Ray B. Thomas
Ray Brown Thomas (April 11, 1884 – August 5, 1931) was an American college athlete, coach of college football and college basketball, physician, and medical officer in the United States Army. BiographyThomas graduated from Burlington High School in Vermont, then Brown University in Rhode Island, and later earned his medical degree at the University of Vermont in 1910.[2] While at Brown, he played football, baseball, and basketball; he also played football at Vermont.[2][3] Thomas served as the head football coach at Vermont in 1909, and at New Hampshire College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts[a] for the full 1910 season and for its final two games of the 1911 season.[b] He compiled a career college football record of 6–7–3 as a head coach. Thomas was also the head basketball coach at New Hampshire for one season, in 1910–11, tallying a mark of 6–3. In 1911, he opened a medical office in Enosburgh, Vermont.[2] During World War I, he served as a major in the U.S. Army Medical Corps,[5] and was chief of X-ray services at the Camp McClellan hospital in Alabama.[2] Thomas died in August 1931 at the age of 47, of pneumonia brought on by heat stroke while on duty with the Army Reserve.[5][2] He was a Freemason and a member of the Episcopal Church; he was survived by his wife, Elizabeth Laird Thomas.[2] Head coaching recordFootball
† Coached team's final two games of the season. Notes
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