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This Week in the West
The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum
63 episodes
5 days ago
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This Week in the West: Jesse Harper, the Kansas Rancher Who Built Notre Dame Football
This Week in the West
6 minutes
1 month ago
This Week in the West: Jesse Harper, the Kansas Rancher Who Built Notre Dame Football
🤠This Week in the WestšŸŽ™ļø Episode 58: Jesse Harper, the Kansas Rancher Who Built Notre Dame Football šŸ“¢ Episode Summary:This episode of This Week in The West explores the remarkable, often overlooked life of Jesse Harper—a rancher, coach, and member of the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum’s Hall of Great Westerners. The story opens in 1931 with the tragic Kansas plane crash that killed Knute Rockne. Harper, a close friend and the man who had once coached Rockne at Notre Dame, was called to identify his body and later accompanied him home to Indiana as the nation mourned. That moment becomes the lens through which the podcast reexamines Harper’s legacy, both on the football field and across the plains of Kansas. Listeners learn that long before he returned to ranch life, Harper revolutionized Notre Dame athletics. After playing under legendary coach Amos Alonzo Stagg at the University of Chicago, he brought innovation, discipline, and administrative organization to a struggling Notre Dame program. As head coach and the school’s first full-time athletics director, Harper went 34–5–1 in football, helped popularize the forward pass, and upgraded scheduling with national powers such as Army and Texas. He insisted athletics should be financially self-sufficient and embodied his son’s memory that ā€œhis whole religion was geared around the Golden Rule.ā€ Harper walked away from coaching in 1918 at the height of his career, explaining to his son that he rejected the rising pressure ā€œto do nothing but win, win, win, regardless of what you did to the boy, the school or anything else.ā€ He believed that football should ā€œbuild men,ā€ not break them. Naming Rockne as his successor, Harper returned to Kansas ranch life, where he later led the Kansas Livestock Association, survived the Depression, and built a respected career as a cattleman—all while remaining a trusted adviser to Rockne. After Rockne’s death, Notre Dame again called Harper back to stabilize the athletic department, and by the time he stepped away in 1934, he had restored order during one of the university’s hardest chapters. When Harper died in 1961, Notre Dame officials traveled to his rural Kansas gravesite to honor him with ā€œA Sportsman’s Prayer.ā€ He was inducted into the Hall of Great Westerners in 1962 and enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame in 1971—belated recognition for a man who, as one journalist wrote, too often ā€œis in the shadows,ā€ despite shaping Notre Dame’s identity for a century. Ā  šŸ” What You’ll Learn: How Jesse Harper built the foundation for Notre Dame football’s rise to national prominence, shaping the program long before Rockne became a household name. Why Harper left coaching at the peak of his success, choosing integrity, character-building, and ranch life over the growing win-at-all-costs mentality of college athletics. How Harper’s leadership extended far beyond football—from restoring Notre Dame after tragedy to becoming a major figure in Kansas ranching and Western heritage. šŸ‘„ Behind the ScenesHost: Seth SpillmanProducer: Chase SpiveyWriter: Mike Koehler šŸ”— Further research: From Notre Dame, ā€œJesse Harper, The Game Changerā€: https://fightingirish.com/jesse-harper-the-game-changer/ College Football Hall of Fame bio: https://www.cfbhall.com/inductees/jesse-harper-1971/ The Last Flight of Knute Rockne: https://125.nd.edu/moments/the-last-flight-of-knute-rockne/ šŸ“¬ Connect With Us:🌐 Website: www.thecowboy.orgšŸ“– Read Our Blog: https://nationalcowboymuseum.org/blog/šŸ“© Email: podcast@thecowboy.orgšŸ“²Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/ncwhm/šŸ“·Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nationalcowboymuseumāŽX/Twitter: https://x.com/ncwhmšŸ’¼LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/national-cowboy-&-western-heritage-museum šŸ—ŗļø Visit Us: The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63rd Street, Oklahoma City, OK, 73111. See us on the map šŸŽŸļø: You can now buy tickets to The Cowboy online, go to https://nationalcowboymuseum.org/
This Week in the West