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The Eagles have been a Philadelphia institution since their beginning in 1933 when a syndicate headed by the late Bert Bell and Lud Wray purchased the former Frankford Yellowjackets franchise for $2,500. In 1941, a unique swap took place between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh that saw the clubs trade home cities with Alexis Thompson becoming the Eagles owner.
In 1943, the Philadelphia and Pittsburgh franchises combined for one season due to the manpower shortage created by World War II. The team was called both Phil-Pitt and the Steagles. Greasy Neale of the Eagles and Walt Kiesling of the Steelers were co-coaches and the team finished 5-4-1.
Counting the 1943 season, Neale coached the Eagles for 10 seasons and he led them to their first significant successes in the NFL. Paced by such future Pro Football Hall of Fame members as running back Steve Van Buren, center-linebacker Alex Wojciechowicz, end Pete Pihos and beginning in 1949, center-linebacker Chuck Bednarik, the Eagles dominated the league for six seasons. They finished second in the NFL Eastern division in 1944, 1945 and 1946, won the division title in 1947 and then scored successive shutout victories in the 1948 and 1949 championship games.
A rash of injuries ended Philadelphia's era of domination and, by 1958, the Eagles had fallen to last place in their division. That year, however, saw the start of a building program by a new coach, Buck Shaw, and the addition of quarterback Norm Van Brocklin in a trade with the Los Angeles Rams. In just three years, Shaw gave Philadelphia another championship. Behind Van Brocklin's expert on-the-field leadership, the Eagles won the Eastern division with a 10-2 record and then defeated the Green Bay Packers 17-13 for the NFL championship. Bednarik saved the day for the Eagles with an open field tackle of Green Bay's Jimmy Taylor on the game's final play. The Eagles fell just a half-game short of another NFL Eastern conference championship in 1961 but didn't reach the playoffs again for 18 years until 1978, their third season with Dick Vermeil as the coach. Vermeil's teams played in four straight post-season playoffs between 1978 and 1981. In 1980, Philadelphia won a club-record 12 games, edged out Dallas for the Eastern division title and then defeated the Cowboys 20-7 for the NFC championship. However, the Eagles lost to the Oakland Raiders 27-10 in Super Bowl XV.
Vermeil's successful tenure was followed by some lean years until Norman Braman took control of the club in 1985. His rebuilding program hit its full stride in 1988 when the Eagles won the NFL Eastern division championship. Starting with that 1988 season, Philadelphia, which was particularly dominating on defense, won 10 or more games for five straight years up to 1993. In four of those years, the Eagles entered the playoffs as a wild-card team, a feat they repeated in 1995.
Since 1971, when the Eagles left the University of Pennsylvania's Franklin Field, they have played in 65,356-seat Veterans Stadium before capacity or near-capacity crowds each week.
Philadelphia Eagles Facts
- · Franchise Granted July 8, 1933
- · First Season 1933
- · Stadium Veterans Stadium (65,352)
- · Owner Jeffrey Lurie
- · NFL Championships 1948, 1949, 1960
- · NFC Championship 1980
- · NFL Eastern Conference Championships 1947, 1948, 1949, 1960
- · NFC Eastern Division Championships 1980, 1988
- · Retired Uniform Numbers #15 Steve Van Buren, #40 Tom Brookshier, #44 Pete Retzlaff, #60 Chuck Bednarik, #70 Al Wistert, #99 Jerome Brown
Firsts, Records, and Odds and Ends
- · First Draft Choice Selected by the Eagles, Jay Berwanger was the first player chosen in the first NFL draft held in 1936. Berwanger, a back from the University of Chicago, chose not to sign.
- · First Regular-Season Game A 56-0 loss to the New York Giants, 10/15/33.
- · First Regular-Season Win A 6-0 victory over the Cincinnati Reds, 11/5/33.
- · First Regular-Season Points A 35-yard touchdown pass from Roger Kirkman to Swede Hansen vs. the Green Bay Packers, 10/29/33.
- · First Winning Season In 1943 the Eagles and Pittsburgh Steelers merged and posted a 5-4-1 record. The one-season merger was made necessary by manpower shortages caused by World War II.
- · First Playoff Appearance A 21-0 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers in the 1947 NFL divisional playoff, 12/21/47.
- · First Super Bowl Appearance A 27-10 loss to the Oakland Raiders in Super Bowl XV, 1/25/81.
- · First Eagle Elected to the Hall of Fame Owner/League Administrator Bert Bell, Charter Member 1963.
- · First to Rush 100 Yards in a Game Swede Hanson, 116 yards vs. the Green Bay Packers, 9/16/34.
- · First 1,000-Yard Rusher Steve Van Buren, 1,008 yards (1947).
- · First to Pass 400 Yards in a Game Bobby Thomason, 437 yards vs. the New York Giants, 11/8/53.
- · Most Yards Rushing, Career Wilbert Montgomery, 6,538 yards (1977-84).
- · Most Yards Passing, Career Ron Jaworski, 26,963 yards (1977-86).
- · Most Receptions, Career Harold Carmichael, 589 receptions (1971-83).
- · All-Time Leading Scorer Bobby Walston, 881 points (1951-62).
- · Most Pro Bowl Appearances Chuck Bednarik was selected to play in eight Pro Bowls.
- · First Televised Game A 23-14 loss to the Brooklyn Dodgers in the first-ever televised pro football game, 10/22/39.
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