Wessell wants to reveal the real Chic Harley
By SETH SHANER
Published: Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Photo courtesy OSU archives
Halfback Chic Harley (left) teamed with quarterback Howard Yerges (kneeling with ball), fullback Dick Boesel (center) and halfback Pete Stinchcomb (right) to form Ohio State's 1917 backfield, one of the most effective in school history. The Buckeyes captured their first two outright Big Ten titles in 1916 and '17.
Bright sunshine, summer-like temperatures and an intriguing mix of young talent all aided in bringing a national record 95,722 spectators to the annual Scarlet and Gray spring football game Saturday, April 25, at Ohio Stadium.
Also a help is the tradition, partially spurred on by past talents like Howard "Hopalong" Cassady, Archie Griffin, Eddie George and Troy Smith. While those are some of the building blocks of the Ohio State program, there's only one person who serves as the foundation.
Chic Harley was OSU's first three-time All-American -- he was named as such three times in 1916, '17 and '19 -- and is often credited for being the reason Ohio Stadium was built.
Harley's legacy is a mix among Buckeyes fans, however, as some know exactly what he did for the program, while others don't even know who he was.
Todd Wessell, Harley's great nephew, also descended upon the Ohio State campus this weekend, to get the word out as to just who Harley was, first by attending the spring game.
Wessell has written a book, expected to hit bookstores June 1, entitled The One and Only.
"The purpose (spring game weekend) is to begin the several month-long marketing campaign for the book that's intended to make people aware of Uncle Chic," Wessell said.
"It's his full story, dating back to when his family first came to Ohio from Virginia. He was born in Ohio and the family moved to Chicago before moving back. That's how Chic wound up going to East High School, and eventually to Ohio State."