Frank Godchaux Sr.
College football career
- LSU (1897)
- Vanderbilt (1899–1900)
Frank Area Godchaux Sr. (November 29, 1879 – July 3, 1965) was a president of the Louisiana Rice Milling Company, a $10,000,000 corporation.[1][2] He was a letterman and quarterback for the Vanderbilt Commodores on the 1899 team,[3] transferring from LSU in 1897.[4][5] He and his son Frank Godchaux Jr were the first father-son Vandy lettermen. Godchaux Sr. was the only child of pioneering merchant Gustave Godchaux, whose parents came from France to Louisiana.[6]
See also
- Detailed and extensive document of the cattle farms of Frank A. Godchaux Jr. and Sr. in Vermilion Parish. Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine
References
- ^ "Louisiana State Rice Milling Company | AcadiaParishToday.com | Crowley Post-Signal, Rayne Acadian-Tribune, Church Point News | Acadia Parish, la". Archived from the original on January 28, 2016. Retrieved January 22, 2016.
- ^ "Claitor's Law Books and Publishing Division".
- ^ Order, Kappa Alpha (1921). "Godchaux Honored by Vanderbilt". The Kappa Alpha Journal. 38 (1): 58.
- ^ cf. Kathy Rivers. "Godchaux Family". Archived from the original on October 25, 2014.
- ^ Bigelow, Poultney; Worman, James Henry; Worman, Ben James; Whitney, Caspar; Britt, Albert (1914). "Vanderbilt–A University of the New South". Outing. 64: 320–331.
- ^ Becnel, Thomas A (2001). "Reviewed work: Grist for the Mill: An Entrepreneurial History of Louisiana State Rice Milling Company, 1911-1965, River Brand Rice Milling Company, 1946-1965, and Riviana Foods, 1965-1999, John Robert Moore". Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 42 (4): 495–497. JSTOR 4233804.
External links
- Frank Godchaux Sr. at Find a Grave
- v
- t
- e
LSU Tigers starting quarterbacks
- Ruffin Pleasant (1890–1893)
- Samuel Gourrier
- Frank Godchaux
- John J. Coleman
- Doc Fenton
- Lawrence Dupont
- Roy Benoit
- Ike Carriere
- Hank Stovall
- Joe Lawrie
- Bert Yates
- Bill May (1935–1936)
- Young Bussey (1939)
- Leo Bird
- Andy Kosmac (1942)
- Gene Knight (1943)
- Y. A. Tittle (1945–1947)
- Charles Pevey (1948)
- Carroll Griffith (1949)
- Lee Hedges (1950)
- Jim Barton (1951)
- Norman Stevens (1952)
- Al Doggett (1953–1954)
- M. C. Reynolds (1955)
- Win Turner (1956–1957)
- Warren Rabb (1958–1959)
- Jimmy Field (1960–1962)
- Lynn Amedee (1961)
- Pat Screen (1963–1965)
- Nelson Stokley (1966)
- Fred Haynes (1967–1968)
- Mike Hillman (1969)
- Buddy Lee (1970)
- Bert Jones (1971–1972)
- Mike Miley (1973)
- Billy Broussard (1974)
- Pat Lyons (1975–1976)
- Steve Ensminger (1977–1979)
- David Woodley (1978–1979)
- Alan Risher (1980–1982)
- Robert Mahfouz (1980)
- Jeff Wickersham (1983–1985)
- Tommy Hodson (1986–1989)
- Mickey Guidry (1986–1988)
- Sol Graves (1990)
- Chad Loup (1991–1992)
- Jesse Daigle (1991)
- Jamie Howard (1993–1995)
- Melvin Hill (1994–1995)
- Herb Tyler (1996–1998)
- Craig Nall (1999)
- Josh Booty (2000)
- Rohan Davey (2001)
- Matt Mauck (2002–2003)
- Rick Clausen (2002)
- Marcus Randall (2004)
- JaMarcus Russell (2005–2006)
- Matt Flynn (2007)
- Ryan Perrilloux (2007)
- Andrew Hatch (2008)
- Jordan Jefferson (2009–2011)
- Jarrett Lee (2011)
- Zach Mettenberger (2012–2013)
- Anthony Jennings (2013–2014)
- Brandon Harris (2015–2016)
- Danny Etling (2016–2017)
- Joe Burrow (2018–2019)
- Myles Brennan (2020)
- T. J. Finley (2020)
- Max Johnson (2020–2021)
- Jontre Kirklin (2021)
- Jayden Daniels (2022–2023)
- Garrett Nussmeier (2023–2024)
This biographical article relating to a college football player is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e