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| Bill "Memphis Bill" Mallory | |
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Position: Fullback |
| Member Biography | |
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If there was such a person as the true All-American boy, it
must have been Bill Mallory, Yale's excellent fullback of the
early 1920s. Modest in his character, yet aggressive on the
field, Mallory was an inspirational leader who was willing to
make the sacrifices to become a respected scholar and athlete.
When he left Yale in 1923, Mallory was voted the outstanding
man in his graduating class. As a sophomore, Mallory led the
Elis to an 8-1-0 record, marred only by a loss to arch rival
Harvard. However, there would be no blemishes on the Yale
eight-game campaign two years later. After a 6-3-1 record in
1922, the Yalies found perfection in 1923, out-scoring the
competition, 230-38. Mallory, a native of Memphis,
Tennessee, was the backfield thrust in that spectacular
campaign, running, blocking and catching passes with an ease
and fluid motion rarely seen in a fullback. Years later, Mallory
became a U.S. Army Air Force intelligence officer and rose to
the rank of Major during World War II, gaining wide-spread
acclaim for his "Operation Mallory", a tactical plan which cut
22 of 24 bridges spanning the Po River in Lombardy, thus
helping to cut German supply lines into Italy. Mallory was
taking off from Italy in 1945, on his way home for discharge,
when his plane crashed and he was killed.
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