Cornell University | college football | Eton College | University College London | Dartmouth College | King's College London | Harvard College | Trinity College | college | Oberlin College | Boston College | University College Dublin | Williams College | Vassar College | college basketball | Winchester College | Imperial College London | Collège de France | Middlebury College | Berklee College of Music | Royal College of Art | Smith College | Royal College of Music | Cornell | Yale College | New College, Oxford | City College of New York | Amherst College | Magdalen College, Oxford | Kenyon College |
After teaching English at Cornell College in Iowa (1913-1917), he worked as an editor for the Century Company in New York City where he was definitions editor of The New Century Dictionary in two volumes.
He served as head football coach at Cornell College in Mount Vernon, Iowa from 1902 to 1903 and at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign in 1904—along with Arthur R. Hall, Fred Lowenthal, and Clyde Matthews—and alone in 1906, compiling a record of 14–16–2.
Democrat Dave Loebsack of Mount Vernon, a former political science professor at Cornell College, the incumbent, was also completing his first term.