Online Bet And Sports Betting Guide

Sports Betting Language
Football Hall of Fame Background
History of Football Hall of Fame
How to Find Football Hall of Fame
Football Hall of Fame 2003 Inductees 
History of Football
How to Play Football
All about Football Playing Field and Ball
Players On A Football Team
All About the Football Official
What A Football Official Does
How to Calculate a Quarterbacks Rating
How a Player Picks His Jersey Number
How to Bet On American Football
History Of Basketball
History Of Woman's Basketball
Rules Of Basketball
How To Rebound
How To Make A Lay-up
How To Dribble A Basketball
How To Make A Foulshot
How To Make A Jump Shot
How to Bet On Basketball
History Of Baseball Part 1
History Of Baseball Part 2
History Of Baseball Part 3
Baseball Coaching Tips
How to Bet On Baseball
How To Bet On A Horse Race
Types Of Horse Racing Bets
Horse Racing Breeding
What Is A Thoroughbred Horse
All About Betting On Horse Racing
Horse Racing Breeding
Horse Racing Hall of Fame
All About Handicap Betting
History of Fantasy Sports
What Are Fantasy Sports Games
How To Play Fantasy Football
How To Play Fantasy Baseball
How to Play Hockey
How to Bet On Hockey
How To Play Fantasy Hockey
Hockey Pool Draft Tips
History of Hockey
National Hockey League
What Is Fantasy Hockey
How to Bet On Golf
History of Golf
The Golf Vacation

 

Golf_125X125_button 

Football Hall of Fame Background

The Pro Football Hall of Fame concept, as far as Canton was concerned, first was placed before the public by the Canton Repository on December 6, 1959. That newspaper challenged its readers with the headline: "PRO FOOTBALL NEEDS A HALL OF FAME AND LOGICAL SITE IS HERE."

Canton civic groups quickly took up the challenge and, by January 25, 1961, William E. Umstattd of the Timken Company was in a position, as the selected representative of his city, to make a formal bid to the National Football League for acceptance of Canton as the site for a pro football hall of fame. Three months later, Canton was granted this official site approval.

Wooded parkland was donated from the city and a civic fund-raising campaign had, by February 8, 1962, acquired pledges totaling $378,026. Ground-breaking for the original construction was held on August 11,1962, and on September 7,1963, the building was first opened to the public.

The original two-building complex, containing 19,000 square feet of interior space, was almost doubled in size when a $620,000 expansion project was completed in May, 1971. The expanded three-building complex contained 34,000 square feet of interior space. A second expansion costing $1.2 million and adding a fourth building was complete in November, 1978, and increased the pro football hall of fame size to 51,000 square feet. A third expansion project, a $9.2 million program that increased the pro football hall of fame size to approximately 83,000 square feet, was completed in October, 1995.

Dick McCann, long-time general manager of the Washington Redskins, was named the pro football hall of fame first director on April 4, 1962. Mr. McCann died in November, 1967, and in April 1968, Dick Gallagher, a long-time pro football coach, scout, and general manager, was named the new director. He served until his retirement on December 31, 1975. In February, 1979, Pete Elliott, an assistant coach of the St. Louis Cardinals who had had an extensive college playing and coaching career, was named the pro football hall of fame's third director. Elliott retired on October 31, 1996. John Bankert, a long-time vice-president of the Hall of Fame, became the pro football hall of fame's fourth director on November 1, 1996.

 

Our Network Sites

Natural Breast Enlargement
Hairstyles
Beauty Tips
Online Dating Services
Homecoming Dresses
Prom Dresses
Online Concert Tickets
Online Health Patches
Online Greeting Cards

Prepaid Calling Cards
Online Sports Betting
HairCuts Pictures
Temporary Tattoos
Home Improvement Loans
Male Celebrity Pictures
Buy Cheap Viagra Pills
Cheap Phentermine
Home Equity Loans
Wine Gift Baskets
Affiliate Pharmacy
Silver Jeans Tab

Apple Bottoms

Meet Woman
Retin-A