Little was born in Boston.[1] After his birth, his father changed his family name to "Little", translating the Italian family name, and moved his family to Leominster, Massachusetts, in 1896.[2] Little played football at Leominster High School, where he was the team captain in 1910, his senior season. The 1910 team, led by Little's stellar play, was Leominster's first undefeated football team.[3] Little went on to play one postgraduate season for the Worcester Academy Hilltoppers, in 1911. before returning to coach his alma mater, Leominster High School, for one season, in 1912.[4][5]
In 1924, Little accepted the post of head football coach at Georgetown and held the position until 1930, when he resigned to become head football coach at Columbia University. Little was the head coach at Columbia from 1930 to 1956. He was probably best known for two wins: the 1934 Rose Bowl when Columbia beat Stanford, 7–0, and a 21–20 win over Army in 1947 in which the Columbia Lions handed the Cadets their first loss since the 1943 season finale, snapping a 23-game undefeated streak. At Columbia, Little coached future Pro Football Hall of FamequarterbackSid Luckman and writer Jack Kerouac, who broke his leg playing in 1940. Other players he coached include Paul Governali, Lou Kusserow, Cliff Montgomery and Bill Swiacki.[6][7]
Personal life
Little was married to Loretta Donohue for 50 years. Following his 1956 retirement, they lived in Barnstable, Massachusetts and Delray Beach, Florida until her death in 1977.
Little died on May 28, 1979, at a nursing home in Delray Beach.[8]
^City of Boston, Birth Registrations, number 8583, December 6, 1891
^Deed, Worcester Northern District Registry of Deeds dated February 1, 1896 for a home at 296 Pleasant Street, Leominster purchased by Michael Little alias Michael Angelo Piccirilli
^"Given a Banquet". Leominster Enterprise. November 28, 1910.
^"Coach Engaged for High School Football Game". Fitchburg Daily Sentinel. September 4, 1912.
^Bodanza, Mark C (2022). When the Lion Roared: How Lou Little Helped Shape College Football. Leominster, Massachusetts: North Hill Press. pp. 20, 21. ISBN9780997014471.
^"Hall of Fame, Lou Little". National Football Foundation & College Hall of Fame, Inc. Retrieved May 11, 2020.
^Oberweger, Alex (September 20, 2017). "Who Was Lou Little?". Columbia Athletics, Football. Columbia University. Retrieved May 11, 2020.