ndmags.jpg (5708 bytes)
 
Return to autumn 1999 contents page
Notre Dame magazine home page
Autumn 1999 issue . Frank and Moose -- neighbors again

LINKS:

ND's football traditions

The Moose Krause basketball seasons

The Frank Leahy football seasons

 

The statue of former football coach Frank Leahy on Juniper Road, which runs through the Notre Dame campus, has gained the company of an old friend.

A statue of Edward AMoose@ Krause, a 1933 ND graduate who was also a   Notremoosef99.jpg (15764 bytes) Dame athlete, coach and long-time athletic director, has been installed by the flag poles in front of the Joyce Center. The statue faces the stadium across Juniper, just south of the two-year-old Leahy statue.

The Krause sculpture has Moose seated on a bench and smoking his trademark cigar. His outstretched right arm rests on the back of the bench.

AWe thought that would be great for people who want pictures,@ explained George Kelly, class of 1953, assistant athletic director.

It=s discernable that Krause is wearing the football team=s 1977 national championship ring.

Krause was an All-American in basketball and football in the 1930s. He returned to coach football under Leahy and went on to coach basketball and serve as assistant athletic director. In 1949 he was chosen to replace Leahy as athletic director, a position he would hold until 1981. After a half-century of promoting Notre Dame athletics, he died in 1992 at age 79.

After the Leahy statue was unveiled in 1997, Krause=s son, Father Edward Krause, CSC, a 1963 ND graduate , of Gannon University in Erie, Pennsylvania, suggested that a statue be dedicated to his father. Kelly says raising money for the statue was easy due to Moose=s immense popularity.

The statue was placed in front of the Joyce Center because of Krause=s strong ties to the basketball program, according to Kelly.

The statue was sculpted by Jerry McKenna, class of 1962, of Boerne, Texas, who also created the Leahy statue.

C Liz Nagle =99

The Moose Krause statue in Jerry McKenn'a studio prior to bronzing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright Notre Dame magazine

Return to autumn 1999 contents
Notre Dame magazine home page