American football player
Fatty Lawrence
Born (1903-05-06 ) May 6, 1903Died August, 1976 (aged 73) Occupation(s) head of Nashville’s Water and Sewerage Services Department College football career Position Guard Class Graduate Height 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m) Weight 195 lb (88 kg) College Vanderbilt (1921–1924)High school Hume-Fogg
SIAA championship (1921)
SoCon championship (1922, 1923)
Robert Landy "Fatty" Lawrence (May 6, 1903 – August, 1976)[ 1] was a college football player who went on to become the superintendent of Nashville’s Water and Sewerage Services Department from 1932 to 1971;[ 2] [ 3] [ 4] namesake of the Robert L. Lawrence Jr., Filtration Plant. He was the father of United States Navy vice admiral William P. Lawrence and the grandfather of NASA astronaut Wendy Lawrence .
Vanderbilt University
Lawrence was a prominent guard for Dan McGugin 's Vanderbilt Commodores football team of Vanderbilt University from 1921 to 1924 .[ 5] He was a part of three conference titles.
1922
In the second week of play of 1922 against Henderson-Brown , Vanderbilt won 33 to 0. Lawrence recovered a fumble in the end zone for Vanderbilt's fourth touchdown.[ 6] Lawrence also intercepted a pass in the scoreless tie with Michigan .[ 7] He was mentioned as one of the players of the game in the 14 to 6 victory over Tennessee . The Nashville Banner said Lawrence had been "in there doing a man's job blocking a kick and tackling with the deadliness of a tiger unleashed in a cave of lions ."[ 8]
1924
He was selected All-Southern by his teammates.[ 9]
References
^ "Family Search" .
^ "Nashville > Water Services > About Us > History > Superintendents and Directors" .
^ Rob Simbeck (August 1, 1996). "One Soldier's Story" .
^ Robert L. Lawrence Jr. (1939). "Cross-Connection Elimination in Nashville" . Journal of the American Water Works Association . 31 (6): 977. doi :10.1002/j.1551-8833.1939.tb12834.x .
^ "Vanderbilt Will Lose Six Gridiron Stars" . Spartanburg Herald . December 8, 1924.
^ "Vandy Defeats Arkansas Team." The Macon Daily Telegraph 8 Oct. 1922: 8.
^ Sam S. Greene (October 15, 1922). "Michigan and Vanderbilt play to Scoreless Tie In Commodores' Stadium: Southerns Spring Surprise on Rivals" . Detroit Free Press . Archived from the original on January 4, 2013.
^ Russell, Fred, and Maxwell Edward Benson. Fifty Years of Vanderbilt Football . Nashville, TN, 1938, p. 40–41
^ Lawrence Perry (December 4, 1924). "Game's For The Sake" . Harrisburg Telegraph . p. 20. Retrieved March 7, 2015 – via Newspapers.com .
*selected national champion by Clyde Berryman
*selected national champion by Clyde Berryman