Walker Glenn "Bill" "Big Six" Carpenter (June 3, 1893 – September 24, 1956) was an American football tackle for John Heisman's Georgia Tech Golden Tornado of the Georgia Institute of Technology. He and teammate Everett Strupper were the first players from the Deep South selected to an All-America team, in 1917. Carpenter was inducted into the Georgia Tech Athletics Hall of Fame in 1965. He is also a member of the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame and the Helms Football Hall of Fame.
Personal
Walker was born June 3, 1893, in Newnan, Georgia, to Starling V. Carpenter and Glenn L. Camp. He was the father of American educator and university administrator Thomas Glenn Carpenter.
Georgia Tech
Carpenter entered The Georgia Institute of Technology in the fall of 1914, elected president of the freshman class.
[Blue Print, 1914. Georgia Institute of Technology, 1914.] He graduated from Tech with a degree in mechanical engineering.
Football
His coach
John Heisman once said of Carpenter: "On three of Georgia Tech's greatest teams Bill Carpenter—Big Six—played right tackle in the manner that makes coaches believe that life is good. Even the coaches of the teams we walloped were given to saying that it was worth a beating to watch Bill."
He was nominated though not selected for an
Associated Press All-Time Southeast 1869-1919 era team.
1914 and 1915
His first year on the football team saw Carpenter suffer a serious injury during the Georgia game which caused him to have one of his
removed.
["Tech men Not Slackers" Technique 30 Oct 1917] It was wondered if he would ever play football again.
[Georgia Tech Student Publications. Blue Print, 1915. Georgia Institute of Technology, 1915.] Carpenter defied the odds and stepped out on the field for the first game of 1915 against
Mercer Bears.
1916
Carpenter would be a starter the next year for the famous 222–0 defeat of Cumberland in 1916
1917
He was captain of one of Tech's greatest teams in 1917, winning a national championship and outscoring opponents 491–17.
[Georgia Tech Student Publications. Blue Print, 1918. Georgia Institute of Technology, 1918] He was responsible that year for training new recruits
Si Bell,
Bill Fincher, and
Dan Whelchel.
[The Technique, Volume 7, Issue 1]