When Loren Stauffer graduated from Rockford High School
in 1928, he was twenty one years old. As was very common at that
time and before, many outstanding athletes at most high
schools participated into their twenties because there were no
rules regarding age or number of years of participation.
Loren’s success as a four sport athlete at R.H.S., and his
accomplishments later in life served to get him elected to the
Rockford Athletic Hall of Fame in 1996.
After high school he married Theo Platt in 1933, lived
as a farmer in the Grattan area, helped to raise two children,
Meradell and Alan, worked at Rapistan and never lost his interest
and enthusiasm for Rockford athletics. Before his death at age
91 in August of 1998, he often took the time to answer my questions
and to encourage my athletic research. His wife Theo, also was
a Rockford graduate (1926). She participated in girl’s athletics
and also is a member of our Hall of Fame (1999). As readers know,
Theo recently made available to me her scrapbooks, several
pictures, some school newspapers (Rockford Rocket) and many of
her husband’s athletic awards. This column will focus on
the track and the monogramed letter awards of Loren Stauffer.
In our early high school athletic history, athletes often
appear in photos with a monogrammed R.H.S. on their sweaters.
The letter “R” is usually larger than the others and
located in the middle intertwined with the “H” and
the “S”. Sometime later, only the letter “R”
was used, but that letter was confusing because many high schools
issued an “R” to players who were on the team but
did not play enough to earn a varsity letter. The letter “R”
meant “reserve” at most schools and apparently was
bothersome to Rockford athletes and to Coach Henry LeMoin.
Coach LeMoin stated in 1924 that Rockford would discontinue
giving an “R” as an award to varsity athletes and
that a monogramed H.R.S. would be presented to football letter
winners instead. He went on to say that different styles of the
monogram would be given for other sports. This information, found
in a copy of the “Rockford Rocket”, helped to explain
why Loren Stauffer’s monograms were not all the same. I
am not sure which style of monogram went with a given sport, but
as readers can see from the picture accompanying this column,
the difference is obvious.
I do not believe the monogram idea lasted very long because
pictures taken of athletes in the late twenties and early thirties
show a letter “R’ being used again.
What about Loren Stauffer’s other athletic awards
that Theo found. In the same photo as the monograms are
three track medals and ten ribbons with the earliest being a second
place ribbon from the June 4, 1926 Kent County Track and
Field meet. Loren won it in the running broad jump, an event he
would place in at the annual meet, not only in 1926, but again
in 1927 (fourth) and 1928 (first). The county meet was usually
held at Comstock Park.
In 1927 Loren placed second in the state regional meet
in the running broad jump, and in 1928 he finished third
at the regional track meet in the low hurdles. His medals from
these events are also shown as are four ribbons that he won on
May 5, 1928 in a triangular track meet with Union and Creston.
Rockford traveled to Garfield Park in Grand Rapids for the three
team competition. Loren won the running broad jump and placed
second in the 100 yard dash, the 220 low hurdles and ran on the
880 relay team which was second also. I spent many days as a youth
at Garfield Park in the forties and fifties, and no track was
there at that time, so it was surprising to find that Rockford
used to run meets at that location.
To finish the information, I should mention that the monograms
appear to be cut out of felt. They are all orange in color, and
I am told that some athletes had them sewn on sweaters. The ribbons
are shiny material and are colored depending on the place they
represent. Two are blue (first), five are red (second),
one is white (third) and two are yellow (fourth). The thirteen
awards are the first that I have seen from a Rockford athlete
from the twenties. It is very fortunate that Mrs. Stauffer still
had them, and that she wants them to be kept as part of Rockford’s
Athletic Hall of Fame display.
People, like Loren and Theo Stauffer, are representative
of many who care about our school district. They also care about
others and have made a positive impact on our society. I extend
my personal thanks to Theo Stauffer for all of her help. What
a positve lady!!