In 1937, Espey became general manager of the Washington Redskins.[1] He was with the team when they won the 1937 and 1942 National Football League championships.[2] He left the club on April 1, 1943, to become the general manager of the Uline Arena.[3] He resigned five months later to return to the newspaper business as the promotion manager of Washington Times-Herald.[4]
Miami Seahawks
In 1946, Espey became the general manager of the Miami Seahawks of the All-America Football Conference. In order to attract fans, Espey brought in high school bands and drums and bugle corps, spent $1,500 on a fireworks show that was hampered by rain, and brought in clown Felix Adler to perform at halftime. However, poor weather (it rained during six of the Seahawks seven home games and the home opener was postponed due to a hurricane) and an uncompetitive team led the Seahawks to draw about 7,000 fans per game. The Seahawks final home game saw about 2,500 fans turn up to the 35,000-seat Burdine Stadium.[5]
Baltimore Colts
The Seahawks folded after the season and Espey joined its successor in the AAFC, the Baltimore Colts. In June 1947 he asked a friend, Jo Lombardi, to compose a theme song for the team. Lombardi wrote the song with Benjamin Klasmer and Espey added a strain from Maryland, My Maryland near the end. The song was used by the first and second incarnations of the Colts and was adapted by John Ziemann and Todd Clontz for the Baltimore Ravens.[6][7] Epsey was fired after the 1947 season.[8]
Later life
In 1948, Espey was a finalist to become manager of the D.C. Armory, but lost the job to Dutch Bergman.[9] He served as a press agent for the Armory's annual sportsmen's and outdoors show and was on the publicity staff for the Presidential Cup.[10][11] He eventually moved to Montgomery County, Maryland, where he worked in newspaper advertising and was vice president of the Paulin Publishing Company.[12][13]
^Atchison, Lewis F. (September 15, 1959). "Atchison's Angle". Evening Star. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
^"Tribute by Hon. Charles McC. Mathias, Jr. of Maryland". Memorial Addresses in the Congress of the United States and Tributes in the Congress of the United States and Tributes in Eulogy of John Fitzgerald Kenney Late a President of the United States. United States Government Printing Office: 805. 1964. Retrieved 16 May 2023.