William Morgan Popular Books

William Morgan Biography & Facts

William George Morgan (January 23, 1870 – December 27, 1942) was the inventor of volleyball, originally called "Mintonette", a name derived from the game of badminton which he later agreed to change to better reflect the nature of the sport. He was born in Lockport, New York, U.S. He met James Naismith, inventor of basketball, while Morgan was studying at Springfield College in 1892. Like Naismith, Morgan pursued a career in Physical Education at the YMCA. Influenced by Naismith and basketball, in 1895, in Holyoke, Massachusetts, Morgan invented "Mintonette" a less vigorous team sport more suitable for older members of the YMCA but one that still required athletic skill. Later Alfred S. Halstead watched it being played and renamed it "Volleyball". In 1985, he was inducted into the Volleyball Hall of Fame as the inaugural member. Early life William George Morgan graduated from high school at Northfield Mount Hermon School and moved on to attend the YMCA International Training School (Later renamed Springfield College) in Massachusetts with James Naismith, the inventor of basketball. Both Morgan and Naismith pursued careers in Physical Education at the YMCA (Young Men’s Christian Association). Auburn, Maine, at the YMCA, was where Morgan spent one year working prior to graduating from Springfield College. During the summer of 1895, Morgan moved to Holyoke, Massachusetts, where he continued to work for the YMCA, becoming the Director of Physical Education. With Morgan being the Director, it allowed him to devise workout plans and teach sports in depth to the young male adults. Creating the sport As he worked as the Director of Physical Education at the YMCA in Holyoke, he noticed the game of basketball was not meant for everyone to play. The weaker young men, non-athletic adults, and the older adults were unable to keep up with running up and down the court, along with the amount of contact they would occasionally run into. Morgan then had to think of a game in which everyone would have an equal amount of participation but also had similar objectives to basketball. He wanted to create a game which everyone could play, no matter their age or physical ability. Between trying to run classes at the YMCA and creating a new sport suitable for all, Morgan decided it was best that he use ideas from various sports such as handball, tennis, and badminton, and his own knowledge from sports training methods and experience, to create this new sport. He decided that the game would involve a six-foot, six-inch net in the middle dividing the 2 separate playing areas, and that it would be played on a 30 ft. × 60 ft. court, so that it could be played in gyms anywhere across the nation. After creating some ground rules, William Morgan had to experiment with his game. First, he had to decide which ball to use. A basketball was too heavy while the basketball bladder was too light. After testing all of the balls he had available, he had come to the conclusion that his best option was to ask A.G. Spalding & Bros. to make him a ball. A young A.G. Spalding & Bros. equipment designer and master marine cloth tailor, Dale Callaghan, developed and produced the first prototype volleyball. Morgan was very pleased with Spalding & Bros. work. They created Morgan the perfect ball for his sport, which was covered in leather, with the circumference of 25–27 inches. The ball was also the perfect weight for Morgan's sport. The ball weighed 9–12 ounces. This new ball that had been made for Morgan's sport was the perfect finishing touch to the basics of the sport. The last thing that had to be done by Morgan was to create a name. Morgan came up with "Mintonette" as the new name for his game. Introducing the sport The first time Morgan revealed his sport to the other Directors of Physical was at the YMCA located in Springfield, in 1896. He presented his new, creative idea to Dr. Luther Halsey Gulick (director of the professional physical education training school) and the rest of the YMCA Directors of Physical Education. Dr. Gulick was so impressed that he asked Morgan to present his sport at the school's new stadium. In preparation for his big debut, Morgan created 2 teams of 5 men, who would help in demonstrating “Mintonette” in front of the conference delegates in the East Gymnasium at Springfield College. In December of 1895, William Morgan presented his new sport to the world. When Morgan was explaining the game before the demonstration, he named a few key guidelines in the game of “Mintoinette” such as that the game was created so that it could be played in open air and in gyms as well as the objective of the game was to keep the ball in action as it goes from one side of the high net, to the other. One of the conference delegates, Professor Alfred T. Halsted, loved the game of Mintonette, but he felt like something was just not right. Professor Halsted suggested that the name of the game should be Volleyball, since the main point of the game was to “volley” the ball to a player or over the net. Morgan agreed with Halsted's idea and since then the original game of “Mintonette” has been referred to as Volleyball. Morgan continued to tweak the rules of the game until July 1896, where his sport was added into the first official handbook of the North American YMCA Athletic League. Aftermath On July 7, 1896, the first game of volleyball was played at Springfield College. In 1900, Spalding started to produce a special ball, which was designed specifically for the sport – A volleyball. In 1920, new rules were instigated which included the three hits per side and the back row attack rules. In 1964, at the Summer Olympic Games in Tokyo, Volleyball was introduced to the Olympics. Later life William Morgan left his job at the YMCA in 1897 to start a new career with General Electric and Westinghouse. He stayed in touch with Springfield College and stated that he was "content in the knowledge that the game brought a richer life to millions of people throughout the world." Morgan died on December 27, 1942. Credits In 1995, The Morgan Trophy Award was created. The Award is presented annually to the most outstanding male and female collegiate volleyball player in the US. An elementary school in Holyoke, William Morgan School, bears his name. References. Discover the William Morgan popular books. Find the top 100 most popular William Morgan books.

Best Seller William Morgan Books of 2024

  • William E. Morgan v. State Indiana synopsis, comments

    William E. Morgan v. State Indiana

    Second District Court of Appeals of Indiana

    Defendantappellant Keith Wayman Brown was found guilty by a jury in the Lake Superior Court, Criminal Division, on two counts of Class A felony robbery. The court imposed a penalty...

  • Stormblood synopsis, comments

    Stormblood

    Jeremy Szal

    Vakov Fukasawa used to be a Reaper: a bioenhanced soldier fighting for the Harmony, against a brutal invading empire. He's still fighting now, on a different battlefield: taking on...

  • Hot Time synopsis, comments

    Hot Time

    W. H. Flint

    For fans of The Knick, The Alienist, and The Last Days of Night, an entertaining, atmospheric crime thriller set in the Gilded Age.New York, August 1896. A “hot wave” has...

  • William H. Seymour and Layton S. Morgan, Plaintiffs in Error v. Cyrus H. Mccormick synopsis, comments

    William H. Seymour and Layton S. Morgan, Plaintiffs in Error v. Cyrus H. Mccormick

    United States Supreme Court

    THIS case came up, by writ of error, from the Circuit Court of the United States for the northern district of New York. It was a suit brought by McCormick against Seymour and Morga...

  • Restoration Heart synopsis, comments

    Restoration Heart

    William Cash

    'Breathtaking untold story . . . riotously colourful' Mail on Sunday'I read most of it in one exciting sitting. It is brilliant, gripping and sad' Harry MountRestoration Heart is a...

  • William H. Seymour and Dayton S. Morgan, Plaintiffs in Error v. Cyrus H. Mccormick synopsis, comments

    William H. Seymour and Dayton S. Morgan, Plaintiffs in Error v. Cyrus H. Mccormick

    United States Supreme Court

    Sixth. Where the claim on which the suit is founded is for an improvement on old machines, patented or unpatented, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, as a measure of damages...

  • William S. Morgan v. State Texas synopsis, comments

    William S. Morgan v. State Texas

    Fifth District, Dallas No. 05-81-00369-CR Court of Appeals of Texas

    BILL J. STEPHENS, JUSTICE On Motion for Rehearing, appellant complains that the trial court's second cumulation order is void for its failure to meet the requirements specified in ...

  • Kathleen Peppers Morgan v. Charles William synopsis, comments

    Kathleen Peppers Morgan v. Charles William

    Supreme Court of Alabama

    HARWOOD, Justice. This record shows that on 5 February 1949, Kathleen Peppers Morgan was granted a decree of divorce from Charles William Morgan. Under said decree the c...

  • Young Leafs synopsis, comments

    Young Leafs

    Gare Joyce

    An indepth and behindthescenes look at how Auston Matthews and a gang of talented young hockey players are breaking from Toronto’s troubled sporting past and rekindling the city’s ...

  • Five Lieutenants synopsis, comments

    Five Lieutenants

    James Carl Nelson

    James Carl Nelson tells the dramatic true story of five brilliant young soldiers from Harvard, a thrilling tale of combat and heroism.Five Lieutenants tells the story of five young...

  • The Diamond As Big As the Ritz And Other Stories synopsis, comments

    The Diamond As Big As the Ritz And Other Stories

    F. Scott Fitzgerald

    6 of the Roaring Twenties chronicler’s most scintillating short stories, chosen from Flappers and Philosophers (1920) and Tales of the Jazz Age (1922). This inexpensive volume comp...

  • The Mysteries of Free Masonry synopsis, comments

    The Mysteries of Free Masonry

    William Morgan

    One rap calls the Lodge to order; one calls up the Junior and Senior Deacons; two raps call up the subordinate officers; and three, all the members of the Lodge.The Master having c...

  • It Never Can Happen Again synopsis, comments

    It Never Can Happen Again

    William De Morgan

    Lizarann Coupland did not know what her father's employment was; but she knew that, every morning, she saw him to the corner of Bladen Street, put his left hand on the palin's of n...

  • William Dennis Morgan v. Giant Markets synopsis, comments

    William Dennis Morgan v. Giant Markets

    Supreme Court of Pennsylvania

    This is an appeal from the Commonwealth Courts reversal of a workmens compensation award in favor of appellant. The sole question presented is: Do the following facts, as testified...

  • William H. Seymour and Dayton S. Morgan, Plaintiffs in Error v. Cyrus H. Mccormick synopsis, comments

    William H. Seymour and Dayton S. Morgan, Plaintiffs in Error v. Cyrus H. Mccormick

    United States Supreme Court

    Sixth. Where the claim on which the suit is founded is for an improvement on old machines, patented or unpatented, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, as a measure of damages...

  • Freemasonry. Classic Collection. Albert G. Mackey, William Morgan, Albert Pike, John Robison, George Thorburgh. Illustrated synopsis, comments

    Freemasonry. Classic Collection. Albert G. Mackey, William Morgan, Albert Pike, John Robison, George Thorburgh. Illustrated

    Albert G. Mackey, William Morgan, Albert Pike, John Robison, George Thorburgh & Julius F. Sachse

    The ethics and philosophy of Freemasonry depend on monotheistic religions and the ancient constitution of the Freemasons. The constitution describes the rules and rituals that memb...

  • Blindspace synopsis, comments

    Blindspace

    Jeremy Szal

    Vakov Fukasawa is a Reaper. An elite soldier injected with a dangerous drug called stormtech: the DNA of a genocidal alien race, the Shenoi. It makes him stronger, faster, more agg...

  • Financial World for Our Children synopsis, comments

    Financial World for Our Children

    William Morgan

    This exceptional book, written by William Morgan, a seasoned professional who has worked on Wall Street, is specifically crafted for parents and children on a mission to raise the ...

  • Synners synopsis, comments

    Synners

    Pat Cadigan

    In Synners, the line between technology and humanity is hopelessly slim. To be a Synner is to join the online hardcore, an outlaw band of hackers, simulation pirates, and reality s...

  • Crown and Country synopsis, comments

    Crown and Country

    David Starkey

    An exploration of the British monarchy from the retreat of the Romans up until the modern day. This compendium volume of two earlier books is fully revised and updated.The monarchy...

  • Mellie M. Morgan v. William E. Dunwoody synopsis, comments

    Mellie M. Morgan v. William E. Dunwoody

    Supreme Court of Florida

    WHITFIELD, J. Dunwoody brought suit for the cancellation of instruments as being a cloud upon his title to land. The court decreed a cancellation as prayed, and on appeal the defe...

  • In Re Application for A Writ of Habeas Corpus of William Lee Morgan synopsis, comments

    In Re Application for A Writ of Habeas Corpus of William Lee Morgan

    Department One Supreme Court of Washington

    On January 2, 1968, in Clallam County, Washington, the petitioner entered a plea of guilty to the offense of unlawful possession of narcotic drugs, a felony. He was sentenced to se...

  • William Dennis Morgan v. Giant Markets synopsis, comments

    William Dennis Morgan v. Giant Markets

    Supreme Court of Pennsylvania

    We are reversing the Commonwealth Court in the instant case. Where one is doing an act that requires force or strain and pain is experienced at the point of force or st...

  • Enemies of All synopsis, comments

    Enemies of All

    Richard Blakemore

    A masterful narrative history of the dangerous lives of pirates during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, revealing their unique impact on colonialism and empire.The pirates...

  • Paul Opitz v. Frederick A. Morgan as Administrator with will Annexed William Treutler synopsis, comments

    Paul Opitz v. Frederick A. Morgan as Administrator with will Annexed William Treutler

    Supreme Court of Florida

    WHITFIELD, J. A bill in equity was brought by beneficiaries of an estate alleging various acts of mismanagement of the estate by the administrator with the will annexed

  • The Pirate Wars synopsis, comments

    The Pirate Wars

    Peter Earle

    Investigating the fascination pirates hold over the popular imagination, Peter Earle takes the fable of oceangoing Robin Hoods sailing under the "banner of King Death" and contrast...

  • United States v. William Murphy and William Morgan synopsis, comments

    United States v. William Murphy and William Morgan

    United States Supreme Court

    Nash, of counsel for the defendant, presented a printed argument. 1. The witness, Francis McMahon, the owner of the property charged to have been stolen, was not a competent witnes...

  • Budget Like a Legend synopsis, comments

    Budget Like a Legend

    Cameron Wislang

    Don't want money to rule your every waking thought? Look no further.This whole budgeting, sorting out your money thing it's not impossible. It's not something only superclever or ...

  • Katie synopsis, comments

    Katie

    Christine Wunnicke

    Vielleicht liegt es am Nebel. Davon jedenfalls gibt es in London auch um 1870 herum genug, und wer weiß, vielleicht trübt er der Stadt ­kollektiv die Sinne. Kaum einer, der nicht d...

  • The Welsh Gold King synopsis, comments

    The Welsh Gold King

    Norena Shopland

    In 1864, a poor Welsh boy, William Pritchard Morgan, emigrated to Australia to make his fortune. He returned a wealthy lawyer and aspiring politician, having used his riches to inv...

  • The Craft synopsis, comments

    The Craft

    Thomas Talbot

    At the request of President John Quincy Adams during a White House visit in April 1826, Matthew Prescott joins Zeb Cardwell and other presidential agents in the hunt for William Mo...

  • Fight of the Century synopsis, comments

    Fight of the Century

    Michael Chabon & Ayelet Waldman

    The American Civil Liberties Union partners with awardwinning authors Michael Chabon and Ayelet Waldman in this “forceful, beautifully written” (Associated Press) collection that b...

  • J. O. Lockridge General Contractors v. William Morgan synopsis, comments

    J. O. Lockridge General Contractors v. William Morgan

    Fifth District, Dallas Court of Appeals of Texas

    This is the second appeal of this case. J.O. Lockridge General Contractors, Inc. sued William Morgan and the appellees in this appeal. Appellant claimed that Morgan acted both for ...

  • To Have and Have Not synopsis, comments

    To Have and Have Not

    Ernest Hemingway

    From one of the best writers in American literature, a classic novel about smuggling, intrigue, and love.To Have and Have Not is the dramatic story of Harry Morgan, an honest man w...

  • Saratoga synopsis, comments

    Saratoga

    Richard M. Ketchum

    Historian Richard M. Ketchum's Saratoga vividly details the turning point in America's Revolutionary War.In the summer of 1777 (twelve months after the Declaration of Independence)...

  • Works of William de Morgan synopsis, comments

    Works of William de Morgan

    William De Morgan

    2 works of William De Morgan English potter and tile designer (18391917) This ebook presents a collection of 2 works of William De Morgan. A dynamic table of contents allows you to...

  • The Prime Ministers synopsis, comments

    The Prime Ministers

    Iain Dale

    Winner of the 2020 PARLIAMENTARY BOOK AWARDS for Best Political Book by a NonParliamentarianA Times Political Book of the Year'An entertaining, thorough and informative canter thro...

  • Just Like Mum Says synopsis, comments

    Just Like Mum Says

    Rosemarie Jarski

    'Having a baby is like watching two very inefficient removal men trying to get a very large sofa through a very small doorway, only in this case you can't say, "Oh, sod it, bring i...

  • State Idaho v. William L. Morgan synopsis, comments

    State Idaho v. William L. Morgan

    Court of Appeals of Idaho No. 15552

    This case presents an issue of procedural due process in sentencing. William Morgan stands convicted of grand theft. He contends that the sentence was based in part upon erroneous ...