Samuel Herbert "Pop" Harding (January 19, 1873 – May 19, 1919) was an American college football player and coach. He served as head football coach at Maryland Agricultural College—now known as the University of Maryland, College Park—in 1893 and led the team to a perfect 6–0 record and its first winning season.
Beginning in 1896, Harding worked as a skilled laborer for the Water Department in Washington, D.C.[1] In the first football game of the 1899 season, Maryland was defeated, 21–0, by Western Maryland, and its coach and best player, fullback S. S. Cooke, was forced to retire after an arm injury.[3] The athletic director, H. A. Harrison, decided the team would finish out its schedule, and Harding returned to fill in as coach.[3]
Harding married Marian Boyle on October 15, 1901.[1] In 1906, he rose to the position of foreman in the Water Department.[1] Harding later worked as a clerk for the Washington, D.C. city government. He died on May 17, 1919, and was interred in Forest Glen, Maryland.[7]