|
 |
|
Angela E. Tammaro |
Elected: 1996 |
Boston University |
 |
Angela began playing lacrosse at Boston University where she played from 1960-1962. She played for the Boston Women's Lacrosse Association from 1960-1965. In 1966 she began playing for the Westchester Women's Lacrosse Association and continued to play for them until 1975.
Angela has been the head coach at Greenwich Academy since 1965 with a record of 390-30-9 at the time of her induction. She was an assistant coach for the U.S. Squad from 1979-1988.
Angela . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
Carl J. Tamulevich |
Elected: 1989 |
United States Naval Academy |
 |
|
Tamulevich was Nashua (N.H.) High School's outstanding athlete in 1961, earning a total of nine varsity letters in football, basketball and baseball.
Tamulevich's lacrosse career began at the U.S. Naval Academy Prep School, where he was selected as the outstanding athlete in 1964 while lettering in football, basketball and lacrosse. At the Naval Academy in 1965, he led the Midshipmen to National Championship titles in 1966 and 1967, and earned First Team All-American honors in . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
Roy Taylor |
Elected: 1957 |
Cornell University |
 |
|
Born October 17, 1887, in Brooklyn, New York. Graduated from Pratt Institute High School, Brooklyn, New York. Graduated with a Civil Engineering degree from Cornell in 1910. While at Cornell, he played Freshman Lacrosse 1907 and was a varsity Lacrosse letterman in 1908, 1909 and 1910. Cornell tied for the Lacrosse Championship in 1910. Lacrosse was a minor sport then at Cornell but Roy was awarded a varsity letter at the . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
Michael Thearle |
Elected: 2004 |
University of Maryland |
 |
|
Mike Thearle was a standout defenseman in the early 1970s. He started his college career at SUNY-Farmingdale, earning first-team All-America honors twice. He moved onto the University of Maryland, earning second-team All-America honors in 1972 and first team in 1973. In 1973 he received the Schmeisser Award as the nation's outstanding defenseman while helping Maryland to the NCAA championship. Thearle played club lacrosse for 10 years and was a six-time all-star selection. He also played . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
Glenn N. Thiel |
Elected: 1965 |
Syracuse University |
 |
|
Glenn "Nick" Thiel first started playing lacrosse while
in the eighth grade, playing on sandlot and junior high school teams
and playing with and against many Native Amercians from the Onodaga
Reservation. While still in junior high school he played with the
Syracuse Crescent Lacrosse Club. In high school Thiel played for
four years and served as team captain in 1929. His high school team
was undefeated for the last two years Thiel participated. Thiel . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
John Thomas |
Elected: 1989 |
Johns Hopkins University |
 |
|
Thomas was an All-Star attackman at Towson High School under coach, father and Hall of Famer Bill Thomas. He led the state of Maryland in scoring in 1969 and 1970. Thomas was also an All-Metro quarterback and the Sunpapers Prep Athlete of the Year in 1970.
At Johns Hopkins University, Thomas played three years varsity lacrosse and football. He was a three time First Team All-American in lacrosse who led the Blue Jays to the National . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
William F. Thomas |
Elected: 1987 |
Western Maryland College |
 |
|
Thomas' impact on lacrosse began in 1933 at City College as a varsity midfielder, where he led City to the 1934 and 1935 championships. After attending Western Maryland College on a football scholarship, Thomas began his 42 years of coaching for Maryland public schools in 1939. He won county championships in three sports his first year. As head coach for championship teams in lacrosse, football and basketball at Forest Park in 1944-1945, he coached his . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
Ferris Thomsen |
Elected: 1963 |
St. John's College |
 |
|
Born in Baltimore on December 25, 1907, Ferris Thomsen was educated at Baltimore Friends School, graduating in 1926. He then went to Swarthmore College for two years before transferring to St. John's College in Annapolis, Md. While at Friends School, Thomsen played football, basketball and lacrosse, winning varsity letters in all
three sports. At Swarthmore College, he played two years of football and lacrosse, once scoring a still unmatched 14 goals during a lacrosse game . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
William G. Tierney |
Elected: 2002 |
Princeton University |
 |
|
Bill Tierney is one of the sport's most successful coaches ever. Through the 2002 season, he has compiled a career record of 204-60, including a 173-50 mark at Princeton. He has guided the Tigers to six national championships since 1992. His career winning percentage of 77.2 ranks among the best in the sport's history. Tierney played on a national championship team at Cortland State in 1973, and was an assistant coach for two national championship . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
John C. Tolson |
Elected: 1972 |
Johns Hopkins University |
 |
|
John Tolson was born in Baltimore on June 22, 1918. He attended Windsor Hills Elementary School and Roland Park Junior High School. After entering Baltimore City College in 1933, he earned three varsity letters in lacrosse. The 1936 City College team went on to an undefeated season, and the Maryland Scholastic Championship. He was chosen on the All-Maryland Scholastic First Team at Point. The 1937 season for City College was a . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
Morris F. Touchstone |
Elected: 1960 |
George Williams |
 |
|
Touchstone played on the Mt. Washington Club team under Coach Bill Schmeisser and conducted the Mt. Washington Summer Camp from 1920-1923. In 1924, Touchstone moved to Yale to coach varsity lacrosse, soccer and freshman gymnastics.
In 1928, he became the head varsity lacrosse coach at the United States Military Academy. He coached there until his death in 1957. Compiling a record of 214-73-8 while at West Point, Touchstone's teams won the national championship . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
George Tracy |
Elected: 2008 |
United States Naval Academy |
 |
A three-time All-American, Tracy was one of the leaders on Navy teams that captured three consecutive USILA national championships from 1961 to 1963. An attackman and midfielder, Tracy was captain of the 1963 team and played in that year’s North-South game, scoring three goals.
Tracy developed his early lacrosse skills on Baltimore's Bolton Hill, inspired in part by his lacrosse cousins, the Corrigans. A three-sport athlete at Loyola High School who also played football and . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
Reginald V. Truitt |
Elected: 1959 |
University of Maryland |
 |
|
Born August 12, 1891 at Snow Hill, Maryland. Graduated from Snow Hill High School in 1910. Attended the University of Maryland 1910 through 1914, receiving a BS degree. Continued his studies, getting a Master of Science degree in 1921 and a Ph.D. degree at the American University in Washington, D.C. in 1929. While at the University of Maryland, he won his varsity award in both lacrosse and track, in 1911, 1912, . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
Thomas Truxton |
Elected: 1970 |
United States Military Academy |
 |
|
Truxton began his lacrosse career at Friends School in Baltimore before attending the United States Naval Academy for one year and playing on the Plebe lacrosse team. Placed on physical disability for two years, he entered The United States Military Academy at West Point, NY in 1933 once he was well.
After playing Plebe lacrosse for Army, Truxton played three years first string lacrosse and was selected First Team All-American in 1935, 1936 and 1937. . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
W. Brooke Tunstall |
Elected: 1948 |
Johns Hopkins University |
 |
|
Born in Virginia but raised in Baltimore, Brooke Tunstall was first exposed to lacrosse is his pre-teens. At age 11 his family moved to Mt. Washington, only a short distance from the famous Mt. Washington Club. This proximity was to prove decisive in developing a deep
and abiding love for the game of lacrosse. As a waterboy for the club's team, he was able to observe and emulate the great stars of the 1930s--the Turnbull . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
Douglass Clayland Turnbull |
Elected: 1962 |
Johns Hopkins University |
 |
|
Doug Turnbull played 20 consecutive years of lacrosse, three for Poly, four for Hopkins, and 13 for the Mt. Washington Club. He played every position on the team with distinction, except goalie. He was a four time All-American.
Born Baltimore, Maryland on July 23, 1903, he attended public schools, including Baltimore Polytechnic, graduating in 1921. He then moved on to Johns Hopkins University, where he received a B.E. Degree in 1924, followed by a year of . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
Jack I. Turnbull |
Elected: 1965 |
Johns Hopkins University |
 |
|
Jack Turnbull has been called the "Babe Ruth" of lacrosse, and few, if any, could equal his playing ability. On April 19, 1937, in the press, Kid Norris stated, "Jack Turnbull is the finest player I've ever seen or played with." Billy Shriver, radio commentator, said in 1947, "Jack Turnbull is what I call the complete athlete. By that I mean when he played a game, he gave it everything he had . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
Albert W. Twitchell |
Elected: 1967 |
Rutgers University |
 |
|
A native of Dedham, Massachusetts, Twitchell attended Dean Academy before attending Rutgers. During his college years, he was an All-American Defenseman, an Honorable Mention All-American Football Player, and the recipient fo the Donald Coursen Outstanding Athlete Award.
Upon graduation from Rutgers in 1935, Twitchell taught and coached at North Plainfield High School, Sewanhaka High School, and Hofstra University. Two of his Sewanhaka teams won Metropolitan Interscholastic Lacrosse Titles.
In 1947, Twitchell returned to Rutgers, and in 1950 . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
Suzanne Tyler |
Elected: 1999 |
Northeastern University |
 |
|
Suzanne Tyler began her coaching career at Cornell University and
coached field hockey, lacrosse and bowling from 1969-72. She coached
field hockey at the University of Maryland from 1974-87, winning
the NCAA Championship in 1987. She coached lacrosse at the University
of Maryland in 1974, and from 1979-90, winning the AIAW championship
in 1981 and the NCAA Championship 1986. She holds the distinction
as the only Division I coach to win NCAA national championships
in . . .
|
|
|
View Detailed Profile
|
|
|
|