 1964-1979 - DE
Pat Fischer, 1961-1977 - DB
Benny Friedman*, 1927-1934 - TB
Gene Hickerson*, 1958-1973 - G
Jerry Kramer, 1958-1968 - G
Johnny Robinson, 1960-1971 - DB
Mac Speedie, 1946-1952 - E
Mick Tingelhoff, 1962-1978 - C
Al Wistert, 1943-1951 - T

*Voted into the Professional Football Hall of Fame after induction into the Hall of Very Good.