هذه المقالة يتيمة. ساعد بإضافة وصلة إليها في مقالة متعلقة بها

آرثر بي. ماكبرايد

من أرابيكا، الموسوعة الحرة
اذهب إلى التنقل اذهب إلى البحث
آرثر بي. ماكبرايد

معلومات شخصية

آرثر بي. ماكبرايد (بالإنجليزية: Arthur B. McBride)‏ هو شخصية أعمال أمريكي، ولد في 20 مارس 1888 في شيكاغو في الولايات المتحدة، وتوفي في 10 نوفمبر 1972 في كليفلاند في الولايات المتحدة.[1][2][3]

مراجع

  1. ^ Cobbledick، Gordon (10 يونيو 1953). "McBride's Policy of Giving Hired Experts Free Hand in Running Grid Club Paid Off". Cleveland Plain Dealer. Cleveland, Ohio. ص. 1. McBride has always stuck pretty close to the grandstand pew, which is what stamps him as an uncommonly shrewd club owner. He hired the best available talent to run his ball club for him, and he gave the talent a free hand. Scarcely knowing the difference between an end zone and an onside kick, he never undertook to tell Paul Brown how to coach the team, what players to buy, sell or trade or whom to claim in the college draft. Elementary? Maybe it should be, but most often it doesn't work that way.
  2. ^ "McBride, Arthur B." Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. مؤرشف من الأصل في 2016-03-03. اطلع عليه بتاريخ 2012-06-22.
  3. ^ Fraley، Oscar (23 ديسمبر 1946). "Browns' Success Can Be Traced Directly to Owner". The Telegraph-Herald. United Press. مؤرشف من الأصل في 2019-12-07. اطلع عليه بتاريخ 2012-06-22. This was a guy who loved boxing and baseball. Football, to him, was a game over on the other side of the tracks. But came 1940 and a son, Arthur, Jr., enrolled at Notre Dame and it wasn't long before you could find McBride wherever the Irish played . Sure, he started as a Chicago newsboy at the age of six. But 17 years later, Arthur was banking a neat $10,000 a year as a newspaper circulation executive. . In 1913, he moved to Cleveland as a newspaper circulation manager and subsequently went into business for himself. Now he has real estate holdings in Cleveland, Chicago, Miami and Coral Gables and is taxi-cab boss of Cleveland, Akron and Canton, O.