Rosey Grier and the 1960 Giants: Rare Photos

The Rev. Roosevelt “Rosey” Grier has enjoyed as varied a life as one can expect from an actor, singer, ordained minister, political activist, author and NFL Pro Bowler.

He was on hand—and physically subdued Sirhan Sirhan—the night Bobby Kennedy was assassinated in the Ambassador Hotel’s kitchen in 1968; was part of the Los Angeles Rams’ famed Fearsome Foursome defensive line; wrote a best-selling book in the early ’70s on the pleasures and challenges of needlepoint; and is a cousin to the blaxploitation movie star, Pam Grier.

During Grier’s years in New York in the Fifties and Sixties, when he played with Big Blue Hall of Famers like Frank Gifford, Andy Robustelli, and Sam Huff, the Giants won four Eastern Conference championships and, in 1956, the NFL title.

Here—his memories stirred by looking at the previously unpublished photographs by George Silk of the 1960 New York Giants featured in this gallery—Grier talks with LIFE about his views on football and sportsmanship; his experience as a young man from small-town Georgia playing in the Big Apple; and the men he shared the road and the field with during a transformational period in his long, full life.

Grier was 6′ 5″ and played at close to 300 pounds—but moved like a smaller man. “When I played in high school,” he told LIFE, “I patterned my movements on the little guys. They were so fast, and I learned to watch how they moved, how they worked their feet. So after a while, the instant the ball moved at the line of scrimmage, I would just explode off the line. My quickness came from watching little guys. I penetrated so quickly because I beat everyone off the line, always.”

“It was an exciting time for me,” Grier recalled of his early days with the Giants. “Here we were, out of college—most of the guys, anyway, had all graduated from college—and to be with these players from all over the country was fun, a thrill … and, at first, a little nervous-making. I mean, when I first came to the Giants, a lot of the guys were from the South — the head coach, Jim Lee Howell, was from Arkansas — and I assumed that there was no way we’d get along. With me being black, and knowing that there were only going to be so many black ball players on a team — well, long story short, I could not have been more wrong. The camaraderie I found there was unbelievable.

“It was an an incredible thing,” Grier said, “coming from the South, playing college ball at Penn State, to end up in New York playing for a franchise with a history like the Giants. I enjoyed it so much, and became good friends with guys like Charlie Conerly, [halfback and receiver] Kyle Rote … oh, so many of them. The team felt like a family then. It really did.”

Rosey Grier (#76) finds himself in a familiar spot -- in the middle of the action during a 1960 game against New York's perennial rivals, the Eagles.

Rosey Grier (#76) during a 1960 game against the Philadelphia Eagles.

George Silk Time & Life Pictures/Shutterstock

New York Giants quarterback Charlie Conerly drops back to pass during a game against the Steelers, 1960.

New York Giants quarterback Charlie Conerly drops back to pass during a game against the Steelers, 1960.

George Silk Time & Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Future Hall of Famer Andy Robustelli leads the Giants in a workout session at Yankee Stadium.

Future Hall of Famer Andy Robustelli leads the Giants in a workout session at Yankee Stadium.

George Silk Time & Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Rosey Grier and Andy Robustelli, Yankee Stadium, 1960.

Rosey Grier and Andy Robustelli, Yankee Stadium, 1960.

George Silk Time & Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Frank Gifford carries the ball against the Cardinals as guard Darrell Dess (#62) runs interference.

Frank Gifford carries the ball against the Cardinals as guard Darrell Dess (#62) runs interference.

George Silk Time & Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Rosey Grier studies plays during a Giants “skull session,” 1960.

George Silk Time & Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Steelers receiver Buddy Dial (upended) lands on the 1-yard line as the Giants' Lindon Crow arrives a moment too late to make the play.

Steelers receiver Buddy Dial (upended) lands on the 1-yard line as the Giants’ Lindon Crow arrives a moment too late to make the play.

George Silk Time & Life Pictures/Shutterstock

New York Giants, 1960.

New York Giants, 1960

George Silk Time & Life Pictures/Shutterstock

In a game against the Redskins, Grier, Robustelli (#81), and other Giants fight to block an extra point attempt by the 'Skins 6' 2", 230-lb. kicker and guard, Bob Khayat.

In a game against the Redskins, Grier, Robustelli (#81), and other Giants fight to block an extra point attempt by the ‘Skins 6’ 2″, 230-lb. kicker and guard, Bob Khayat.

George Silk Time & Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Frank Gifford

Frank Gifford, New York Giants

George Silk Time & Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Frank Gifford is carried off the field on a stretcher after a near-career-ending hit by the Eagles' Chuck Bednarik.

Frank Gifford is carried off the field on a stretcher after a hit by the Eagles’ Chuck Bednarik.

George Silk Time & Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Redskins fullback John Olszewski (wearing a #0 jersey) leaps for a touchdown against the Giants.

Redskins fullback John Olszewski (wearing a #0 jersey) leaps for a touchdown against the Giants.

George Silk Time & Life Pictures/Shutterstock

New York Giants at Yankee Stadium, 1960

New York Giants, 1960

George Silk Time & Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Becoming Father Christmas: LIFE Goes to Santa School

Some Santas are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them. And then there are those happy fellows who have taken a week-long class in all things Father Christmas, and come out the other side with a coveted B.S.C. degree (Bachelor of Santa Claus).

Such was the fate of those who, for years, chose to take instruction at Charles Howard’s Santa Claus School in the upstate New York town of Albion, not far from Rochester. In fact, the school, founded in 1937,  still exists; since the mid-1960s, it has operated out of Midland, Mich., and remains the world’s oldest Santa school.

In 1961, LIFE’s Alfred Eisenstaedt visited Howard’s school for would-be Santas, and made a series of photos chronicling the evidently quite fun process of learning to be all the Santa Claus one can be. (Many of the pictures here were not originally published in the article that ran in LIFE.) In its Nov. 17, 1961, issue, LIFE shared the lighthearted goings-on at the school with its readers:

In Albion, N.Y., Charles Howard (right) runs the country’s only school of its kind for Santas and this fall has graduated 15, most sent up for training by department stores. Howard himself is the nation’s No. 1 Santa, the one who waves from the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade.
Howard’s school gives a Santa’s Helper degree after a five-day, $75 course and a post-graduate B.S.C. (Bachelor of Santa Claus).
He teaches the history of Santa Claus, make-up and costumes (“Don’t use false eyebrows — let your own grow”), Christmas stories and how to be jolly. He tells how to cope with young hazards Santa may find in his lap. There is the tear-spiller (“All you can do is get his mind off what’s bothering him”) and the shin-kicker (“Santa is no reformer so don’t spend much time with him”). Most dangerous of all is the beard-yanker. “When you see a devilish gleam in the eye,” he says, “you know you’ve got one. So you grab your beard underneath, hold tight and when he yanks, holler ‘Ouch.'”

Finally, we’ll end with one of Howard’s more memorable quotes about St. Nick, and the power of belief in an age of doubt: “To say there is no Santa Claus is the most erroneous statement in the world. Santa Claus is a thought that is passed from generation to generation. After time this thought takes on a human form. Maybe if all children and adults understand the symbolism of this thought we can actually attain Peace on Earth and good will to men everywhere.”

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Original caption: “On third day of school, Marine John Ray learns how to squint his eyes into a Santa twinkle. His wig and beard are of yak hair. Ray will work at the W. G. Swartz store in Norfolk, Va.”

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa school, 1961

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Original caption: “John Ray holds the diploma naming him a Santa’s helper. Next year he can work for B.S.C. degree. To get it he will have to present recommendations from customers and write 1,500-word thesis.”

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa School, 1961

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

Santa school portrait, 1961.

Santa Claus school, 1961.

Alfred Eisenstaedt / The LIFE Picture Collection

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