Art Rooney

Miscellaneous

Popular As Arthur Joseph Rooney

Birthday January 27, 1901

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Coulterville, Pennsylvania, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1988-8-25, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S. (87 years old)

Nationality United States

#43081 Most Popular

1840

Rooney's great-grandparents, James and Mary Rooney, were Irish Catholics who emigrated from Newry in County Down, Ireland to Canada during the Great Famine in the 1840s.

While living in Montreal, the Rooneys had a son, Arthur (who would become Art Rooney's grandfather).

James and Mary later moved to Ebbw Vale, Wales, where the iron industry was flourishing, taking their son Arthur, then 21, with them.

This Arthur Rooney married Catherine Regan (who was also Irish Catholic), in Wales, and they had a son, Dan.

1884

Two years after Dan Rooney was born, the family moved back to Canada and eventually ended up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1884.

Along the way the family grew to include nine children of which Dan was the second.

Dan Rooney remained in the Pittsburgh area, and eventually opened a saloon in the Youghiogheny Valley coal town of Coulter, Pennsylvania (or Coultersville).

This is where Dan Rooney met and wed Margaret "Maggie" Murray, who was the daughter of a coal miner, and where the couple's first son, Arthur Joseph Rooney, was born.

1901

Arthur Joseph Rooney Sr. (January 27, 1901 – August 25, 1988), often referred to as "the Chief", was the founding owner of the Pittsburgh Steelers, an American football franchise in the National Football League (NFL), from 1933 until his death.

Rooney is a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, was an Olympic qualifying boxer, and was part or whole owner in several track sport venues and Pittsburgh area pro teams.

1909

The building was located just a block from Exposition Park, which had been home to the Pittsburgh Pirates baseball team until 1909.

Rooney had a brother, Silas Rooney, who later entered the priesthood.

1913

Dan and Maggie would eventually settle their family in Pittsburgh's North Side in 1913, where they bought a three-story building at the corner of Corey Street and General Robinson Street.

Dan operated a cafe and saloon out of the first floor with the family living above.

1918

After graduation, he dedicated himself to sports, winning the AAU welterweight belt in 1918 and tried out for the 1920 Olympic Team, he played minor league baseball for both the Flint, Michigan "Vehicles" and the Wheeling, West Virginia "Stogies".

1920

Since the league's inception in 1920, the NFL had wanted a team in Pittsburgh due to the city's already-long history with football as well as the popularity of the Pittsburgh Panthers football team, an NCAA national championship contender during this period.

1925

In 1925 he served as Wheeling's player-manager and led the Middle Atlantic League in games, hits, runs, stolen bases and finished second in batting average (his brother Dan Rooney, Wheeling's catcher that year, finished third).

1933

He was the first president of the Pittsburgh Steelers from 1933 to 1974, and the first chairman of the team from 1933 to 1988.

Art also played halfback for the semi-pro Pittsburgh "Hope Harvey" and "Majestic Radio" clubs which he later took over and renamed the J.P. Rooneys before purchasing an NFL franchise for $2,500 in 1933.

Rooney's affiliation with the National Football League (NFL) began in 1933 when he paid a $2,500 franchise fee to found a club based in the city of Pittsburgh.

He had named his new team the "Pirates" which was also the name of the city's long-established Major League Baseball club of which Rooney was a fan since a childhood spent in the shadow of the team's stadium.

The league was finally able to take advantage of Pennsylvania relaxing their blue laws that prior to 1933 prohibited sporting events from taking place on Sundays, when most NFL games take place.

1936

In 1936, Rooney won a parlay at Saratoga Race Course, which netted him about $160,000.

He placed the bet based on a tip from New York Giants owner Tim Mara, a bookmaker.

He used the winnings to hire a coach, Joe Bach, give contracts to his players and almost win a championship.

1938

Rooney sent shock waves through the NFL by signing Byron "Whizzer" White to a record-breaking $15,000 contract in 1938.

This move, however, did not bring the Pirates a winning season, and White left the team for the Detroit Lions the following year.

1941

The winnings funded the team until 1941 when he sold the franchise to NY playboy Alex Thompson.

Thompson wanted to move the franchise to Boston so he could be within a five-hour train ride of his club.

At the same time, the Philadelphia Eagles ran into financial problems.

Rooney used the funds from the sale of franchise to get a 70% interest in the Eagles, the other 30% held by Rooney friend and future NFL commissioner, Bert Bell.

Bell and Rooney agreed to trade places with Thompson.

1942

The club did not have a season above .500 until 1942, the year after they were renamed the Pittsburgh Steelers.

1943

During World War II, the Steelers had some financial difficulties and were merged with the Philadelphia Eagles in 1943 and the Chicago Cardinals in 1944.

1946

Bell took the role of President of the Steelers that he relinquished to Rooney in 1946 when Bell became Commissioner.

Rooney got his good friend and his sister's father in law, Barney McGinley, to buy Bell's shares.

1947

Silas Rooney eventually became the athletic director for St. Bonaventure University in 1947 and invited the Steelers to play their training camp at the university in the 1950s.

Another brother, James P. Rooney, later was elected to the Pennsylvania General Assembly, winning easily in part because Art had renamed the team after James, who also played on the squad, as a promotional tactic.

Rooney attended St. Peter's Catholic School in Pittsburgh, Duquesne University Prep School, then several semesters at Indiana Normal School before completing a final year at Temple University on an athletic scholarship.

2006

Barney's son Jack, Art's brother in law, retained the McGinley interest that passed to his heirs when he died in 2006.