by Chris Willis, NFL Films
Irene Cassady, 2005 interview |
Cassady has a unique football lineage. She was the
daughter of John Schneider and Rose Nesser. Her mother Rose was a sibling of the
famous Nesser brothers – Ted, Phil, John, Fred, Frank, and Al – who played for
two decades with the Columbus Panhandles. But her father, John Schneider, married
into the Nesser family. Just like the Nessers he also played for the Panhandles.
1915 Columbus Panhandles Team Photo. John Schneider, back row in middle |
I was fortunate enough to interview Cassady twice,
once in 2002 at the Pro Football Hall of Fame, where the Nessers held their annual
family reunion, and then again in 2005 at her home in Columbus. Every time I interviewed
or talked to Irene Cassady I would earn something new about the Columbus
Panhandles or the Nesser family. She was a talking encyclopedia for the family’s
and football history. She knew everything. It was impressive. Hearing that she
passed left me sad but content that she lived a full life.
Her father, John Schneider, worked in the Panhandle
shops with the Nessers, working as a blacksmith, and he was equally tough as
the family he married into. In the end he would work for the railroad for fifty
years (1904-1954). Schneider stood five feet ten and weighed a solid 190-pounds. He lined up mostly on the front line at center, guard and tackle.
He also would play in the backfield if needed.
Schneider played 8 seasons with the Panhandles, 1909-1915
and one year in the APFA (1920). He earned the nickname “Pop.” It was a
football game that the two met. “Rose Nesser very often would drive her
brothers to the game in the family’s horse-drawn cart. Because the field
[Recreation Park] was about five to six miles away, she would stay and watch
the game, then drive them home,” said Irene Cassady in 2002. “Well one time she
drove the boys to the game and she met my father, John Schneider, who was
playing on the team. My father said that once she stepped down off that wagon,
he lost his heart, and the same with her.”
1912 wedding of Rose Nesser (on right) and John Schneider (sitting) Courtesy from Nesser Family |
But asking to marry Rose was a difficult task for the tough-minded blacksmith. He would have to confront the Nesser brothers. “My grandfather took a shine to my dad, he really liked him,” recalled Cassady. “My dad was a very likable guy and he knew he’d have no problem at all asking my grandparents if he could marry their daughter. But he said the thing that just made him shake in his boots was having to ask the brothers, that scared him.”
Irene Cassady at Pro Football Hall of Fame, 2002, Nesser Family Reunion |
Those were just a few quotes of Irene’s that I heard
when interviewing her. She was a pleasure to talk to and she made my research for
my book on the Columbus Panhandles better. I will miss our conversations.
Irene Cassady, 2002 interview at Pro Football Hall of Fame |
Chris, what a nice tribute...I love the stuff you post here and your historical knowledge is unparalleled (I presume) in the early eras of pro football....at some point, I hope you'll turn your attention to the 1921 Tonawanda Kardex squad....the great white whale of film for me would be game footage of their scrap with the Rochester Jeffersons, the Marx Brothers 1920 film Humorisk, and the 1950 World Cup game between US and England.....thanks for your contributions to the sport's history
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment, I appreciate it.
ReplyDeleteGreat honor to the Nesser Brothers contribution the the beginning of modern football we know & love today
ReplyDeleteI am married to Phil Nesser’s great granddaughter and thoroughly enjoy my in laws discussions on the Nesser Brothers and family that played football. It is sad to know that Columbus does t have a street named after them or that not one of them was ever inducted into the National Football Hall of Fame.
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