Joe Fogg

Joseph Graham Fogg (July 6, 1882 – December 2, 1946) was an American football player for the Wisconsin Badgers and the Akron East Ends.

Fogg, who was Akron's quarterback, had to make the extra point in order for East Ends to get a share of the title.

While at Case Tech, Fogg continued the program success created by his predecessor, Joseph Wentworth, who had won the first four football titles of the Ohio Athletic Conference (OAC).

His son, Joe G. Fogg, Jr., was a 1941 graduate from Princeton University and served in the American Field Service during World War II.

His unit, on active duty through Sicily, Italy, France, and Germany, ultimately evacuated the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.

Fogg is buried alongside his wife Mary at Knollwood Cemetery in Mayfield Heights, Ohio, inside the main mausoleum.

Joe Fogg as quarterback of the 1903 Wisconsin Badgers , located second from the right from top main row, wearing his varsity "W" letter.
Knollwood Cemetery mausoleum.